"The Polish Barbara Hepworth" - REVIEW Magdalena Abakanowicz at Tate Modern London

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ArtTop10.com

ArtTop10.com

Жыл бұрын

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ArtTop10.com Founder Robert Dunt reviews the art exhibition Magdalena Abaknaowicz: Every Tangle of Thead and Rope at Tate Modern London. Described by Robert Dunt as a Polish Barbara Hepworth this show is a fascinating glimpse of an artist who was driven by the spiritual and the spirits that lived in the forest by her parents' house. The resulting works are huge fascinating textile pieces that float in the gallery in a mesmerising and sometimes alarming fashion.
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The Tate Press Release says -
“The Abakans were a kind of bridge between me and the outside world. I could surround myself with them; I could create an atmosphere in which I somehow felt safe because they were my world.” - Magdalena Abakanowicz
Tate Modern offers a rare opportunity to explore an extraordinary body of work by Polish artist Magdalena Abakanowicz known as Abakans. Made of organic materials such as horsehair, sisal and hemp rope, these complex three-dimensional forms broke new ground for art in the 1960s and 70s. Bringing together 26 of these radical works for the first time in the UK, the exhibition presents a forest of towering sculptures, enabling visitors to explore their ambiguous forms and earthy scents.
With a career spanning over 50 years, Magdalena Abakanowicz (1930-2017) changed what it meant to be a sculptor and led the way for other artists working with fibre. Having grown up among the rural landscapes outside Warsaw, Poland, she took inspiration from the myth, folklore and spirits of the forest - themes that would eventually lead the artist to create new worlds through her work. Although she came of age during the traumatic events of World War II and later lived under the restrictions of an oppressive Communist regime, Abakanowicz was determined to engage on a global scale. Gaining international recognition by 1970 for her revolutionary installations, she went on to cross the Iron Curtain more than any other artist, participating in hundreds of exhibitions worldwide.
Choosing to reject the restrictive definitions of art and craft inherited from previous generations, Abakanowicz created trailblazing fibre installations that were a radical departure from the traditional tapestries produced in Western Europe. Deriving their name from the artist’s own family name, Abakans astounded critics when they were first presented in the late 1960s.
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NOTES TO EDITORS
ABOUT MAGDALENA ABAKANOWICZ
Magdalena Abakanowicz was born in Falenty, Poland in 1930 and graduated from the Academy of Fine Art, Warsaw in 1954, having studied painting and weaving. In 1962 she gained recognition outside Poland at the 1st International Tapestry Biennial in Lausanne. In 1965 she won the Gold Medal in Applied Arts at the São Paulo Biennial. This prestige brought her an appointment as professor, heading the weaving studio at the Poznań art academy until 1990 (in 2020 it was renamed the Magdalena Abakanowicz University of Arts).
While her invention of weaving methods alongside known techniques led to critics to call her rectangular wall works Abakans as early as 1964, this uniquely personal term became identified with her more radical, fully three-dimensional forms beginning in 1967. The 1970s saw an expansion into environmental installations with shows in Europe, the US, and Australia, culminating with her in command of the Polish Pavilion at the 1980 Venice Biennale where Embryology - 800 soft sculptures which feature in the Tate collection as well as this exhibition - were first exposed. There, too, were her iconic Backs (40 are in the Tate collection) which, along with Heads and Seated Figures, comprised her Alterations series begun in 1973 in which she employed burlap sacking. This led to her formidable Crowds of headless figures, always striving to show individuality in spite of multiplicity, leading her in later decades to create herds of mutant mammals and flocks of bomber-like birds.

Пікірлер: 21
@geoffstern7652
@geoffstern7652 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video tour of this wonderful exhibition, but please sort out the microphone. You've turned this tour into a breathing sound installation! Had to turn the sound off.
@ArtTop10
@ArtTop10 Жыл бұрын
Thanks Geoff! The sound can be hard in the galleries, especially when I'm trying to whisper a bit and not put off the other journalists with my loud commentary. The RODE GO 2 which I've been using has been pretty good recently but I agree it wasn't the best that day. I think I need to fiddle with turning down the gain when talking close to the microphone. I'm always trying to improve everything so thank you for the feedback. Rob
@janemorrow6672
@janemorrow6672 Жыл бұрын
Wonderful exhibition and such an awesome tour you have provided. Many thanks.
@ArtTop10
@ArtTop10 Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much! It means a lot people like the videos.
@Dolon19
@Dolon19 Жыл бұрын
Thank you very much for the video. I saw the exhibition and it's amazing. The texture of abakans is so haptic, I feel magic looking at them. Your video made my memories alive again.
@ArtTop10
@ArtTop10 Жыл бұрын
Love the haptic description!
@BBaxterSwank
@BBaxterSwank Жыл бұрын
I really appreciate this tour of the M Abakanowicz exhibit. Thank you for including the early work, drawings, studies and small details as well as the monumental works. I enjoyed your fresh and thoughtful reaction to her work. She has been a beacon for many of us in the textile/fiber arts and still relatively unknown in greater depth. There are several videos of the Tate exhibit online, but yours is the first that I have seen that follows her chronograph and spends equal time & emphasis on the drawings, studies and studio images as the impressive Abakans. I will check out your channels further.
@ArtTop10
@ArtTop10 Жыл бұрын
Many thanks for your comments, it's much appreciated and I'm really pleased when someone likes one of the videos. It's also vry god to know why you enjoyed it, it helps for the next videos I will make.
@paperpalacequeen
@paperpalacequeen Жыл бұрын
Great video. Thanks
@janemorrow6672
@janemorrow6672 Жыл бұрын
My impression is that her earlier works are very plant based and the later ones are very visceral and animalistic. Maybe before and after her trip to Papua New Guinea?
@ArtTop10
@ArtTop10 Жыл бұрын
Interesting. I don’t have enough knowledge on her to know. I think the initial and mid career pieces were certainly inspired by spirits in the forest and that changed later.
@sesvaoffice8331
@sesvaoffice8331 Жыл бұрын
thanks for this fantastic tour through. what a great artist Ive never heard of.
@ArtTop10
@ArtTop10 Жыл бұрын
So glad you enjoyed it! Thank you£
@offbeat65
@offbeat65 Жыл бұрын
"Really, really good". Oh, seriously? Staggering level of expertise there.
@architecture9925
@architecture9925 Жыл бұрын
stupid title but the tour could be nice if you removed the noise you are making in the background. thanks
@MateuszDolski
@MateuszDolski Жыл бұрын
What a ridiculous title
@offbeat65
@offbeat65 Жыл бұрын
I agree. Totally ignorant title, tinged with chauvinism. Abakanowicz's achievements owe nothing to and are not even reminiscent of Hepworth's. If anything, she is the more innovative and more relevant of the two.
@patryk2700
@patryk2700 Жыл бұрын
The critics at the time coined a term to describe what was then entirely novel - Abakans - and not "Hepworths". Actually, BH's sculptures are very much in line with the general aesthetic prevalent throughout mid XXc - nothing novel about them. The world does not revolve around the british empire guv'nor...
@piotr.leniec-lincow5209
@piotr.leniec-lincow5209 Жыл бұрын
Its nice but like most of Polish art waaaaay to serious ......
@ArtTop10
@ArtTop10 Жыл бұрын
Interesting I hadn’t really thought of Polish art as way to serious.
@piotr.leniec-lincow5209
@piotr.leniec-lincow5209 Жыл бұрын
@@ArtTop10 its natural . Auschwitz was in Poland
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