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Home Exhibitions

Alicja Buławka-Fankidejska: Possible Forms at the Rothko Museum, Daugavpils

July 16, 2024
in Exhibitions

Alicja Buławka-Fankidejska: Possible Forms is on view at the Rothko Museum, Daugavpils

May 17 – August 25, 2024

The Rothko Museum is pleased to present “Possible Forms,” a solo exhibition by Alicja Buławka-Fankidejska at the Martinsons House in Daugavpils.

“Ceramics is my communicator and my point of contact, the nexus of my narrative and relationship with the viewer. This versatile and open-ended medium has a unique capacity to take on and embody new contexts and meanings. Its impressive technological range holds great potential for personal discoveries by an aspiring and inquisitive artistic mind.

Clay is a fascinating, sensitive, sensory material with an organic candor that will reveal the creator’s intention like no other medium. These inherent material properties offer multi-sensory opportunities for perception and lend themselves to various “form-making” techniques, which become a perfect launching pad for limitless interpretation. Clay has an irresistible implicit corporality, which is what makes it so engaging.

In the subjective geometric and biology-inspired shapes based on the powerful relationship between the softly rounded form and firm precision framing of its surrounding planes, I see the calm, sophisticated composition of the streamlined female body and its metamorphosis. These ways of expressing and interpreting femininity are difficult to represent and contain with a specific shape or entity. One rather talks about an attitude of association and openness to stay in a relationship with the corporality felt, realized, and internalized. For that, you have to get “close” and intimate with the sculpture: touch, co-sensate, and carefully explore its shapes…

The dynamic firing process in gas kilns, followed by the not-quite-controlled post-firing reduction techniques of raku and its offshoots, throws me out of the seemingly stable realm of creation and lets me move metaphorical shapes into entirely new fields of experimentation, charting new territories of identification and definition.”

Alicja Buławka-Fankidejska graduated from the Faculty of Sculpture at the Academy of Fine Arts in Gdansk. Since 2013, she has been working as an assistant at the Academy’s Studio of Ceramics. In 2022, she received her doctorate in art. The artist works mainly in artistic ceramics and moves between alternative firing methods, mostly in gas kilns of her own design. She is fascinated by the experimental approach to ceramics. Together with the Academy of Fine Arts in Gdansk, she organizes and leads the plein air “Ceramics Alternatively”.

Buławka Fankidejska has won multiple awards, including the Excellence Award in the Cluj International Ceramics Biennale organised by the Museum of Art in Cluj-Napoca, Romania in 2015. She participated in the “Best 2015” post-competition exhibition at the Gallatea Gallery in Bucharest and won the Rector’s Award from the Academy of Fine Arts in Gdansk in 2015, 2021, and 2022. Her ceramic objects have been presented in eight solo exhibitions in Poland and Denmark.

The artist’s works are held in multiple public collections, such as the Cluj-Napoca Art Museum in Romania, the Rothko Museum and the Latvian Centre for Contemporary Ceramics in Latvia, the National Museum in Gdansk, Poland, and the Guldagergaard International Ceramic Research Centre in Denmark. Between 2014 and 2018, she contributed to a project in Gdansk, Poland, which involved creating artistic decorations for municipal tenement houses. Buławka Fankidejska is represented by Fine Art Gallery in Wrocław, Poland.

Contact
rotkomuzejs@daugavpils.lv

Rothko Museum
Martinsons House
1 Nikolaja Street
Daugavpils Fortress
Latvia

Photo credits: Didzis Grodzs

Tags: Alicja Buławka-FankidejskaDaugavpilsRothko Museum

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