Roman Cieslewicz |
The Healing Power of Posters by Roman Cieslewicz, a Retrospective, Royal College of Art, organised by the Polish Cultural Institute.
If anyone needs evidence that art can heal old wounds – the theme of this blog – all they have to do is look at a few film posters.
Who would have believed that posters helped people, perhaps even an entire nation, Poland, to adjust to their overlords, the Soviet Union, in the last few decades of the 20th century?
Roman Cieslewicz (1930-1996) was an artist with a steadfast vision who combined visual wit with stark disturbing imagery that transfused angst into eloquent visual communication. His skill juxtaposing images, words in startling combinations, using a simple cut and paste collage technique is extraordinary. Even today we might look twice at these memorable, even scary designs. It does not surprise me to find that these images expressed people's innermost conflicts and feelings. So, while his work teeters on the edge of disturbing, nightmarishly surreal, it is also revelatory, with hints of grim humour.
Roman Cieslewicz (1930-1996) was an artist with a steadfast vision who combined visual wit with stark disturbing imagery that transfused angst into eloquent visual communication. His skill juxtaposing images, words in startling combinations, using a simple cut and paste collage technique is extraordinary. Even today we might look twice at these memorable, even scary designs. It does not surprise me to find that these images expressed people's innermost conflicts and feelings. So, while his work teeters on the edge of disturbing, nightmarishly surreal, it is also revelatory, with hints of grim humour.
Roman Cieslewicz |
Roman Cieslewicz |
Roman Cieslewicz |
Roman Cieslewicz |
That great art is cathartic goes some way to explaining why we love to see tragedies played out over and over in Operas and great dramatic plays like Hamlet and MacBeth. In seeing that the fates of opposed characters can be locked in battle in such a way that the inevitable happens follows a logic way beyond just being nice. The resulting work, the dramatic clash can ennoble and enhance our knowledge of who we are. To turn away from what scares us dooms us to forever repeat it.
According to Friedrich Nietzsche, the proper way to view art was like the ancient Greeks who transformed disease into great beneficial forces. Their secret was to honour illness like a god.
‘Art approaches as a saving sorceress, expert at healing. She alone knows how to turn these nauseous thoughts about the horror and absurdity of existence into notions with which one can live’. ( The Birth of Tragedy)
Roman Cieslewicz |
This is true of all the arts from words to music. We have at our disposal the tool to transform our scary bits, reintegrating their scattered fragments back into a semblance of order and meaning.
It is this profusion that heals.. Art is the soul’s medicine.
Kensington Gore
London SW7 2EU
FREE
London SW7 2EU
FREE
5 comments:
This was a fine exhibition and it struck me too that the art was therapeutic for the artist
great read with simple yet meaningful references. more please. naj
To turn away from what scares us dooms us to forever repeat it. what a beautiful line. amazing kieron, interesting articles please. CB
The great thing is we don't even have to know we are doing it consciously for art - that's anything we happen to be working on- to have the effect of integrating our bits and pieces into a greater whole. We are just answering its call to wholeness.
Great read, great deed. Thank you.
Some of us still think we can have a positive impact on the world through our art.
NL
www.nanettelasalle.com
Post a Comment