Städtisches Museum Engen

Städtisches Museum Engen

„Eine Explosion wie von 30 Atombomben“

26.09.14 – 09.11.14

Renata Jaworska wurde 1979 in Zwolen, Polen geboren. Heute lebt und arbeitet sie in Schloss Salem. Ihr Studium absolvierte sie an der Kunstakademie Düsseldorf und war Meisterschülerin von Jörg Immendorf. Sie hatte zahlreiche Ausstellungen in Düsseldorf, Berlin, Warschau, Venedig, London, Bukarest, Friedrichshafen und Salem und nahm mehrmals am internationalen Künstlerprojekt „salem2salem“ in den Jahren 2010 bis 2013 teil.

Im Zentrum von Renata Jaworskas künstlerischem Interesse stehen Malerei und Performance. Sie untersucht interkulturelle und partizipatorische Fragen menschlicher Kommunikation und ihre Aspekte wie Sprachlosigkeit, Ausgrenzung und Isolation.

Bild: Renata Jaworska, Ohne Titel, Öl auf Leinwand, 2013

© Copyright Renata Jaworska

Anschrift

Städtisches Museum Engen + Galerie
Klostergasse 19
D- 78234 Engen
Telefon 07733 501400
Telefax 07733 502-299

Öffnungszeiten
Dienstag bis Freitag 14:00 – 17:00 Uhr
Samstag und Sonntag von 10:00 – 17:00 Uhr

Preise
Eintritt: 2 Euro, erm.1,5o Euro
Freier Eintritt: jeder 1. Sonntag im Monat, Kinder unter 16 Jahren und Schulklassen

Renata Jaworska, educated at the Art Academy of Düsseldorf, has exhibited extensively throughout Poland, Germany and London since 2004 and focuses on collaborative performance and painting. Most recently she has collaborated with twenty American and fourteen German artists in Lake Constance, Germany for the project Salem2Salem, a pilot scheme of Bodensee Kulturraum that encourages interdisciplinary art production and takes its inspiration from the Bauhaus movement. Her "119-minute circle" project also called "a dancing congress" was held on 14th of march 2010 at Whitechapel Gallery in London. She invited representatives of sixteen different nations who gathered at the "The Nature of the Beast" – international, round table to form a live human exhibition. The piece was instigated in front of an installation by Goshka Macuga that explored Pablo Picasso’s Guernica exhibition at the Whitechapel Gallery in 1939, thus framing it with a reader-centric production of material exploring connections between art, propaganda and war. Each participant recited their national anthem individually followed by all reciting them again simultaneously creating a cacophony of dissonance, miscommunication and aural power struggles. The conference aimed to emphasize the rules of cultural identity whilst highlighting the sense of duty, individualism, thought process and behavior of each individual. Through this project Renata commented contemporary times, particularly the lack of communication among people and the feeling of loss experienced by many. Recording of the “119-minute circle” project as well as a documentation and research material would be a part of an exhibition Young Polish Art_ Metal at Metal Chalkwell Hall in Southend on Sea between 8th-12th of September. Born 1979, Poland. Lives in Germany and Poland