Dolls – (Witold Wojtkiewicz) Previous Next


Artist:

Size: 89 x 69 cm

Museum: Warsaw National Museum (Warsaw, Poland)

Technique: Oil On Canvas

The body of work left behind by Witold Wojtkiewicz is a one-of-a-kind phenomenon that has no parallel in Polish modern art. Afflicted with an incurable heart condition, the artist had a delicate psychological constitution and was prone to volatile mood swings. His works convey the full spectrum of fears, traumas and passions. The world he created abounds in subtexts, allusions and references to Modernist poetry. In his short life spanning a mere twenty-nine years, Wojtkiewicz produced consistently brilliant works often grouped in series. The painting Dolls belongs to the Circus series populated by sad clowns, harlequins and rag dolls juxtaposed with gloomy and infantilised human faces. This composition is split into two distinct zones. The upper section depicts the interior of a bourgeoisie sitting room occupied by a group of bored, disinterested women. A black cat sits rests on one of their laps and a tea kettle sits on an end table. The room is steeped in an atmosphere of melancholy and decadence that was typical of the fin de siècle. The mood is somewhat reminiscent of the hazy women-filled interiors painted by French Symbolists associated with the Les Nabis school. It is possible that in this painting, the artist portrays the muses of the Young Poland movement – the ladies of the Pareński family, Eliza and her fetching daughters Zofia, Liza and Maryna, who was the object of Wojtkiewicz’s lone tragic love. The deeply-rooted friendship linking the artist with this unique Krakow family until his death left a considerable mark on his personality and creative output. In the lower section of the painting, we see the titular dolls, added by painting over the original lower part of the composition. Artificially animate, feigning mirth, unable to register feelings, they are likely a reflection of the five women depicted above. In his thoughts on this painting, Antoni Potocki [Antonee Pototzki] wrote, When the dolls come to life at the hand of Wojtkiewicz […] they appear to our eyes like his brittle, frail toys, struck with fate’s tragic curse […] They play out before us the painful pantomime of human affairs…

This artwork is in the public domain.

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