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Starowieyski: Stammerings of the Human Soul
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15918 |
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Section : |
THE ARTS
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| Issue
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7 / 1989 |
2,490 Words |
| Author
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Frank Fox Frank Fox is a professor of east European history who
specializes in the history and art of Poland in the twentieth
century.
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Francizek Staroweiyski watched me with amusement as I struggled with the Polish spelling of the line he had just quoted from Dante's Inferno. He finally turned my interview notes around and printed neatly: "Come with me and I shall lead you to the wonders of a nonexistent place." It seemed as natural as if he were giving me his address.
I had come to Poland to interview this enfant terrible of the Polish art world. At fifty-nine, he is still referred to with that phrase--proof of his continuing capacity to shock the viewing public. But age and time are relative dimensions for him. Not the least of his idiosyncratic habits is that he subtracts three hundred years when dating his works, so that his current posters and paintings are signed as of 1689. This not only testifies to his love for the Baroque but suggests a defiant struggle with time. It is also, to be sure, an embrace of the past in a land robbed of its history. His work is a time capsule meant to confound its finders.
Warsaw seemed to be coated with more than its usual chalky grayness, not unlike the shade often favored by Starowieyski. But we were far from the city's grime in his suburban twelfth-floor studio, where strong daylight illuminated his famous collection of carved and scarred saints, cherubs, chalices, crucifixes, clocks, locks, and sabers--many sabers. It was as if one had entered a cathedral armory, an artist's reliquary, where time and place merged in studied disarray.
Starowieyski the painter, poster artist, stage designer, television producer, film actor (he portrayed Jacques-Louis David in Andrzej Wajda's Danton) was eager to tell me about his recent work. The
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