Wilhelm Sasnal
Wilhelm Sasnal (born December 29, 1972) is a Polish painter, photographer, and filmmaker. Sasnal received his diploma of painting in 1999 from the Academy of Fine Arts in Kraków.
Early life and career
Wilhelm Sasnal was born in Tarnów, Poland, in 1972. He studied architecture for two years at the Polytechnic, Kraków, beginning in 1992, and then became a painting student at the Akademia Sztuk Pięknych w Krakowie, Poland. While there, he helped form an artist's collective that exhibited together as the Ładnie Group until 2000. Ironically named after the Polish word meaning "pretty" or "nice," the members made paintings of their contemporary, often banal surroundings, using a deskilled aesthetic that countered the style valued by their instructors. Sasnal finished his studies in 1999, and then worked briefly for advertising companies in Kraków while also making paintings, graphic novels (his strips are regularly published in "Machina" and "Przekroj", two Polish periodicals), photographs, and films.[1]
Work
Sasnal produces pencil drawings, ink drawings, photographs, videos and paintings. In his art he employs a variety of media and cultivates a non-uniform practice.
Sasnal is primarily a painter. He paints a wide variety of subjects: More or less banal everyday objects, portraits of historical figures, views of his home town Cracow, snapshots of friends and family members and very often existing images from the internet or mass media are his starting point. Other sources include Art Spiegelman's 1973 graphic Holocaust novel Maus, and stills from Claude Lanzmann's 1985 documentary Shoah as source material.[2] Even if, over the years, one can make out a number of overarching themes, there are always new paintings that shift the emphases and connections once again. The same is true of his painting style. His approach is unpredictable and his methods range from graphic reduction and a pointedly two-dimensional, illustration-oriented style to seemingly autonomous gestures with brush and paint. Like Neo Rauch, however, Sasnal makes the grip of the Communist era on the post-Communist imagination his subject.[3]
While painting is still at the centre of Sasnal’s work, he has also increasingly turned to photography and film in recent years. The video work The Band (2002) was made during a live performance of indie rock band Sonic Youth. A 2007 piece is a product many times removed from the 1961 Polish movie on which it is based – a fictionalized account of a historical event in which a railway worker accidentally sold industrial methyl alcohol as vodka, causing widespread illness, blindness and death.[4] The 16-mm film projection Untitled (2007) is based on found-footage from the late 1970s of Elvis Presley.[5] Swiniopas (Swineherd) (2008), his first ever feature-length film, is an adaptation of an 1842 Hans Christian Andersen fairytale of the same name yet radically deviates from the original. Shot in black and white, Sasnal’s version is set in bleak, rural Poland. It concerns a swineherd who smuggles letters back and forth between a farmer’s daughter and her lesbian lover.[6] Also in 2008, Sasnal caused controversy in Scotland with his film The Other Church, which focused on the brutal murder of the Polish student Angelika Kluk in Glasgow.[7]
In September 2011, Sasnal selected a playlist of music that inspires him in his work. "I always listen to music when I make art. I do about 30 minutes of work and then have a break between records. The link is that they are all very simple songs, classical in structure – from Elvis Presley to Slayer – and that’s what I like about them. Some of them ended up in my films."[8]
Selected exhibitions
Solo Exhibitions
2011
Wilhelm Sasnal, Whitechapel Gallery, London, England
2009
Hauser & Wirth, Zurich, Switzerland
Centro de Arte Contemporanea, Malaga, Spain
Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen K21, Düsseldorf, Germany
Sadie Coles HQ, London, England
2008
Wilhelm Sasnal. Lata walki / Years of Struggle, Galleria Civica di Arte Contemporanea, Trento, Italy (Travelling Exhibition)
2007
Wilhelm Sasnal. Lata walki / Years of Struggle, Zachęta National Gallery of Art, Warsaw, Poland (Travelling Exhibition)
Wilhelm Sasnal. Untitled, Swiss Institute, New York, New York, United States
Hauser & Wirth, Zurich, Switzerland
Boredom, Johnen Galerie, Berlin, Germany
2006
Douglas Hyde Gallery, Dublin, Ireland
Sadie Coles HQ, London, UK
At the very Center of Attention, Part 10: Wilhelm Sasnal, Center of Contemporary Art Ujazdowski Castle, Warsaw, Poland
Foksal Gallery Foundation, Warsaw, Poland
Wilhelm Sasnal. Painting and Films, Van Abbe Museum, Eindhoven, Netherlands
Ist das Leben nicht schön? Gruppenaustellung in 4 Kapiteln, Kapitel 2: Wilhelm Sasnal, Kunstverein Frankfurt, Germany
2005
Matrix 219, UC Berkeley Art Museum & Pacific Film Archive, Berkeley CA, USA
Anton Kern Gallery, New York NY, USA
Wilhelm SAsnal. Chinati Artist in Residence, The Locker Plant, Marfa TX, USA
2004
The Band, Hauser & Wirth, Zurich, Switzerland
Camden Arts Centre, London, UK
Galerie Rüdiger Schöttle, Munich, Germany
ZAWA SROD, Galerie Johnen und Schöttle, Cologne, Germany
Map Trap, Galerie Raster, Warsaw, Poland
2003
Kunstverein Münster, Germany
Kunsthalle Zürich, Switzerland
Sadie Coles HQ, London, UK
Wilhelm Sasnal - Monika Sosnowska, Galleria Laura Pecci, Milan, Italy
Anton Kern Gallery, New York NY, USA
Interventions: Wilhelm Sasnal, Museum van Hedendaagsekunst, Antwerp, Belgium
WISLA, Sommer Contemporary Art, Tel Aviv, Israel
2002
Galerie Johnen und Schöttle, Cologne, Germany
Foksal Gallery Foundation, Warsaw, Poland
Parel, Amsterdam, Netherlands
BWA Gallery, Zielona Gora, Poland
2001
Cars and Men, Foksal Gallery Foundation, Warsaw, Poland
Everyday Life in Poland between 1999 and 2001, Foksal Gallery Foundation, Warsaw, Poland
2000
Board Game, Galeria Potocka, Cracow, Poland
1999
The Hundred Pieces, Galeria Zderzak, Cracow, Poland
The Crowd, billboards of Galleria Otwarta, Cracow, Poland
Painting, CCA Ujadowski Castle, Warsaw, Poland
Group Exhibitions
2009
Abstraction + Warhol, Woxart, Prague, Czech Republic
Something Else!!! Selected Works from the Collection of the SMAK, Gent, Museo d' Arte Provincia di Nuoro, Nuoro, Italy
Invasion of Sound. Music and the Visual Arts, Zachęta National Gallery of Art, Warsaw, Poland
Collections
Sasnal's art work is in collections of such institutions as Guggenheim Saatchi Gallery and Tate Modern in London and Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw.
Recognition
He is the 2006 winner of the Vincent van Gogh Biennial Award for Contemporary Art in Europe 2006.[9]
Art market
Records for his works were set at Phillips de Pury & Company in March 2006 and at Christie’s (New York) Post-War and Contemporary Art sale in May 2007.
Further reading
- Dominic Eichler, Joerg Heiser and Andrzei Przywara, Wilhelm Sasnal, Phaidon Press, 2011, ISBN 0-7148-6079-4
- Heynen, Julian (ed.), Wilhelm Sasnal, Munich: Prestel Verlag, 2009
- Nomination for the Vincent Award, by Beatrix Ruf, director of the Kunsthalle Zürich
- Michael Zeeman, The Vincent Van Gogh Award for Contemporary Art in Europe, Veenman Publishers (2006), ISBN 90-8690-031-3
- Wilhelm Sasnal, Wilhelm Sasnal: Paintings & Films, Veenman Publishers (2006), ISBN 90-8690-004-6
- Carina Plath and Beatrix Ruf (ed.), Wilhelm Sasnal. Night Day Night, Ostfildern-Ruit: Hatje Cantz Verlag, 2003
Notes
- ↑ Wilhelm Sasnal Guggenheim Collection.
- ↑ Adrian Searle (October 18, 2011), Wilhelm Sasnal – Whitechapel Gallery The Guardian.
- ↑ Roberta Smith (April 6, 2007), Wilhelm Sasnal New York Times
- ↑ Claire Gilman (June 2007), Wilhelm Sasnal Frieze.
- ↑ Wilhelm Sasnal, June 10 – July 28, 2007 Hauser & Wirth, Zürich.
- ↑ Wilhelm Sasnal, October 31 – December 19, 2009 Hauser & Wirth, Zürich.
- ↑ Jessica Lack (July 8, 2009), Artist of the week 48: Wilhelm Sasnal The Guardian.
- ↑ Wilhelm Sasnal chooses music that inspires him in his work. Phaidon.com, September 2011.
- ↑ Vincent Award
Contributions
2008 Life on Mars, the 2008 Carnegie International
External links
- Wilhelm Sasnal – Anton Kern Gallery
- The Saatchi Gallery; About Wilhelm Sasnal and his art Additional information on Wilhelm Sasnal including artworks, text panels, articles, and full biography
- Wilhelm Sasnal at Culture.pl
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