VITKAC DS is a place identified not only with perfectly selected fashion,
but also with pioneering and art. The name of the department store was
chosen to commemorate the most eccentric of Polish artists, Stanisław
Ignacy Witkiewicz, who lived for part of his life at 23 Bracka St. It was
his work that inspired a collaboration that is unusual on the Polish
market - VITKAC x National Museum in Warsaw.
Present at Warsaw's National Museum until October 9, the exhibition
Witkacy. Seismograph of the Age of Acceleration features more
than 500 works by Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz, one of the most outstanding
artists of the 20th century. The collection of paintings, drawings,
pastels and photographs allows a new and more complete reading and
understanding of the artist's work, shrouded in mystery. This unique
accessibility of the works became the starting point for launching a
project in cooperation with the Museum, during which we were guided by the
desire to transfer the situations, emotions and appeal of the characters
of Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz's works to our models. The results of the
cooperation can be admired in the photo session and video material.
The first frame, is a shot during which the models were stylized in
the likeness of the characters of the
Double Portrait of Helena Lisinska and Jan Gadomski painted
in 1939. A similar character is assumed by the second photograph,
which takes us to one of the many portraits of Leon Reynel presented
at the exhibition.
Witkiewicz's works are also a kind of documentation of the everyday
fashion of the interwar period. In the portraits we can see mainly white
silk or cotton blouses with collars, summer dresses and geometric
patterns, as well as men's suits and outer garments. Following this
pattern, VITKAC's interpretation of Witkiewicz's works presents styles set
in the interwar period trend, built on the basis of top designers'
collections for the fall-winter 2022 season available at VITKAC DS and on
vitkac.com.
"Witkacy loved art and he loved women." [source: the portal Niezła Sztuka]
That's why, in opposition to the reticence of Jadwiga Witkiewicz, the
artist's wife, a woman in an avant-garde colorful fur coat flashes by in a
humorous shot under a painting from the collection of Szczecin's
Pomeranian Bookstore.
The artist has always been intrigued by women's superficiality and
personality. The metaphorical multidimensionality of his female
characters can be seen in one of the frames.
In the next shot, Portrait of Julian Tuwim
played like a "real character," creating a close relationship with the
model.
It is not without reason that a series of portraits characterized by
emotion became part of the session.
"Witkacy was very fond of being photographed and made all sorts of
faces." [source: portal Niezła Sztuka]. The artist happened to create during
drug sessions. As he himself admitted, sometimes intensified visionary
experiences allowed him to create his best works. This fact became the
starting point for the video, which at times takes on a psychedelic
character.