The tradition of the visual has often overlapped with the inexpressible, and the confrontation was sealed by the “anarrative” modernist art.
The title of the exhibition, which in Polish triggers association with dumbness or infant babble, refers to Tadeusz Miciński’s esoteric work from 1910 – Nietota. The Mystic Book of the Tatra Mountains. The author used a word which commonly described lepidodendrons, an extinct genus of tree-like plants from 300 million years ago. As folk superstition had it, especially in the Carpathian Mountains, they possessed magical powers.
However, it is difficult to explain Miciński’s motivations when using the tradition of witchcraft in his visionary novel. Given the author’s personality, whose literary rendition can be found in one of the novels by Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz, he was not driven solely by ethnographic fascinations. The use of the neologism in the title of the book referred to a state of “non-sense” and infirmity, and to the habit of not using proper names, which is reflected in the strong belief in sympathetic magic, and indirectly – in the supernatural power of representation.
As the French philosopher and sociologist Edgar Morin claimed, in the old days there was no distinction between technology, magic, religion and art. While drawing on the relationship between art and the inexpressible, and the connections between artistic and magical practices, the exhibition simultaneously raises the problem of the persecution of antisocial individuals, and indirectly – the aestheticisation of violence, which is present in the theatre-like setting of witch trials.
The belief in the existence of secret knowledge and invisible powers is still widespread, irrespective of the technological advancement of civilisation. By modelling and representing reality, transmuting matter, the mystic aspect of the abstract, the performative character of gesture and the intertwining of mimesis and hermetic symbolism, the artistic practice penetrates many spheres of human spirituality.
The exhibition will feature paintings, videos, objects and installations referring to the visual aspect of hermetic and mystical practices.
Artists:
Paweł Baśnik
Olaf Brzeski
Łukasz Huculak
Robert Kuśmirowski
Marcin Łuczkowski
Maess
Kamil Moskowczenko
Łukasz Patelczyk
Laura Pawela,
Hubert Pokrandt
Alex Urban
Małgorzata Wielek-M
The exhibition NIETOTA (THE WHAT-IS-NOT) is accompanied by publication
With texts by: Łukasz Huculak, Joanna Kilian-Michieletti, Marian Pilot, Kazimiera Szczuka
Curator – Łukasz Huculak
Coordinator – Danka Milewska
Start 09.11.2018, 6 pm
20 Gdańska St.
End 05.01.2019