Art is always a mirror of the times, a reflection of the present, and a response to social issues. This is illustrated by the exhibition “Change to come”. The show features artists who live and work in Poland and focuses on their desire for social, political, and artistic change.
Criticism and “engagement” have been one of the key phenomenon in Polish art in recent decades. In view of the dynamic global upheavals, however, the exhibition does not limit itself to Poland, but raises fundamental questions about the relationship between art and society. In doing so, it emphasises the role of the artist as a witness to contemporary challenges and as an active agent of change.
In the exhibition, a dialogue is created between historical works of art and contemporary ones. The historical section presents key figures in Polish art of the twentieth century, their strategies and artistic practices, starting with the doctrine of socialist realism in the 1940s and 1950s, through the so-called “Small Stabilization” period in the 1960s and 1970s, down to the 1980s and the introduction of martial law. After the country regained its independence in the 1990s, “critical art” emerged.
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