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2002 | 74 | 119-130

Article title

Ikonografia śmierci w polskim malarstwie fantazji i baśni w wieku XIX

Content

Title variants

EN
The Iconography of Death in Polish Nineteenth-Century Painting of Fantasy and Fairy Tales

Languages of publication

Abstracts

EN
The trend of fantasy art originating from the interest of the ethnographical and historical researches as well as from the studies of religious and archaeology came into existence in Poland in the 1840s and 1850s. There were few Polish artists who dealt with the fantasy art; Ignacy Gierdzicjewski, Artur Grottger and Witold Pruszkowski are among the most important ones. The works of the fantasy trend discussed problems of the life and the death, the here after life, demons, fairy-tales, and folktales. In the fantasy paintings some typical for the romantic iconography cemetery motives such as skulls, crossbones, sepulchral crosses and ruins of castles are present. Gierdzicjewski was painting gloomy, demonical, hallucinatory visions of the Mazovian’s plains, haunted by the suffering souls. Pruszkowski’s fantasy paintings were full of realism, firmly connected with the reality, in such a manner that the nightmarish scenes seemed to be eternally included into human’s existence. Grottger was linking up fantasy events and the ones connected with the fights for national independence, wars, and misery of life in the subjugated motherland. The fantasy art used iconographic motives coming from far religious traditions, pagan, popular beliefs, fairy-tales and myths.

Keywords

Year

Volume

74

Pages

119-130

Physical description

Dates

published
2002

Contributors

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

Biblioteka Nauki
16539247

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.ojs-issn-0208-6050-year-2002-issue-74-article-3bb37119-64eb-31b2-819b-02ddb2f16c6a
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