The forgotten man of letters and acclaimed graphic artist Feliks Jabłczyński (1865-1928) led an experimental life and became part of the Warsaw legend. He discreetly contested bourgeois manners and morals as well as the rules of prose and the pursuit of the arts. From the perspective of a century he appears to have been a precursor of Polish artistic miserabilism, a fully conscious creator of the aesthetics of recycling in the spirit of Leśmian (whom he befriended), Witkacy, Schulz, Jonasz Stern, Kantor, Białoszewski and Hasior.
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