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Figures

Magnificent 'Figures' sculpture by Magdalena Abakanowicz (1970). Textured clay forms evoke anonymity & contemplation. A unique contemporary art piece.

Magdalena Abakanowicz (1930-2017) was a Polish sculptor & fiber artist renowned for pioneering textile sculpture, large-scale installations, and exploring themes of anonymity, individuality, and the human condition. Her 'Abakans' revolutionized fiber

온라인 미리보기보다 훨씬 뛰어난 품질의 고해상도 디지털 이미지를 구매해 보세요.

각 파일은 사내 전문가가 고급 도구와 숙련된 수동 리터칭 기술을 사용하여 세심하게 준비합니다. 우리는 모든 이미지가 탁월한 선명도, 정확한 색상 재현력, 그리고 미세한 디테일까지 완벽하게 갖추도록 보장합니다.

최종 파일은 전문적인 편집 및 인쇄 환경에서 즉시 사용할 수 있도록 최적화되어 72시간 이내에 이메일로 발송됩니다. 이는 세계적인 디자인 스튜디오, 출판사 및 갤러리가 신뢰하는 것과 동일한 품질입니다.

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개인 소장 및 전시, 인쇄, 창작 프로젝트를 위한 고해상도 파일을 다운로드하세요. (프린트 구매 프린트 구매손으로 그린 그림 구매 손으로 그린 그림 구매)

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$ 24.90

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전문적인 도구와 색상 관리 시스템을 통해 디지털 이미지가 원본의 색상을 최대한 정확하게 구현하도록 보장합니다.

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이미지 3매 구매 시 10% 할인 - 5매 구매 시 15% 할인 - 10매 이상 구매 시 20% 할인. 크리에이티브 프로젝트, 갤러리, 에이전시에 매우 유용합니다.


작가 소개

The Weaver of Human Shadows: The Life and Legacy of Magdalena Abakanowicz

To encounter the work of Magdalena Abakanowicz is to step into a visceral landscape where the boundaries between organic matter and human emotion dissolve. Born Marta Magdalena Abakanowicz in 1930 in the quiet, noble estate of Falenty, Poland, her early life was shadowed by the profound traumas of the twentieth century. The Nazi occupation of her homeland during World War II was not merely a historical backdrop but a formative crucible; witnessing the resilience and resistance of her family instilled in her a lifelong preoccupation with the themes of survival, vulnerability, and the collective struggle of the human spirit. This early exposure to the fragility of existence would later manifest in sculptures that feel as though they are breathing, decaying, and enduring all at once.

Her artistic education took place within the rigid confines of the Academy of Fine Arts in Sopot and Warsaw during the 1950s, a period dominated by the suffocating aesthetic of Socialist Realism. This state-imposed doctrine demanded art that served as propaganda, yet Abakanowicz found a way to subvert these constraints through the medium of fiber. By turning away from the hard, didactic lines of traditional sculpture and toward the soft, tactile world of textiles, she began to develop a language that was entirely her own. She moved beyond the decorative, transforming woven strands into monumental, three-scale entities that challenged the very definition of what sculpture could be.

The Revolution of the Abakans

In the 1960s, Abakanowicz achieved international renown through the creation of her "abakans"—massive, organic forms crafted from interwoven jute and hessian. These were not mere tapestries hung upon a wall; they were woven forms that descended from ceilings like heavy, biological organisms. These works pioneered a new form of installation art, creating immersive environments that functioned as both objects and spaces. The texture of the coarse fibers, combined with their ambiguous, hollow shapes, evoked a sense of primordial life and existential dread. To walk among the abakans was to navigate a forest of textile shadows, reflecting the anxieties of a generation living under the watchful eye of communist surveillance.

As her career progressed into the 1970s, Abakanowicz’s focus shifted from the purely abstract toward the figurative, though never without maintaining her signature sense of ambiguity. She began to create fragmented, headless, and limb-less human forms that appeared as if they were emerging from—or being consumed by—the earth itself. These sculptures, often cast in bronze, wood, or clay, spoke to the loss of individuality within a mass society. Her ability to use materials like stone and metal to mimic the softness of flesh or the roughness of bark allowed her to explore the human condition with an unflinching, almost haunting honesty.

A Monumental Legacy

The significance of Abakanowicz’s contribution to contemporary art cannot be overstated. She bridged the gap between the traditional craft of weaving and the avant-garde movements of Postminimalism, proving that "soft" materials could carry the weight of profound political and philosophical inquiry. Her influence stretched far beyond the borders of Poland, as she served as a professor in Poznań and later as a visiting professor at UCLA, sharing her radical vision with a global audience.

Her achievements are marked by numerous prestigious accolades, including:

  • The Herder Prize (1979), recognizing her cultural impact.
  • The Leonardo da Vinci World Award of Arts (1999), celebrating her mastery of form.
  • The Lifetime Achievement Award from the International Sculpture Center (2005), cementing her status as a titan of the medium.

Today, her work remains a haunting presence in the world's most esteemed institutions, from the Tate Modern to the National Museum of Women in the Arts. Whether through the towering, hollowed-out figures of her public installations or the intimate, textured surfaces of her early textiles, Magdalena Abakanowicz continues to remind us of our shared capacity for both immense strength and profound fragility. She remains an artist who did not merely represent the human form, but captured its very essence—the struggle to remain whole in a world that seeks to fragment us.

magdalena abakanowicz

magdalena abakanowicz

1930 - 2017 , Poland

주요 정보

  • Artistic Movement Or Style: Constructivism & Socialist Realism
  • Artists Or Movements Influenced By This Artist: ['Contemporary Fiber Art']
  • Artists Who Influenced This Artist: ['Minimalism']
  • Date Of Birth: 20 June 1930
  • Date Of Death: 20 April 2017
  • Full Name: Marta Magdalena Abakanowicz
  • Nationality: Polish
  • Notable Artworks:
    • Agora
    • Birds of Knowledge
  • Place Of Birth: Falenty, Poland