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In a graveyard

Popularization note

The oeuvre of Witold Wojtkiewicz (1879-1909), considered one of the most important representatives of Symbolism and Expressionism in Polish painting, is one of the most original phenomena in the art of Young Poland. The artist studied at the Warsaw Drawing School and at the Academy of Fine Arts in Krakow in the ateliers of Leon Wyczółkowski and Józef Pankiewicz. He belonged to the artistic bohemia of Krakow and was associated with the environment of the Zielony Balonik (Green Balloon) cabaret. His paintings caught the attention of the writer André Gide and the painter Maurice Denis, thanks to whom the artist was able to organize a solo exhibition at the Galerie Druet in Paris in 1907.

Wojtkiewicz's art introduces the viewer into a world of grotesque-lyrical poetics that invokes the imagination, dreams, and a deformed reality populated with figures that symbolize the pain of existence, existential fears and obsessions. The composition At the Cemetery is a field of reflective deliberations, typical of Young Poland artists, associated with the idea of overwhelming evil, unhappiness, meaninglessness of life, transience and suffering. They are characteristic of the decadent mood of the era, which is aptly described by Kazimierz Przerwa-Tetmajer in one of the poems of the “Zamyślenia” [“Thoughts”] cycle:

Melancholy, longing, sadness, discouragement

Are the contents of my soul... With broken wings

My thoughts, instead of piercing the air,

Wander like weary cranes on the ground.

The composition, created a year before the untimely death of the artist suffering from an incurable disease of which he was fully aware, bears traits of authentic tragedy. The drawing depicts a figure in the scenery of a cemetery. Her pose reveals a sense of helplessness of a man plunged into despair. A narrow frame, restricting the composition to a fragment of nature represented by a forest landscape and crumbling tombstones, intensifies the atmosphere of gloom and anxiety. They become a symbol of the inevitability of fate and the drama of loneliness.

Anna Hałata

Information about the object

Information about this object

Author / creator

Wojtkiewicz, Witold (1879-1909) (cartoonist)

Dimensions

cały obiekt: height: 21 cm, width: 18 cm

Object type

drawing

Technique

feather drawing

Material

paper, cardboard, ink

Creation time / dating

1908

Creation / finding place

powstanie: Kraków (Lesser Poland Voivodeship)

Owner

The National Museum in Lublin

Identification number

S/G/1717/ML

Location / status

object is not displayed now

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