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Stanisław Szukalski

Stanisław Szukalski (13 December 1893 – 19 May 1987) was a Polish sculptor and painter who became a part of the Chicago Renaissance.[1] Szukalski's art exhibits influence from ancient cultures such as Egyptian, Slavic, and Aztec combined with elements of art nouveau, from the various currents of early 20th century European modernism - cubism, expressionism, futurism and pre-Columbian art. During the 1920s, he was hailed as Poland's "greatest living artist". The style of his art was called "Bent Classicism".[2]

Stanisław Szukalski
Stanisław Szukalski in Kraków 1936.
Born(1893-12-13)13 December 1893
Died19 May 1987(1987-05-19) (aged 93)
NationalityPolish, American

He also developed the pseudoscientific-historical theory of Zermatism, positing that all human culture was derived from post-deluge Easter Island and that humankind was locked in an eternal struggle with the Sons of Yeti ("Yetinsyny"), the offspring of Yeti and humans.

Life edit

Between Poland and Chicago edit

 
Tooker Alley on map of March 2, 1921 in Chicago with "Szukalski" studio location across from the "Dill Pickle Club House and Chapel"

Szukalski was born in Warta, Congress Poland and was raised in Gidle. He arrived at New York with his mother, Konstancja, and sister, Alfreda, on June 27, 1907;[3] they then went to Chicago to join his father, Dyonizy Szukalski, a blacksmith.[4] A child prodigy in sculpture, he enrolled at age 13 at the Art Institute of Chicago.[5] A year later, Sculptor Antoni Popiel persuaded Szukalski's parents to send him back to Poland,[5] to enroll at Kraków's Academy of Fine Arts in 1910. There he studied sculpture under Konstanty Laszczka for three years.[5] He returned to Chicago in 1913.[6]

Back in the U.S., Szukalski joined the arts scene in Chicago,[1] becoming a vital part of the "Chicago Renaissance." In November 1914, he exhibited seven of his sculptures at the Annual Exhibition of American Oil Paintings and Sculpture in the Art Institute's galleries.[7] He had two solo exhibitions at the Art Institute, in 1916 and 1917, as well as one at the progressive Arts Club in 1919; he also exhibited regularly in the juried annuals at the Art Institute.[8] In 1922, he married Helen Walker, the artist daughter of Dr. Samuel J. Walker, a prominent member of Chicago society.[9]

Mickiewicz monument in Vilnius edit

The first design proposed for a monument of Adam Mickiewicz (a Polish poet, dramatist and political activist) to be built in the city of Vilnius, was promoted by Zbigniew Pronaszko of Vilnius University (then, Stefan Batory University in the Second Polish Republic). However, in May 1925, a contest was declared for the design of the monument.[10]: 53  The period for submitting designs was extended a number of times, with 67 designs ultimately submitted.[10]: 53  The jury consisted of Vilnius's municipal authorities and representatives of the arts scene, with General Lucjan Żeligowski at the helm.[10]: 54 

Szukalski won first prize in the contest. His design for the monument showed Mickiewicz, naked, lying upon a sacrificial altar. The sculpture was to be situated on a large pedestal in the shape of an Aztec pyramid.[10]: 55  A White Eagle, Poland's national symbol, was perched at the figure's side, where it symbolically drank blood from the poet's wound.[10]: 55 

Szukalski's design was highly divisive among Poland's intelligentsia, leadership, and art critics, as well as ordinary individuals.[10]: 56–66  The polarized atmosphere led the monument committee to arrange for a new contest, this time limited to concepts by artists who were invited to participate.[10]: 56–66  The winner was Henryk Kuna, whose proposal was then chosen to be built. However, due to a number of problems involving financing as well as a suitable location, the monument's construction dragged on.[10] With the outbreak of World War II and the incorporation of Vilnius into Lithuania, the project was abandoned.[10]: 56–66 

European travels edit

In 1925 Szukalski participated in the International Exhibition of Modern and Decorative Arts in Paris, where he won numerous awards. However, his success was criticized by the Polish press because Szukalski, representing Poland in the exhibition, did not even live in that country. On June 20, 1926, in Paris, Helen Walker Szukalski gave birth to Szukalski's only child, a daughter, Elżbieta Kalina (Kalinka) Szukalski.[11][12]

After traveling in Europe from 1926 to 1928, Szukalski went to Kraków, Poland, where he had a retrospective exhibition in 1929.[5] In 1929 he was a founder of an artistic movement called Tribe of the Horned Heart (Szczep Rogate Serce), centered on Polish artists who sought inspiration in the pagan or pre-Christian history of Poland.

In 1929, Szukalski published Projects in Design: Sculpture and Architecture, containing drawings that ranged from highly detailed ornamental architectural elements (fireplaces, doorways, and windows) to idealized city plans (bridges, tombstones, and monuments) befitting the heroes of Poland.[13] In 1932, he and Helen divorced.

Ben Hecht, who had met Szukalski in 1914, described Szukalski in his 1954 autobiography, A Child of the Century, "For twenty years my friend ... experienced disasters which would have killed off a dozen businessmen. Sickness, poverty and hunger nipped everlasting at his heels. ... during his struggles he heard only the catcalls of critics and the voices of derision. Yet when I saw him in 1934, I saw a man who had feasted on power and whose eyes smiled with triumph."[14]: 241–242 

In September 1934, in Hollywood, Szukalski married Joan Lee Donovan (b. 1910), who had been his daughter's kindergarten teacher in Chicago.[15]: 34  The wedding was at the home of screenwriter Wallace Smith, who was the best man.[16]

Return to Poland edit

In 1936, Szukalski returned to Poland, supported financially by the Minister of the Treasury. He completed several sculptures, most notably the monument of Bolesław Chrobry, and decorated the façade of the Silesian Museum in Katowice, as well as a local government building in that city.[5] Poland declared Szukalski the country's greatest living artist.[17]: 240  The government gave him a studio, the largest in Warsaw, and proclaimed it the Szukalski National Museum.[14]: 242  It contained many of his intricate paintings and massive sculptures, notable for their dramatic mythological imagery;[18] Szukalski had brought much of his lifetime work with him to Poland.[17]: 240 

During the siege of Warsaw by the German army in September 1939, Szukalski was hurt in the initial bombing attack on Warsaw, which destroyed much of his studio. With two suitcases, Szukalski and his wife took refuge in the US embassy, since both were American citizens. By early November they were among about 100 Americans remaining in Warsaw.[19] The two eventually escaped from Poland and were able to make their way back to the United States.

Szukalski had come to Poland with all his unsold works, encouraged by the prospect of building a museum devoted to his art;[5] he left almost all of his work in Poland. Most of what had not been lost in the bombing attacks was destroyed by the occupying Germans.

California edit

In 1940, Szukalski and his wife settled in Los Angeles. Szukalski did odd jobs in film studios, designing scenery; occasionally sculpted; and did drawings.

During the last years of his 75-year-long career Szukalski's major projects as a sculptor were Prometheus (1943), designed for Paris in homage to the French partisans; the Rooster of Gaul (1960), a gigantic and complex structure that he wanted the U.S. to give France to reciprocate for the Statue of Liberty;[5] Katyn (1979), a monument to commemorate the death of more than 20,000 Polish officers and intellectuals killed by the Soviets during World War II; and a monument intended for the city of Venice (1982), featuring the Polish pope John Paul II.[15]: 61  None of these projects went much further than Szukalski's immediate friends.

In 1971, Glenn Bray, a publisher who had previously specialized in the work of Mad Magazine artist Basil Wolverton, befriended Szukalski, and introduced many of his friends to Szukalski. Bray published a book of Szukalski's art and philosophy, A Trough Full of Pearls / Behold! The Protong, in 1980, and a second volume of his art, Inner Portraits, in 1982. Those books led others, including George DiCaprio, Leonardo DiCaprio's father, to contact Szukalski; Di Caprio immediately became a close friend of Szukalski and his wife.[4]

Szukalski's second wife, Joan, died in 1980.[18] Following Szukalski's death in 1987, a group of his admirers spread his ashes on Easter Island, in the rock quarry of Rano Raraku.

Zermatism and Protong edit

Beginning in 1940, Szukalski devoted most of his time to examining the mysteries of prehistoric ancient history of mankind, the formation and shaping of languages, faiths, customs, arts, and migration of peoples. He tried to unravel the origin of geographical names, gods, and symbols that have survived in various forms in various cultures. Through his research in these subjects, Szukalski claimed to have discovered Polish origins for various ancient places and people, in a language called Protong. According to Szukalski, Protong could be seen in phenomena ranging from the apparent Polish origins of Babylon to Jesus's Polish identity. The culmination of this work was a massive book called Protong (in Polish, Macimowa), its writing continued uninterruptedly for over 40 years. He wrote a manuscript of 42 volumes, totaling more than 25,000 pages, and including 14,000 illustrations.[4] The volumes covered a variety of issues; his pen drawings of artifacts, which he considered "witnesses", were done to confirm his theories.

Zermatism, Szukalski's concept of world history, postulated that all human culture derived from post-deluge Easter Islanders who settled in Zermatt (hence the name) and that in all human languages one could find traces of the original, ancient mother-tongue of mankind (one with archaic Polish origins). In his view, humanity was locked in an eternal struggle with the Sons of Yeti ("Yetinsyny"), the offspring of Yeti and humans, who had enslaved humanity from time immemorial. He claimed that the figures of the god Pan on Greek vases depict creatures that actually existed, the product of Yeti apes raping human women. Szukalski used his considerable artistic talents to illustrate his theories, which, despite their lack of scientific merit, have gained a cult following largely on their aesthetic value.

Artistic legacy edit

Bray and his wife Lena Zwalve maintain Szukalski's estate and the great bulk of his existing art under the name "Archives Szukalski." In 1990, they published The Lost Tune: Early Works (1913-1930), a collection of photographs taken by Szukalski of his own work in that period.[20]

Among Szukalski's admirers are Leonardo DiCaprio, who sponsored a retrospective exhibition entitled "Struggle" at the Laguna Art Museum in 2000;[6] the Church of the SubGenius, which incorporates the Yetinsyny elements of Zermatism;[21] Rick Griffin,[22] Richard Sharpe Shaver, Robert Williams, H. R. Giger[23] the band Tool[24] and Ernst Fuchs,[25] who said "Szukalski was the Michelangelo of the 20th century. And probably also of an age to come."[25]

Szukalski's works are on permanent display at the Polish Museum of America in Chicago. None of his work in Warsaw survived the destruction during WWII. In addition to the Laguna retrospective, notable exhibitions of his work include "The Self-Born" at Varnish Fine Art, San Francisco, in 2005, and "Mantong and Protong," where Szukalski is paired with another unorthodox theorist of earth history, Richard Sharpe Shaver, at Pasadena City College in 2009.

In 2018, Leonardo DiCaprio produced a documentary entitled Struggle: The Life and Lost Art of Szukalski,[6] which was released on Netflix as of December 21, 2018.[18]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Duffey, Bernard I. (1954). The Chicago renaissance in American letters: A critical history. Michigan State College Press.
  2. ^ Jen Rogers & Kerri Stephens. "Varnish Fine Art & Archives Szukalski". from the original on 9 January 2021. Retrieved 27 December 2020. Stanislav Szukalski (1893-1987) fused the movement and energy of Futurism, the emotion of Impressionism and the geometric configurations of Cubism into a single poetic form referred to as Bent Classicism.
  3. ^ See “List or Manifest of Alien Passengers for the United States Immigration Officer at Port of Arrival”, New York, June 27, 1907 (Ellis Island Foundation, http://www.ellisisland.org ); cited in ARCHIWUM EMIGRACJI, 2007 -https://www.bu.umk.pl/Archiwum_Emigracji/gazeta/ae_9.pdf (p. 171)
  4. ^ a b c Gliński, Mikołaj (16 May 2016). "Polishness as Religion: The Mystical Delirium of a Nationalist Artist". Culture.pl. Adam Mickiewicz Institute. from the original on 21 December 2018. Retrieved 26 December 2018.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Szubert, Piotr (February 2013). "Stanisław Szukalski". Culture.pl. Adam Mickiewicz Institute. from the original on 26 December 2018. Retrieved 26 December 2018.
  6. ^ a b c Hubert, Craig (December 19, 2018). "Who Is Stanislav Szukalski, the Obscure Artist Leonardo DiCaprio Is Trying to Make Famous?". Observer. from the original on May 25, 2019. Retrieved December 26, 2018.
  7. ^ ARCHIWUM EMIGRACJI, 2007 -https://www.bu.umk.pl/Archiwum_Emigracji/gazeta/ae_9.pdf (p. 172)
  8. ^ "Stanislaw Szukalski | Artists | Modernism in the New City: Chicago Artists, 1920-1950". www.chicagomodern.org. from the original on 19 December 2018. Retrieved 26 December 2018.
  9. ^ "Sculptor Wants Pig Farm; Szukalski Will Take His Bride to the Country to Make Money" (PDF). The New York Times. 30 May 1922. p. 22. (PDF) from the original on 27 June 2021. Retrieved 26 December 2018.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i Lameński, Lechosław (2007). Stach z Warty Szukalski i Szczep Rogate Serce. Lublin: Wydawnictwo KUL. ISBN 978-83-7363-554-8.
  11. ^ Slotbower, Laurie (31 Mar 1986). "Conversations: Kalinka Szukalska." Santa Cruz (CA) Sentinel.
  12. ^ Swissair flight 836 manifest (11 Oct 1961) for Kalinka S. Pierce, Ancestry.com
  13. ^ "Projects in Design: Sculpture and Architecture". Chronicle Books (reprint). from the original on 27 December 2018. Retrieved 26 December 2018.
  14. ^ a b Hecht, Ben (1954). A child of the Century. New York, New York: Simon and Schuster.
  15. ^ a b Szukalski, Stanisław (2000). Struggle : the art of Szukalski. Bray, Glenn., Laguna Art Museum (Laguna Beach, Calif.). San Francisco: Last Gasp. ISBN 9780867194791. OCLC 47196542.
  16. ^ "Sculptor Szukalski Weds". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Associated Press. 16 September 1934. from the original on 28 December 2018. Retrieved 27 December 2018.
  17. ^ a b The old guard and the avant-garde : modernism in Chicago, 1910-1940. Prince, Sue Ann., University of Chicago Press. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press. 1990. ISBN 0226430669. OCLC 1030550064.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  18. ^ a b c Kinsella, Eileen (December 20, 2018). "Why Leonardo DiCaprio and His Father Produced a New Netflix Film About an Obscure Polish Artist". artnet News. from the original on December 26, 2018. Retrieved December 26, 2018.
  19. ^ "Life Normal in Warsaw: 100 Americans are Unable to Leave Poland". newspaperarchive.com. Biddeford Daily Journal (Associated Press). 7 November 1939. p. 2. from the original on 28 December 2018. Retrieved 28 December 2018.
  20. ^ Szukalski, Stanisław (1990). The lost tune : early works (1913-1930) as photographed by the artist. Polish Museum of America (Chicago, Ill.) (1st ed.). Sylmar: Archives Szukalski. ISBN 0962623008. OCLC 22863279.
  21. ^ Szukalski: God King of the Kook Nation 5 June 2010 at the Wayback Machine – excerpt written by Rev. Ivan Stang from The Happy Mutant Handbook 25 August 2018 at the Wayback Machine
  22. ^ "The Rick Griffin Story". Rick Griffin Designs. from the original on 28 June 2021. Retrieved 22 December 2020.
  23. ^ "R.F. Paul. "Baphomet's Lament: An Interview with H.R. Giger". Esoterra: The Journal of Extreme Culture 9 (fall/winter 2000)
  24. ^ "The Official Tool Newsletter". from the original on 17 July 2011. Retrieved 16 May 2007.
  25. ^ a b Stanislaw Szukalski: The Master Who Fell Through the Cracks 14 March 2022 at the Wayback Machine, “When I saw the works of Szukalski. This was astonishing you know. What a sense of beauty and spiritual eroticism… Szukalski was the Michelangelo of the 20th century. And probably also of an age to come.” said Ernst Fuchs.

Further reading edit

  • Gambon, Blanche. “Stanislaw Szukalski: Painter, Sculptor, Architect, Philosopher.” The New American: A Monthly Digest of Polish-American Life and Culture, Chicago, September, 1935; Vol II, No. 10

External links edit

  • Szukalski.com – official website (English)
  • Polishness as Religion: The Mystical Delirium of a Nationalist Artist by Mikołaj Gliński at Culture.pl
  • Stanislav Szukalski: Reminiscences, Mukul Dey Archives

stanisław, szukalski, december, 1893, 1987, polish, sculptor, painter, became, part, chicago, renaissance, szukalski, exhibits, influence, from, ancient, cultures, such, egyptian, slavic, aztec, combined, with, elements, nouveau, from, various, currents, early. Stanislaw Szukalski 13 December 1893 19 May 1987 was a Polish sculptor and painter who became a part of the Chicago Renaissance 1 Szukalski s art exhibits influence from ancient cultures such as Egyptian Slavic and Aztec combined with elements of art nouveau from the various currents of early 20th century European modernism cubism expressionism futurism and pre Columbian art During the 1920s he was hailed as Poland s greatest living artist The style of his art was called Bent Classicism 2 Stanislaw SzukalskiStanislaw Szukalski in Krakow 1936 Born 1893 12 13 13 December 1893Warta Congress PolandDied19 May 1987 1987 05 19 aged 93 Burbank California U S NationalityPolish AmericanHe also developed the pseudoscientific historical theory of Zermatism positing that all human culture was derived from post deluge Easter Island and that humankind was locked in an eternal struggle with the Sons of Yeti Yetinsyny the offspring of Yeti and humans Contents 1 Life 1 1 Between Poland and Chicago 1 2 Mickiewicz monument in Vilnius 1 3 European travels 1 4 Return to Poland 1 5 California 2 Zermatism and Protong 3 Artistic legacy 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksLife editBetween Poland and Chicago edit nbsp Tooker Alley on map of March 2 1921 in Chicago with Szukalski studio location across from the Dill Pickle Club House and Chapel Szukalski was born in Warta Congress Poland and was raised in Gidle He arrived at New York with his mother Konstancja and sister Alfreda on June 27 1907 3 they then went to Chicago to join his father Dyonizy Szukalski a blacksmith 4 A child prodigy in sculpture he enrolled at age 13 at the Art Institute of Chicago 5 A year later Sculptor Antoni Popiel persuaded Szukalski s parents to send him back to Poland 5 to enroll at Krakow s Academy of Fine Arts in 1910 There he studied sculpture under Konstanty Laszczka for three years 5 He returned to Chicago in 1913 6 Back in the U S Szukalski joined the arts scene in Chicago 1 becoming a vital part of the Chicago Renaissance In November 1914 he exhibited seven of his sculptures at the Annual Exhibition of American Oil Paintings and Sculpture in the Art Institute s galleries 7 He had two solo exhibitions at the Art Institute in 1916 and 1917 as well as one at the progressive Arts Club in 1919 he also exhibited regularly in the juried annuals at the Art Institute 8 In 1922 he married Helen Walker the artist daughter of Dr Samuel J Walker a prominent member of Chicago society 9 Mickiewicz monument in Vilnius edit Main article Adam Mickiewicz Monument Vilnius The first design proposed for a monument of Adam Mickiewicz a Polish poet dramatist and political activist to be built in the city of Vilnius was promoted by Zbigniew Pronaszko of Vilnius University then Stefan Batory University in the Second Polish Republic However in May 1925 a contest was declared for the design of the monument 10 53 The period for submitting designs was extended a number of times with 67 designs ultimately submitted 10 53 The jury consisted of Vilnius s municipal authorities and representatives of the arts scene with General Lucjan Zeligowski at the helm 10 54 Szukalski won first prize in the contest His design for the monument showed Mickiewicz naked lying upon a sacrificial altar The sculpture was to be situated on a large pedestal in the shape of an Aztec pyramid 10 55 A White Eagle Poland s national symbol was perched at the figure s side where it symbolically drank blood from the poet s wound 10 55 Szukalski s design was highly divisive among Poland s intelligentsia leadership and art critics as well as ordinary individuals 10 56 66 The polarized atmosphere led the monument committee to arrange for a new contest this time limited to concepts by artists who were invited to participate 10 56 66 The winner was Henryk Kuna whose proposal was then chosen to be built However due to a number of problems involving financing as well as a suitable location the monument s construction dragged on 10 With the outbreak of World War II and the incorporation of Vilnius into Lithuania the project was abandoned 10 56 66 European travels edit In 1925 Szukalski participated in the International Exhibition of Modern and Decorative Arts in Paris where he won numerous awards However his success was criticized by the Polish press because Szukalski representing Poland in the exhibition did not even live in that country On June 20 1926 in Paris Helen Walker Szukalski gave birth to Szukalski s only child a daughter Elzbieta Kalina Kalinka Szukalski 11 12 After traveling in Europe from 1926 to 1928 Szukalski went to Krakow Poland where he had a retrospective exhibition in 1929 5 In 1929 he was a founder of an artistic movement called Tribe of the Horned Heart Szczep Rogate Serce centered on Polish artists who sought inspiration in the pagan or pre Christian history of Poland In 1929 Szukalski published Projects in Design Sculpture and Architecture containing drawings that ranged from highly detailed ornamental architectural elements fireplaces doorways and windows to idealized city plans bridges tombstones and monuments befitting the heroes of Poland 13 In 1932 he and Helen divorced Ben Hecht who had met Szukalski in 1914 described Szukalski in his 1954 autobiography A Child of the Century For twenty years my friend experienced disasters which would have killed off a dozen businessmen Sickness poverty and hunger nipped everlasting at his heels during his struggles he heard only the catcalls of critics and the voices of derision Yet when I saw him in 1934 I saw a man who had feasted on power and whose eyes smiled with triumph 14 241 242 In September 1934 in Hollywood Szukalski married Joan Lee Donovan b 1910 who had been his daughter s kindergarten teacher in Chicago 15 34 The wedding was at the home of screenwriter Wallace Smith who was the best man 16 Return to Poland edit In 1936 Szukalski returned to Poland supported financially by the Minister of the Treasury He completed several sculptures most notably the monument of Boleslaw Chrobry and decorated the facade of the Silesian Museum in Katowice as well as a local government building in that city 5 Poland declared Szukalski the country s greatest living artist 17 240 The government gave him a studio the largest in Warsaw and proclaimed it the Szukalski National Museum 14 242 It contained many of his intricate paintings and massive sculptures notable for their dramatic mythological imagery 18 Szukalski had brought much of his lifetime work with him to Poland 17 240 During the siege of Warsaw by the German army in September 1939 Szukalski was hurt in the initial bombing attack on Warsaw which destroyed much of his studio With two suitcases Szukalski and his wife took refuge in the US embassy since both were American citizens By early November they were among about 100 Americans remaining in Warsaw 19 The two eventually escaped from Poland and were able to make their way back to the United States Szukalski had come to Poland with all his unsold works encouraged by the prospect of building a museum devoted to his art 5 he left almost all of his work in Poland Most of what had not been lost in the bombing attacks was destroyed by the occupying Germans California edit In 1940 Szukalski and his wife settled in Los Angeles Szukalski did odd jobs in film studios designing scenery occasionally sculpted and did drawings During the last years of his 75 year long career Szukalski s major projects as a sculptor were Prometheus 1943 designed for Paris in homage to the French partisans the Rooster of Gaul 1960 a gigantic and complex structure that he wanted the U S to give France to reciprocate for the Statue of Liberty 5 Katyn 1979 a monument to commemorate the death of more than 20 000 Polish officers and intellectuals killed by the Soviets during World War II and a monument intended for the city of Venice 1982 featuring the Polish pope John Paul II 15 61 None of these projects went much further than Szukalski s immediate friends In 1971 Glenn Bray a publisher who had previously specialized in the work of Mad Magazine artist Basil Wolverton befriended Szukalski and introduced many of his friends to Szukalski Bray published a book of Szukalski s art and philosophy A Trough Full of Pearls Behold The Protong in 1980 and a second volume of his art Inner Portraits in 1982 Those books led others including George DiCaprio Leonardo DiCaprio s father to contact Szukalski Di Caprio immediately became a close friend of Szukalski and his wife 4 Szukalski s second wife Joan died in 1980 18 Following Szukalski s death in 1987 a group of his admirers spread his ashes on Easter Island in the rock quarry of Rano Raraku nbsp Gordon Bennett Cup from 1936 nbsp Eagle of Szukalski on the Building of Disabled Offices in Katowice 1938 1939 bas relief was destroyed during World War II nbsp Ink drawing of unidentified sitterZermatism and Protong editBeginning in 1940 Szukalski devoted most of his time to examining the mysteries of prehistoric ancient history of mankind the formation and shaping of languages faiths customs arts and migration of peoples He tried to unravel the origin of geographical names gods and symbols that have survived in various forms in various cultures Through his research in these subjects Szukalski claimed to have discovered Polish origins for various ancient places and people in a language called Protong According to Szukalski Protong could be seen in phenomena ranging from the apparent Polish origins of Babylon to Jesus s Polish identity The culmination of this work was a massive book called Protong in Polish Macimowa its writing continued uninterruptedly for over 40 years He wrote a manuscript of 42 volumes totaling more than 25 000 pages and including 14 000 illustrations 4 The volumes covered a variety of issues his pen drawings of artifacts which he considered witnesses were done to confirm his theories Zermatism Szukalski s concept of world history postulated that all human culture derived from post deluge Easter Islanders who settled in Zermatt hence the name and that in all human languages one could find traces of the original ancient mother tongue of mankind one with archaic Polish origins In his view humanity was locked in an eternal struggle with the Sons of Yeti Yetinsyny the offspring of Yeti and humans who had enslaved humanity from time immemorial He claimed that the figures of the god Pan on Greek vases depict creatures that actually existed the product of Yeti apes raping human women Szukalski used his considerable artistic talents to illustrate his theories which despite their lack of scientific merit have gained a cult following largely on their aesthetic value Artistic legacy editBray and his wife Lena Zwalve maintain Szukalski s estate and the great bulk of his existing art under the name Archives Szukalski In 1990 they published The Lost Tune Early Works 1913 1930 a collection of photographs taken by Szukalski of his own work in that period 20 Among Szukalski s admirers are Leonardo DiCaprio who sponsored a retrospective exhibition entitled Struggle at the Laguna Art Museum in 2000 6 the Church of the SubGenius which incorporates the Yetinsyny elements of Zermatism 21 Rick Griffin 22 Richard Sharpe Shaver Robert Williams H R Giger 23 the band Tool 24 and Ernst Fuchs 25 who said Szukalski was the Michelangelo of the 20th century And probably also of an age to come 25 Szukalski s works are on permanent display at the Polish Museum of America in Chicago None of his work in Warsaw survived the destruction during WWII In addition to the Laguna retrospective notable exhibitions of his work include The Self Born at Varnish Fine Art San Francisco in 2005 and Mantong and Protong where Szukalski is paired with another unorthodox theorist of earth history Richard Sharpe Shaver at Pasadena City College in 2009 In 2018 Leonardo DiCaprio produced a documentary entitled Struggle The Life and Lost Art of Szukalski 6 which was released on Netflix as of December 21 2018 18 References edit a b Duffey Bernard I 1954 The Chicago renaissance in American letters A critical history Michigan State College Press Jen Rogers amp Kerri Stephens Varnish Fine Art amp Archives Szukalski Archived from the original on 9 January 2021 Retrieved 27 December 2020 Stanislav Szukalski 1893 1987 fused the movement and energy of Futurism the emotion of Impressionism and the geometric configurations of Cubism into a single poetic form referred to as Bent Classicism See List or Manifest of Alien Passengers for the United States Immigration Officer at Port of Arrival New York June 27 1907 Ellis Island Foundation http www ellisisland org cited in ARCHIWUM EMIGRACJI 2007 https www bu umk pl Archiwum Emigracji gazeta ae 9 pdf p 171 a b c Glinski Mikolaj 16 May 2016 Polishness as Religion The Mystical Delirium of a Nationalist Artist Culture pl Adam Mickiewicz Institute Archived from the original on 21 December 2018 Retrieved 26 December 2018 a b c d e f g Szubert Piotr February 2013 Stanislaw Szukalski Culture pl Adam Mickiewicz Institute Archived from the original on 26 December 2018 Retrieved 26 December 2018 a b c Hubert Craig December 19 2018 Who Is Stanislav Szukalski the Obscure Artist Leonardo DiCaprio Is Trying to Make Famous Observer Archived from the original on May 25 2019 Retrieved December 26 2018 ARCHIWUM EMIGRACJI 2007 https www bu umk pl Archiwum Emigracji gazeta ae 9 pdf p 172 Stanislaw Szukalski Artists Modernism in the New City Chicago Artists 1920 1950 www chicagomodern org Archived from the original on 19 December 2018 Retrieved 26 December 2018 Sculptor Wants Pig Farm Szukalski Will Take His Bride to the Country to Make Money PDF The New York Times 30 May 1922 p 22 Archived PDF from the original on 27 June 2021 Retrieved 26 December 2018 a b c d e f g h i Lamenski Lechoslaw 2007 Stach z Warty Szukalski i Szczep Rogate Serce Lublin Wydawnictwo KUL ISBN 978 83 7363 554 8 Slotbower Laurie 31 Mar 1986 Conversations Kalinka Szukalska Santa Cruz CA Sentinel Swissair flight 836 manifest 11 Oct 1961 for Kalinka S Pierce Ancestry com Projects in Design Sculpture and Architecture Chronicle Books reprint Archived from the original on 27 December 2018 Retrieved 26 December 2018 a b Hecht Ben 1954 A child of the Century New York New York Simon and Schuster a b Szukalski Stanislaw 2000 Struggle the art of Szukalski Bray Glenn Laguna Art Museum Laguna Beach Calif San Francisco Last Gasp ISBN 9780867194791 OCLC 47196542 Sculptor Szukalski Weds St Louis Post Dispatch Associated Press 16 September 1934 Archived from the original on 28 December 2018 Retrieved 27 December 2018 a b The old guard and the avant garde modernism in Chicago 1910 1940 Prince Sue Ann University of Chicago Press Chicago The University of Chicago Press 1990 ISBN 0226430669 OCLC 1030550064 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link a b c Kinsella Eileen December 20 2018 Why Leonardo DiCaprio and His Father Produced a New Netflix Film About an Obscure Polish Artist artnet News Archived from the original on December 26 2018 Retrieved December 26 2018 Life Normal in Warsaw 100 Americans are Unable to Leave Poland newspaperarchive com Biddeford Daily Journal Associated Press 7 November 1939 p 2 Archived from the original on 28 December 2018 Retrieved 28 December 2018 Szukalski Stanislaw 1990 The lost tune early works 1913 1930 as photographed by the artist Polish Museum of America Chicago Ill 1st ed Sylmar Archives Szukalski ISBN 0962623008 OCLC 22863279 Szukalski God King of the Kook Nation Archived 5 June 2010 at the Wayback Machine excerpt written by Rev Ivan Stang from The Happy Mutant Handbook Archived 25 August 2018 at the Wayback Machine The Rick Griffin Story Rick Griffin Designs Archived from the original on 28 June 2021 Retrieved 22 December 2020 R F Paul Baphomet s Lament An Interview with H R Giger Esoterra The Journal of Extreme Culture 9 fall winter 2000 The Official Tool Newsletter Archived from the original on 17 July 2011 Retrieved 16 May 2007 a b Stanislaw Szukalski The Master Who Fell Through the Cracks Archived 14 March 2022 at the Wayback Machine When I saw the works of Szukalski This was astonishing you know What a sense of beauty and spiritual eroticism Szukalski was the Michelangelo of the 20th century And probably also of an age to come said Ernst Fuchs Further reading editGambon Blanche Stanislaw Szukalski Painter Sculptor Architect Philosopher The New American A Monthly Digest of Polish American Life and Culture Chicago September 1935 Vol II No 10External links editSzukalski com official website English Polishness as Religion The Mystical Delirium of a Nationalist Artist by Mikolaj Glinski at Culture pl Stanislav Szukalski Reminiscences Mukul Dey Archives Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stanislaw Szukalski amp oldid 1173975924, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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