fbpx
Wikipedia

Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz

Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz (Polish: [staˈɲiswaf iɡˈnatsɨ vʲitˈkʲɛvʲitʂ]; 24 February 1885 – 18 September 1939), commonly known as Witkacy, was a Polish writer, painter, philosopher, theorist, playwright, novelist, and photographer active before World War I and during the interwar period.

Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz
Born(1885-02-24)24 February 1885
Warsaw, Congress Poland, Russian Empire
Died18 September 1939(1939-09-18) (aged 54)
Jeziory, Poland
Pen nameWitkacy
OccupationWriter, painter, dramatist, philosopher, photographer
Alma materKraków Academy of Fine Arts
Notable works
  • Tumor Mózgowicz
  • Shoemakers
  • The Madman and the Nun
  • Farewell to Autumn
  • Insatiability
SpouseJadwiga Unrug, m.1923
PartnerJadwiga Janczewska [pl]
RelativesFather: Stanisław Witkiewicz
Godmother: Helena Modjeska
Father-in-law: Juliusz Kossak

Life

Born in Warsaw, Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz was a son of the painter, architect and an art critic Stanisław Witkiewicz. His mother was Maria Pietrzkiewicz Witkiewiczowa. Both of his parents were born in the Samogitian region of Lithuania. His godmother was the internationally famous actress Helena Modrzejewska.[1]

 
Little Witkacy with his father, ca. 1893

Witkiewicz was reared at the family home in Zakopane. In accordance with his father's antipathy to the "servitude of the school," he was home-schooled and encouraged to develop his talents across a range of creative fields. Against his fathers wishes he studied at the Kraków Academy of Fine Arts with Józef Mehoffer and Jan Stanisławski.[2]

Witkiewicz was close friends with composer Karol Szymanowski and, from childhood, with Bronisław Malinowski and Zofia Romer. Romer was romantically linked to both Bronisław Malinowski and Witkiewicz. He had a tumultuous affair with prominent actress Irena Solska[3] who according to Anna Micińska is represented as the heroine Akne Montecalfi in his first novel, The 622 Downfalls of Bungo or The Demonic Woman, 1911. According to Micińska he also represented himself as the character Bungo and Malinowski as the Duke of Nevermore.[4] The unfinished novel, which was not published until 1972, also describes erotic encounters between Bungo and the Duke of Nevermore.[5] Taught wet plate photography by his father, it was during this period that he also began producing the intimate portrait photography for which he is known; producing striking portraits of his circle in Zakopane and many self-portraits.

In 1914 following a crisis in Witkiewicz's personal life due to the suicide of his fiancée Jadwiga Janczewska, for which he blamed himself, he was invited by Malinowski to act as draftsman and photographer on his anthropological expedition to the then Territory of Papua,[6] by way of Ceylon and Australia.[7] The venture was interrupted by the onset of World War I. After quarrelling with Malinowski in Australia, Witkiewicz who was by birth a subject of the Russian Empire, travelled to St Petersburg (then Petrograd) from Sydney and was commissioned as an officer in the Pavlovsky Regiment of the Imperial Russian Army.[8] His ailing father, a Polish patriot, was deeply grieved by his son's decision and died in 1915 without seeing him again.[9]

In July 1916 he was seriously wounded in the battle on Stokhid River in what is now Ukraine and was evacuated to St Petersburg [10] where he witnessed the Russian Revolution. He claimed that he worked out his philosophical principles during an artillery barrage, and that when the Revolution broke out he was elected political commissar of his regiment. His later works would show his fear of social revolution and foreign invasion, often couched in absurdist language.

 
Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz, Multiple self-portrait in mirrors, 1915–1917[11]

He had begun to support himself through portrait painting and continued to do so on his return to Zakopane in Poland. He soon entered into a major creative phase, setting out his principles in New Forms in Painting and Introduction to the Theory of Pure Form in the Theatre. He associated with a group of "formist" artists in the early 1920s and wrote most of his plays during this period. Of about forty plays written by Witkiewicz between 1918 and 1925, twenty-one survive, and only Jan Maciej Karol Hellcat met with any public success during the author's lifetime. The original Polish manuscript of The Crazy Locomotive was also lost; the play, back-translated from two French versions, was not published until 1962.

 
Self-portrait, 1924

After 1925, and taking the name 'Witkacy', the artist ironically re-branded his portrait painting which provided his economic sustenance as The S.I. Witkiewicz Portrait Painting Company, with the tongue in cheek motto: "The customer must always be satisfied". Several of the so-called grades of portraits were offered, from the merely representational to the more expressionistic and the narcotics-assisted. Many of his paintings were annotated with mnemonics listing the drugs taken while painting a particular painting, even if this happened to be only a cup of coffee. He also varied the spelling of his name, signing himself Witkac, Witkatze, Witkacjusz, Vitkacius and Vitecasse — the last being French for "breaks quickly".

In the late 1920s he turned to novel-writing, writing two works, Farewell to Autumn and Insatiability. The latter, his major work, encompasses geopolitics, psychoactive drugs, and philosophy. In 1935 he was awarded the Golden Laurel of the Polish Academy of Literature for his novels.[12]

During the 1930s, Witkiewicz published a text on his experiences of narcotics, including peyote, and pursued his interests in philosophy writing, Concepts and Principles Implied by the Concept of Existence 1935.[13] In 1934 he finishes his most famous literary work - drama Szewcy, finally published in 1948.[14][15] He also promoted emerging writers such as Bruno Schulz.[16]

Death

Shortly after Poland was invaded by Germany in September 1939, Witkiewicz escaped with his young lover Czesława to the rural frontier town of Jeziory, in what was then eastern Poland. After hearing the news of the Soviet invasion of Poland on 17 September 1939, Witkacy committed suicide on 18 September by taking a drug overdose and trying to slit his wrists.[17] He convinced Czesława to attempt suicide with him by consuming Luminal, but she survived.[18] The film Mystification (2010), written and directed by Jacek Koprowicz proposes, in surrealist fashion, that Witkiewicz faked his own death and lived secretly in Poland until 1968.[19][20]

Legacy

Witkiewicz had died in some obscurity but his reputation began to rise soon after the war, which had destroyed his life and devastated Poland. Outside of Poland his work was discussed as a precursor to post-ww2 European drama in Martin Esslin's influential "Theatre of the Absurd" 1961,[21] and later in Hans-Theis Lehmann's "Postdramatic Theatre" 2006.[22] Konstanty Puzyna collected his surviving dramatic writings in two volumes in "Dramaty" (Dramas) 1962 which revived interest in his plays in Poland. Through his translations and scholarship, Daniel Gerould introduced English-language audiences to the writings of Witkiewicz.

Czesław Miłosz framed his argument in The Captive Mind around a discussion of Witkiewicz's novel, Insatiability. The artist and theater director Tadeusz Kantor was inspired by the Cricot group, through which Witkiewicz had presented his final plays in Kraków. Kantor brought many of the plays back into currency, first in Poland and then internationally, including The Cuttlefish (1956) and The Water Hen (1969). Visual artist Paulina Olowska produced Witkiewicz's The Mother: An Unsavoury Play in Two Acts and an Epilogue at the Tate Modern in 2015.[23]

Films which have Witkiewicz as the subject include Tumor Witkacego 1985,[24] Mystification 2010 [25] and Witkacy and Malinowski: a cinematic séance in 23 scenes 2018.[26] Films based on his works include Ludiot i kalugericata 1968,[27]Farewell to Autumn 1990,[28] Insatiability 2003,[29]Madame Tutli-Putli 2007[30] and Nursery Rhyme of a Madman 2017.[31]

Witkiewicz's paintings and pastel drawings are in the collections of the National Museum, Warsaw,[32] the National Museum, Kraków, Museum of Literature, Warsaw and the Museum of Central Pomerania with 125 works in Słupsk Castle.[33] The Metropolitan Museum of Art[34] and Museum of Modern Art[35] in New York, and the Art Gallery of New South Wales,[36] Sydney hold important examples of his photography. The Villa Oksza Gallery of 20th century art of the Tatra Museum in Zakopane holds important examples of his photography and pastel drawings.

In the postwar period, People's Republic of Poland's Ministry of Culture decided to exhume Witkiewicz's body, move it to Zakopane, and give it a solemn funeral. This was carried out according to plan, though no one was allowed to open the coffin that had been delivered by the Soviet authorities.

On 26 November 1994, the Polish Ministry of Culture and Art ordered the exhumation of the presumed grave of Witkiewicz in Zakopane. Genetic tests on the remaining bones proved that the body had belonged to an unknown woman — a final absurdist joke, fifty years after the publication of Witkacy's last novel.[37]

Works

Art philosophy

  • Nowe formy w malarstwie (1919), translated into English as New Forms in Painting and the Misunderstandings Arising Therefrom (in The Witkiewicz Reader, Quartet, 1993)
  • Szkice estetyczne (Aesthetic Sketches, 1922)

Novels

  • 622 Upadki Bunga czyli demoniczna kobieta (1911) partial translation into English as The 622 Downfalls of Bungo or The Demonic Woman (in The Witkiewicz Reader)
  • Pożegnanie jesieni (1927) partial translation into English as Farewell to Autumn (in The Witkiewicz Reader)
  • Nienasycenie (1930) translated into English as Insatiability (Quartet Encounter, 1985)

Plays

 
Bob DeFrank and Ann Crumb in a scene from Paul Berman's production of Witkacy's The Madman and the Nun, Theatre Off Park, 1979
 
Tobias Haller, James Curran, Nat Warren-White, and Betty LaRoe in Brad Mays' production of Witkacy's The Water Hen, Theatre Off Park, 1983
  • Maciej Korbowa i Bellatrix (Maciej Korbowa and Bellatrix) (1918)
  • Pragmatyści (1919) (translated into English as The Pragmatists)
  • Mister Price, czyli Bzik tropikalny (1920) (translated into English as Mr Price, or Tropical Madness)
  • Tumor Mózgowicz (1920) (translated into English as Tumor Brainiowicz)
  • Nowe wyzwolenie (1920) (translated into English as The New Deliverance)
  • Oni (1920) (translated into English as They)
  • Panna Tutli-Putli (1920) (Miss Tootli-Pootli)
  • W małym dworku (1921) (translated into English as Country House)
  • Niepodległość trójkątów (1921) (translated into English as The Independence of Triangles)
  • Metafizyka dwugłowego cielęcia (1921) (translated into English as Metaphysics of a Two-Headed Calf)
  • Gyubal Wahazar, czyli Na przełęczach bezsensu (translated into English as Gyubal Wahazar, or Along the Cliffs of the Absurd: A Non-Euclidean Drama in Four Acts) (1921)
  • Kurka Wodna (1921) (Translated into English as The Water Hen)
  • Bezimienne dzieło (1921) (translated into English as The Anonymous Work: Four Acts of a Rather Nasty Nightmare)
  • Mątwa (1922) (translated into English as The Cuttlefish, or The Hyrcanian World View)
  • Nadobnisie i koczkodany, czyli Zielona pigułka (1922) (Translated into English as Dainty Shapes and Hairy Apes, or The Green Pill: A Comedy with Corpses)
  • Jan Maciej Karol Wścieklica (1922) (translated into English as Jan Maciej Karol Hellcat)
  • Wariat i zakonnica (1923) (translated into English as The Madman and the Nun)
  • Szalona lokomotywa (1923) (translated into English as The Crazy Locomotive)
  • Janulka, córka Fizdejki (1923) (translated into English as Janulka, Daughter of Fizdejko)
  • Matka (1924) translated into English as The Mother (in The Mother & Other Unsavoury Plays, Applause, 1993)
  • Sonata Belzebuba (1925) (translated into English as The Beelzebub Sonata)
  • Szewcy (1931–34) translated into English as The Shoemakers (in The Mother & Other Unsavoury Plays, Applause, 1993)

Filmography

  • Witkacy z Niną w Warszawie (1927), comedy film by Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz. Starring him and his wife Jadwiga in the city of Warsaw. Film housed in the Adam Mickiewicz Museum of Literature in Warsaw. Details: black and white film reel Pathé 9.5 mm, 5 minutes, silent film; remastered in 4K quality in 2015.[38]

Other works

  • Narkotyki — niemyte dusze (1932), partial translation into English as Narcotics (in The Witkiewicz Reader)
  • Pojęcia i twierdzenia implikowane przez pojęcie istnienia (Concepts and Statements Implied by the Idea of Existence) (1935)
  • Jedyne wyjście
  • Kompozycia fantastyczna
  • Pocałunek mongolskiego księcia

Sample artwork

Performances of work

 
James Fleming, Lee Taylor-Allan and Linda Chambers in Brad Mays' production of Witkacy's The Water Hen, Theatre Off Park, 1983
  • Two New York premiers of Witkacy plays: The Madman and the Nun (Wariat i zakonnica) in 1979 under the direction of Paul Berman and The Water Hen (Kurka Wodna) directed by Brad Mays were staged by the Theatre Off-Park,[42] in 1983.[43] Broadway producer / Theatre Off-Park managing director Patricia Flynn Peate[44] produced both plays, which were well received by critics and audiences alike. Future New York Times theatre critic Mark Matousek, then writing for the theatrical journal Other Stages, praised The Water Hen for "masterful comic direction,"[45] and the piece was videotaped for permanent inclusion in the Lincoln Center's Billy Rose Theatre Collection.
  • The British premiere of "They" "(Oni)" was presented at the Polish Theatre Hammersmith, London by POSK, directed by Paul Brightwell in 1984
  • The New York premiere of The Shoemakers (Szewcy) was presented by the Jean Cocteau Repertory under the direction of Włodzimierz Herman in 1987.[46]
  • The Madman and the Nun was presented in 1989 by The Cosmic Bicycle Theatre at the Summer Music from Greensborough, a Classical Music Festival in Greensborough, Vermont, and in Boston, at The Charlestown Working Theatre. Directed by Jonathan Edward Cross [a.k.a. Jonny ClockWorks]. The production used Actors alongside Life-sized Puppets. Two of the original Puppet Figures are in the collection of the Witkacy Teatre in Zarkopane' Poland.[47]
  • The New York premiere of Witkacy's Tumor Brainiowicz presented by La MaMa ETC was performed by The Theatre of a Two-Headed Calf (named after the Witkacy play Metaphysics of a Two-Headed Calf), under the direction of Brooke O'Harra. This production was followed by Witkacy's The Mother in 2003, also under O'Harra's direction and also a New York premier. The production featured puppets and video.[48]
  • In 2019 Witkacy/Two-Headed Calf, a collaboration between CalArts Center for New Performance and STUDIO teatrgaleria, Warsaw, was directed by Natalia Korczakowska[49]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Helena Modrzejewska "Modjeska", czyli jak polska aktorka podbiła Amerykę" (in Polish). Retrieved 16 July 2022.
  2. ^ "Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz (Witkacy)". Culture.pl. Retrieved 22 September 2018.
  3. ^ "Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz (Witkacy)". Culture.pl. Retrieved 9 April 2019.
  4. ^ "Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz (Witkacy)". Culture.pl. Retrieved 22 September 2018.
  5. ^ Witkiewicz, Stanisław Ignacy (1992). The Witkiewicz reader. Gerould, Daniel C. (Daniel Charles), 1928-2012. Evanston, Ill.: Northwestern University Press. ISBN 0810109808. OCLC 26014071.
  6. ^ Anna., Micińska (1990). Witkacy-Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz : life and work. Warsaw: Interpress. ISBN 832232359X. OCLC 26361556.
  7. ^ "John Gillies "Tracking down Witkacy in Australasia: sources, race, productions, context and speculation"". 5 December 2021. Retrieved 16 July 2022.
  8. ^ Witkiewicz, Stanisław Ignacy (1992). The Witkiewicz reader. Gerould, Daniel C. (Daniel Charles), 1928-2012. Evanston, Ill.: Northwestern University Press. ISBN 0810109808. OCLC 26014071.
  9. ^ "Witkacy - biografia – Witkacy – Zinterpretuj.pl" (in Polish). 31 August 2022. Retrieved 6 September 2022.
  10. ^ "Witkacy's Theater of Life/The Search for Self". info-poland.icm.edu.pl. Retrieved 22 September 2018.
  11. ^ Frantczak, Ewa; Okołowicz, Stefan (1986). Przeciw nicości : fotografie Stanisława Ignacego Witkiewicza. Kraków: Wydawnictwo Literackie. p. 63. ISBN 83-08-01398-8.
  12. ^ Prof. dr hab. Miłosława Bulowska Schielman. "Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz". Virtual Library of Polish Literature. Retrieved 13 December 2011.
  13. ^ "Witkacy's Theater of Life/The Search for Self". info-poland.icm.edu.pl. Retrieved 9 October 2018.
  14. ^ "Witkacy - biografia - LekcjaPolskiego.pl" (in Polish). 14 September 2021. Retrieved 8 September 2022.
  15. ^ "Witkacy - biografia – Witkacy – Zinterpretuj.pl" (in Polish). 31 August 2022. Retrieved 8 September 2022.
  16. ^ "Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz (Witkacy)". Retrieved 16 July 2022.
  17. ^ Donald Pirie; John Bates; Elwira Grossman. . Archived from the original on 8 February 2009. Retrieved 16 April 2009.
  18. ^ Journal of Czesława Oknińska, quoted in: Gerould, Daniel Charles; Witkiewicz, Stanisław Ignacy (1992). "Part 5: Philosophy and Suicide, 1931–1939". The Witkiewicz Reader. Northwestern University Press. p. 275. ISBN 978-0-8101-0994-0. Retrieved 22 November 2009.
  19. ^ Mystification, retrieved 9 October 2018
  20. ^ "Mystification".
  21. ^ Esslin, Martin (2004). The theatre of the absurd (3rd, 1st vintage books ed.). New York: Vintage Books. ISBN 1400075238. OCLC 54075141.
  22. ^ Hans-Thies, Lehmann (2006). Postdramatic theatre. Jürs-Munby, Karen. London. ISBN 9780415268127. OCLC 61229777.
  23. ^ Tate. "BMW Tate Live: Paulina Olowska: 'The Mother An Unsavoury Play in Two Acts and an Epilogue' – Performance at Tate Modern | Tate". Tate. Retrieved 23 September 2018.
  24. ^ Tumor Witkacego, retrieved 18 October 2018and
  25. ^ Mystification, retrieved 18 October 2018
  26. ^ . www.sff.org.au. Archived from the original on 30 July 2019.
  27. ^ Ludiot i kalugericata, retrieved 18 October 2018
  28. ^ Pozegnanie jesieni, retrieved 18 October 2018
  29. ^ Insatiability, retrieved 18 October 2018
  30. ^ Madame Tutli-Putli, retrieved 18 October 2018
  31. ^ Pozegnanie jesieni, retrieved 18 October 2018
  32. ^ "Muzeum Cyfrowe / Digital Museum". www.cyfrowe.mnw.art.pl. Retrieved 22 September 2018.
  33. ^ "Strona główna". www.muzeum.slupsk.pl. Retrieved 22 September 2018.
  34. ^ "Witkiewicz". The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Retrieved 22 September 2018.
  35. ^ "Anna Oderfeld, Zakopane | Object:Photo". MoMA. Retrieved 22 September 2018.
  36. ^ "Works by Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz :: The Collection :: Art Gallery NSW". www.artgallery.nsw.gov.au. Retrieved 22 September 2018.
  37. ^ "...Przeprowadzone badania wykazują, że szczątki kostne, przywiezione w 1988 roku ze wsi Jeziory na Ukrainie należą do kobiety w wieku 25–30 lat, o wzroście około 164 cm. ..." ("the tests conducted indicate that the bone remains, brought in 1988 from the village Jeziory in the Ukraine, belong to a woman 25–30 years old and about 164 cm tall...") from the protocol of the commission called by the Ministry of Culture and Art after the exhumation on 26 November 1994 of the presumed grave of Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz at Pęksowy Brzyzek" cemetery in Zakopane. From: . Archived from the original on 20 January 2010. Retrieved 28 January 2015. in: "Moje Zakopane" dn. 21 February 2005. (Source: Komunikat Komisji powołanej przez Ministra Kultury i Sztuki do spraw pochówku Stanisława Ignacego Witkiewicza. Prof. dr hab. Tadeusz Polak). Retrieved 11 November 2012.
  38. ^ . nina.gov.pl. Archived from the original on 14 January 2019.
  39. ^ http://broadwayworld.com/shows/cast.php?showid=327362 BroadwayWorld: The Crazy Locomotive, complete cast & crew listing.
  40. ^ . Archived from the original on 7 September 2009. Retrieved 31 October 2008.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  41. ^ "The San Diego Union-Tribune - San Diego, California & National News".
  42. ^ Cantwell, Mary (6 January 1996). "Editorial Notebook;Small Theater". The New York Times. Retrieved 24 May 2010.
  43. ^ Mark Matusek, NY Times, The Water Hen, NYC Production - 1983. BradMays.com. Retrieved 21 July 2015.
  44. ^ "No Headline". The New York Times. 31 October 1983. Retrieved 24 May 2010.
  45. ^ Matousek, Mark (1983). "Water Hen – (review)". Other Stages.
  46. ^ Bruckner, D. j r. (24 March 1987). "The Shoemakers by Stanislaw I. Witkiewicz, Poland's greatest modern playwright; first English-language performance by the Jean Cocteau Repertory". The New York Times.
  47. ^ "The Cosmic Bicycle Theatre, Carroll Gardens, New ClockWorks~Puppet Theatre - South Brooklyn Post - News & Culture in Carroll Gardens, Cobble Hill, Boerum Hill, Gowanus, Red Hook and Points Nearby". southbrooklynpost.com. Retrieved 9 August 2018.
  48. ^ "THE MOTHER". www.lamama.org. Retrieved 9 August 2018.
  49. ^ "CalArts Center for New Performance - » WITKACY / Two-Headed CalfCalArts Center for New Performance". CalArts Center for New Performance. Retrieved 29 October 2019.
  • Sarah Boxer, "A Polish Satirist Obsessed with Identity". New York Times, 24 April 1998
  • F. Coniglione, at the Wayback Machine (archived 9 February 2008)
  • Halina Florynska-Lalewicz, Monika Mokrzycka-Pokora, Irena Kossowska, Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz (Witkacy) at culture.pl
  • Daniel Gerould, Witkacy: Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz as an Imaginative Writer (University of Washington Press, 1981)
  • Stanislaw Ignacy Witkiewicz Bibliography, including Bio
  • Łozińska Hempel, Maria (1986). Z łańcucha wspomnień. Wydawnictwo Literackie.

External links

  • Works by Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz at Open Library  
  • Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz (Witkacy) at Culture.pl
  • Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz (Witkacy) at poezja.org
  • Witkiewicz & Futurism – The Crazy Locomotive
  • Witkacy's Madness: The Lost Manuscript of a Total Artist on Culture.pl

stanisław, ignacy, witkiewicz, polish, staˈɲiswaf, iɡˈnatsɨ, vʲitˈkʲɛvʲitʂ, february, 1885, september, 1939, commonly, known, witkacy, polish, writer, painter, philosopher, theorist, playwright, novelist, photographer, active, before, world, during, interwar, . Stanislaw Ignacy Witkiewicz Polish staˈɲiswaf iɡˈnatsɨ vʲitˈkʲɛvʲitʂ 24 February 1885 18 September 1939 commonly known as Witkacy was a Polish writer painter philosopher theorist playwright novelist and photographer active before World War I and during the interwar period Stanislaw Ignacy WitkiewiczBorn 1885 02 24 24 February 1885Warsaw Congress Poland Russian EmpireDied18 September 1939 1939 09 18 aged 54 Jeziory PolandPen nameWitkacyOccupationWriter painter dramatist philosopher photographerAlma materKrakow Academy of Fine ArtsNotable worksTumor Mozgowicz Shoemakers The Madman and the Nun Farewell to Autumn InsatiabilitySpouseJadwiga Unrug m 1923PartnerJadwiga Janczewska pl RelativesFather Stanislaw WitkiewiczGodmother Helena ModjeskaFather in law Juliusz Kossak Contents 1 Life 2 Death 3 Legacy 4 Works 4 1 Art philosophy 4 2 Novels 4 3 Plays 4 4 Filmography 4 5 Other works 5 Sample artwork 6 Performances of work 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksLife EditBorn in Warsaw Stanislaw Ignacy Witkiewicz was a son of the painter architect and an art critic Stanislaw Witkiewicz His mother was Maria Pietrzkiewicz Witkiewiczowa Both of his parents were born in the Samogitian region of Lithuania His godmother was the internationally famous actress Helena Modrzejewska 1 Little Witkacy with his father ca 1893 Witkiewicz was reared at the family home in Zakopane In accordance with his father s antipathy to the servitude of the school he was home schooled and encouraged to develop his talents across a range of creative fields Against his fathers wishes he studied at the Krakow Academy of Fine Arts with Jozef Mehoffer and Jan Stanislawski 2 Witkiewicz was close friends with composer Karol Szymanowski and from childhood with Bronislaw Malinowski and Zofia Romer Romer was romantically linked to both Bronislaw Malinowski and Witkiewicz He had a tumultuous affair with prominent actress Irena Solska 3 who according to Anna Micinska is represented as the heroine Akne Montecalfi in his first novel The 622 Downfalls of Bungo or The Demonic Woman 1911 According to Micinska he also represented himself as the character Bungo and Malinowski as the Duke of Nevermore 4 The unfinished novel which was not published until 1972 also describes erotic encounters between Bungo and the Duke of Nevermore 5 Taught wet plate photography by his father it was during this period that he also began producing the intimate portrait photography for which he is known producing striking portraits of his circle in Zakopane and many self portraits In 1914 following a crisis in Witkiewicz s personal life due to the suicide of his fiancee Jadwiga Janczewska for which he blamed himself he was invited by Malinowski to act as draftsman and photographer on his anthropological expedition to the then Territory of Papua 6 by way of Ceylon and Australia 7 The venture was interrupted by the onset of World War I After quarrelling with Malinowski in Australia Witkiewicz who was by birth a subject of the Russian Empire travelled to St Petersburg then Petrograd from Sydney and was commissioned as an officer in the Pavlovsky Regiment of the Imperial Russian Army 8 His ailing father a Polish patriot was deeply grieved by his son s decision and died in 1915 without seeing him again 9 In July 1916 he was seriously wounded in the battle on Stokhid River in what is now Ukraine and was evacuated to St Petersburg 10 where he witnessed the Russian Revolution He claimed that he worked out his philosophical principles during an artillery barrage and that when the Revolution broke out he was elected political commissar of his regiment His later works would show his fear of social revolution and foreign invasion often couched in absurdist language Stanislaw Ignacy Witkiewicz Multiple self portrait in mirrors 1915 1917 11 He had begun to support himself through portrait painting and continued to do so on his return to Zakopane in Poland He soon entered into a major creative phase setting out his principles in New Forms in Painting and Introduction to the Theory of Pure Form in the Theatre He associated with a group of formist artists in the early 1920s and wrote most of his plays during this period Of about forty plays written by Witkiewicz between 1918 and 1925 twenty one survive and only Jan Maciej Karol Hellcat met with any public success during the author s lifetime The original Polish manuscript of The Crazy Locomotive was also lost the play back translated from two French versions was not published until 1962 Self portrait 1924 After 1925 and taking the name Witkacy the artist ironically re branded his portrait painting which provided his economic sustenance as The S I Witkiewicz Portrait Painting Company with the tongue in cheek motto The customer must always be satisfied Several of the so called grades of portraits were offered from the merely representational to the more expressionistic and the narcotics assisted Many of his paintings were annotated with mnemonics listing the drugs taken while painting a particular painting even if this happened to be only a cup of coffee He also varied the spelling of his name signing himself Witkac Witkatze Witkacjusz Vitkacius and Vitecasse the last being French for breaks quickly In the late 1920s he turned to novel writing writing two works Farewell to Autumn and Insatiability The latter his major work encompasses geopolitics psychoactive drugs and philosophy In 1935 he was awarded the Golden Laurel of the Polish Academy of Literature for his novels 12 During the 1930s Witkiewicz published a text on his experiences of narcotics including peyote and pursued his interests in philosophy writing Concepts and Principles Implied by the Concept of Existence 1935 13 In 1934 he finishes his most famous literary work drama Szewcy finally published in 1948 14 15 He also promoted emerging writers such as Bruno Schulz 16 Death EditShortly after Poland was invaded by Germany in September 1939 Witkiewicz escaped with his young lover Czeslawa to the rural frontier town of Jeziory in what was then eastern Poland After hearing the news of the Soviet invasion of Poland on 17 September 1939 Witkacy committed suicide on 18 September by taking a drug overdose and trying to slit his wrists 17 He convinced Czeslawa to attempt suicide with him by consuming Luminal but she survived 18 The film Mystification 2010 written and directed by Jacek Koprowicz proposes in surrealist fashion that Witkiewicz faked his own death and lived secretly in Poland until 1968 19 20 Legacy EditWitkiewicz had died in some obscurity but his reputation began to rise soon after the war which had destroyed his life and devastated Poland Outside of Poland his work was discussed as a precursor to post ww2 European drama in Martin Esslin s influential Theatre of the Absurd 1961 21 and later in Hans Theis Lehmann s Postdramatic Theatre 2006 22 Konstanty Puzyna collected his surviving dramatic writings in two volumes in Dramaty Dramas 1962 which revived interest in his plays in Poland Through his translations and scholarship Daniel Gerould introduced English language audiences to the writings of Witkiewicz Czeslaw Milosz framed his argument in The Captive Mind around a discussion of Witkiewicz s novel Insatiability The artist and theater director Tadeusz Kantor was inspired by the Cricot group through which Witkiewicz had presented his final plays in Krakow Kantor brought many of the plays back into currency first in Poland and then internationally including The Cuttlefish 1956 and The Water Hen 1969 Visual artist Paulina Olowska produced Witkiewicz s The Mother An Unsavoury Play in Two Acts and an Epilogue at the Tate Modern in 2015 23 Films which have Witkiewicz as the subject include Tumor Witkacego 1985 24 Mystification 2010 25 and Witkacy and Malinowski a cinematic seance in 23 scenes 2018 26 Films based on his works include Ludiot i kalugericata 1968 27 Farewell to Autumn 1990 28 Insatiability 2003 29 Madame Tutli Putli 2007 30 and Nursery Rhyme of a Madman 2017 31 Witkiewicz s paintings and pastel drawings are in the collections of the National Museum Warsaw 32 the National Museum Krakow Museum of Literature Warsaw and the Museum of Central Pomerania with 125 works in Slupsk Castle 33 The Metropolitan Museum of Art 34 and Museum of Modern Art 35 in New York and the Art Gallery of New South Wales 36 Sydney hold important examples of his photography The Villa Oksza Gallery of 20th century art of the Tatra Museum in Zakopane holds important examples of his photography and pastel drawings In the postwar period People s Republic of Poland s Ministry of Culture decided to exhume Witkiewicz s body move it to Zakopane and give it a solemn funeral This was carried out according to plan though no one was allowed to open the coffin that had been delivered by the Soviet authorities On 26 November 1994 the Polish Ministry of Culture and Art ordered the exhumation of the presumed grave of Witkiewicz in Zakopane Genetic tests on the remaining bones proved that the body had belonged to an unknown woman a final absurdist joke fifty years after the publication of Witkacy s last novel 37 Works EditArt philosophy Edit Nowe formy w malarstwie 1919 translated into English as New Forms in Painting and the Misunderstandings Arising Therefrom in The Witkiewicz Reader Quartet 1993 Szkice estetyczne Aesthetic Sketches 1922 Novels Edit 622 Upadki Bunga czyli demoniczna kobieta 1911 partial translation into English as The 622 Downfalls of Bungo or The Demonic Woman in The Witkiewicz Reader Pozegnanie jesieni 1927 partial translation into English as Farewell to Autumn in The Witkiewicz Reader Nienasycenie 1930 translated into English as Insatiability Quartet Encounter 1985 Plays Edit Bob DeFrank and Ann Crumb in a scene from Paul Berman s production of Witkacy s The Madman and the Nun Theatre Off Park 1979 Tobias Haller James Curran Nat Warren White and Betty LaRoe in Brad Mays production of Witkacy s The Water Hen Theatre Off Park 1983 Maciej Korbowa i Bellatrix Maciej Korbowa and Bellatrix 1918 Pragmatysci 1919 translated into English as The Pragmatists Mister Price czyli Bzik tropikalny 1920 translated into English as Mr Price or Tropical Madness Tumor Mozgowicz 1920 translated into English as Tumor Brainiowicz Nowe wyzwolenie 1920 translated into English as The New Deliverance Oni 1920 translated into English as They Panna Tutli Putli 1920 Miss Tootli Pootli W malym dworku 1921 translated into English as Country House Niepodleglosc trojkatow 1921 translated into English as The Independence of Triangles Metafizyka dwuglowego cielecia 1921 translated into English as Metaphysics of a Two Headed Calf Gyubal Wahazar czyli Na przeleczach bezsensu translated into English as Gyubal Wahazar or Along the Cliffs of the Absurd A Non Euclidean Drama in Four Acts 1921 Kurka Wodna 1921 Translated into English as The Water Hen Bezimienne dzielo 1921 translated into English as The Anonymous Work Four Acts of a Rather Nasty Nightmare Matwa 1922 translated into English as The Cuttlefish or The Hyrcanian World View Nadobnisie i koczkodany czyli Zielona pigulka 1922 Translated into English as Dainty Shapes and Hairy Apes or The Green Pill A Comedy with Corpses Jan Maciej Karol Wscieklica 1922 translated into English as Jan Maciej Karol Hellcat Wariat i zakonnica 1923 translated into English as The Madman and the Nun Szalona lokomotywa 1923 translated into English as The Crazy Locomotive Janulka corka Fizdejki 1923 translated into English as Janulka Daughter of Fizdejko Matka 1924 translated into English as The Mother in The Mother amp Other Unsavoury Plays Applause 1993 Sonata Belzebuba 1925 translated into English as The Beelzebub Sonata Szewcy 1931 34 translated into English as The Shoemakers in The Mother amp Other Unsavoury Plays Applause 1993 Filmography Edit Witkacy z Nina w Warszawie 1927 comedy film by Stanislaw Ignacy Witkiewicz Starring him and his wife Jadwiga in the city of Warsaw Film housed in the Adam Mickiewicz Museum of Literature in Warsaw Details black and white film reel Pathe 9 5 mm 5 minutes silent film remastered in 4K quality in 2015 38 Other works Edit Narkotyki niemyte dusze 1932 partial translation into English as Narcotics in The Witkiewicz Reader Pojecia i twierdzenia implikowane przez pojecie istnienia Concepts and Statements Implied by the Idea of Existence 1935 Jedyne wyjscie Kompozycia fantastyczna Pocalunek mongolskiego ksieciaSample artwork Edit Jadwiga Janczewska Zakopane1913 Black Lake1907 Tatra Museum in Zakopane Winter Landscape at Zakopaneafter 1930 Museum of Fine Arts Szepmuveszeti Budapest Bronislawa Wieniawa Dlugoszowska1918 Nova Aurigae1918 Adam Mickiewicz Museum of Literature Warsaw Composition1922 National Museum Krakow Fantasy Fairy tale1922 National Museum Warsaw Self portrait with Mrs Maryla Grosmanowa1927 National Museum Warsaw Self portrait1930 National Museum in Wroclaw Portrait of a boy1934 Silesian Museum Katowice Zofia Romer1935 Self portrait1938 Silesian Museum Katowice Performances of work EditThe Crazy Locomotive Szalona lokomotywa received its New York premier at the Chelsea Theatre in 1977 under the direction of Des McAnuff 39 The Obie Award winning production starred Dwight Schultz Bob DeFrank and Glenn Close 40 in leading roles 41 James Fleming Lee Taylor Allan and Linda Chambers in Brad Mays production of Witkacy s The Water Hen Theatre Off Park 1983 Two New York premiers of Witkacy plays The Madman and the Nun Wariat i zakonnica in 1979 under the direction of Paul Berman and The Water Hen Kurka Wodna directed by Brad Mays were staged by the Theatre Off Park 42 in 1983 43 Broadway producer Theatre Off Park managing director Patricia Flynn Peate 44 produced both plays which were well received by critics and audiences alike Future New York Times theatre critic Mark Matousek then writing for the theatrical journal Other Stages praised The Water Hen for masterful comic direction 45 and the piece was videotaped for permanent inclusion in the Lincoln Center s Billy Rose Theatre Collection The British premiere of They Oni was presented at the Polish Theatre Hammersmith London by POSK directed by Paul Brightwell in 1984 The New York premiere of The Shoemakers Szewcy was presented by the Jean Cocteau Repertory under the direction of Wlodzimierz Herman in 1987 46 The Madman and the Nun was presented in 1989 by The Cosmic Bicycle Theatre at the Summer Music from Greensborough a Classical Music Festival in Greensborough Vermont and in Boston at The Charlestown Working Theatre Directed by Jonathan Edward Cross a k a Jonny ClockWorks The production used Actors alongside Life sized Puppets Two of the original Puppet Figures are in the collection of the Witkacy Teatre in Zarkopane Poland 47 The New York premiere of Witkacy s Tumor Brainiowicz presented by La MaMa ETC was performed by The Theatre of a Two Headed Calf named after the Witkacy play Metaphysics of a Two Headed Calf under the direction of Brooke O Harra This production was followed by Witkacy s The Mother in 2003 also under O Harra s direction and also a New York premier The production featured puppets and video 48 In 2019 Witkacy Two Headed Calf a collaboration between CalArts Center for New Performance and STUDIO teatrgaleria Warsaw was directed by Natalia Korczakowska 49 See also EditHistory of philosophy in Poland Culture of Krakow List of Poles Mononymous personsReferences Edit Helena Modrzejewska Modjeska czyli jak polska aktorka podbila Ameryke in Polish Retrieved 16 July 2022 Stanislaw Ignacy Witkiewicz Witkacy Culture pl Retrieved 22 September 2018 Stanislaw Ignacy Witkiewicz Witkacy Culture pl Retrieved 9 April 2019 Stanislaw Ignacy Witkiewicz Witkacy Culture pl Retrieved 22 September 2018 Witkiewicz Stanislaw Ignacy 1992 The Witkiewicz reader Gerould Daniel C Daniel Charles 1928 2012 Evanston Ill Northwestern University Press ISBN 0810109808 OCLC 26014071 Anna Micinska 1990 Witkacy Stanislaw Ignacy Witkiewicz life and work Warsaw Interpress ISBN 832232359X OCLC 26361556 John Gillies Tracking down Witkacy in Australasia sources race productions context and speculation 5 December 2021 Retrieved 16 July 2022 Witkiewicz Stanislaw Ignacy 1992 The Witkiewicz reader Gerould Daniel C Daniel Charles 1928 2012 Evanston Ill Northwestern University Press ISBN 0810109808 OCLC 26014071 Witkacy biografia Witkacy Zinterpretuj pl in Polish 31 August 2022 Retrieved 6 September 2022 Witkacy s Theater of Life The Search for Self info poland icm edu pl Retrieved 22 September 2018 Frantczak Ewa Okolowicz Stefan 1986 Przeciw nicosci fotografie Stanislawa Ignacego Witkiewicza Krakow Wydawnictwo Literackie p 63 ISBN 83 08 01398 8 Prof dr hab Miloslawa Bulowska Schielman Stanislaw Ignacy Witkiewicz Virtual Library of Polish Literature Retrieved 13 December 2011 Witkacy s Theater of Life The Search for Self info poland icm edu pl Retrieved 9 October 2018 Witkacy biografia LekcjaPolskiego pl in Polish 14 September 2021 Retrieved 8 September 2022 Witkacy biografia Witkacy Zinterpretuj pl in Polish 31 August 2022 Retrieved 8 September 2022 Stanislaw Ignacy Witkiewicz Witkacy Retrieved 16 July 2022 Donald Pirie John Bates Elwira Grossman Stanislaw Ignacy Witkiewicz Archived from the original on 8 February 2009 Retrieved 16 April 2009 Journal of Czeslawa Okninska quoted in Gerould Daniel Charles Witkiewicz Stanislaw Ignacy 1992 Part 5 Philosophy and Suicide 1931 1939 The Witkiewicz Reader Northwestern University Press p 275 ISBN 978 0 8101 0994 0 Retrieved 22 November 2009 Mystification retrieved 9 October 2018 Mystification Esslin Martin 2004 The theatre of the absurd 3rd 1st vintage books ed New York Vintage Books ISBN 1400075238 OCLC 54075141 Hans Thies Lehmann 2006 Postdramatic theatre Jurs Munby Karen London ISBN 9780415268127 OCLC 61229777 Tate BMW Tate Live Paulina Olowska The Mother An Unsavoury Play in Two Acts and an Epilogue Performance at Tate Modern Tate Tate Retrieved 23 September 2018 Tumor Witkacego retrieved 18 October 2018 and Mystification retrieved 18 October 2018 Witkacy amp Malinowski a cinematic seance in 23 scenes Sydney Film Festival www sff org au Archived from the original on 30 July 2019 Ludiot i kalugericata retrieved 18 October 2018 Pozegnanie jesieni retrieved 18 October 2018 Insatiability retrieved 18 October 2018 Madame Tutli Putli retrieved 18 October 2018 Pozegnanie jesieni retrieved 18 October 2018 Muzeum Cyfrowe Digital Museum www cyfrowe mnw art pl Retrieved 22 September 2018 Strona glowna www muzeum slupsk pl Retrieved 22 September 2018 Witkiewicz The Metropolitan Museum of Art Retrieved 22 September 2018 Anna Oderfeld Zakopane Object Photo MoMA Retrieved 22 September 2018 Works by Stanislaw Ignacy Witkiewicz The Collection Art Gallery NSW www artgallery nsw gov au Retrieved 22 September 2018 Przeprowadzone badania wykazuja ze szczatki kostne przywiezione w 1988 roku ze wsi Jeziory na Ukrainie naleza do kobiety w wieku 25 30 lat o wzroscie okolo 164 cm the tests conducted indicate that the bone remains brought in 1988 from the village Jeziory in the Ukraine belong to a woman 25 30 years old and about 164 cm tall from the protocol of the commission called by the Ministry of Culture and Art after the exhumation on 26 November 1994 of the presumed grave of Stanislaw Ignacy Witkiewicz at Peksowy Brzyzek cemetery in Zakopane From Maciej Pinkwart Wygralismy Archived from the original on 20 January 2010 Retrieved 28 January 2015 in Moje Zakopane dn 21 February 2005 Source Komunikat Komisji powolanej przez Ministra Kultury i Sztuki do spraw pochowku Stanislawa Ignacego Witkiewicza Prof dr hab Tadeusz Polak Retrieved 11 November 2012 Rekonstrukcja NInA nina gov pl Archived from the original on 14 January 2019 http broadwayworld com shows cast php showid 327362 BroadwayWorld The Crazy Locomotive complete cast amp crew listing Archived copy Archived from the original on 7 September 2009 Retrieved 31 October 2008 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link The San Diego Union Tribune San Diego California amp National News Cantwell Mary 6 January 1996 Editorial Notebook Small Theater The New York Times Retrieved 24 May 2010 Mark Matusek NY Times The Water Hen NYC Production 1983 BradMays com Retrieved 21 July 2015 No Headline The New York Times 31 October 1983 Retrieved 24 May 2010 Matousek Mark 1983 Water Hen review Other Stages Bruckner D j r 24 March 1987 The Shoemakers by Stanislaw I Witkiewicz Poland s greatest modern playwright first English language performance by the Jean Cocteau Repertory The New York Times The Cosmic Bicycle Theatre Carroll Gardens New ClockWorks Puppet Theatre South Brooklyn Post News amp Culture in Carroll Gardens Cobble Hill Boerum Hill Gowanus Red Hook and Points Nearby southbrooklynpost com Retrieved 9 August 2018 THE MOTHER www lamama org Retrieved 9 August 2018 CalArts Center for New Performance WITKACY Two Headed CalfCalArts Center for New Performance CalArts Center for New Performance Retrieved 29 October 2019 Sarah Boxer A Polish Satirist Obsessed with Identity New York Times 24 April 1998 F Coniglione Polish Philosophy Page Stanislaw Ignacy Witkiewicz at the Wayback Machine archived 9 February 2008 Halina Florynska Lalewicz Monika Mokrzycka Pokora Irena Kossowska Stanislaw Ignacy Witkiewicz Witkacy at culture pl Daniel Gerould Witkacy Stanislaw Ignacy Witkiewicz as an Imaginative Writer University of Washington Press 1981 Stanislaw Ignacy Witkiewicz Bibliography including Bio Lozinska Hempel Maria 1986 Z lancucha wspomnien Wydawnictwo Literackie External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Stanislaw Ignacy Witkiewicz 1885 1939 Works by Stanislaw Ignacy Witkiewicz at Open Library Stanislaw Ignacy Witkiewicz Witkacy at Culture pl Stanislaw Ignacy Witkiewicz Witkacy at poezja org Witkiewicz amp Futurism The Crazy Locomotive Witkacy s Madness The Lost Manuscript of a Total Artist on Culture pl Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stanislaw Ignacy Witkiewicz amp oldid 1122127020, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.