Mikołaj Sobczak
Snails Riot I
FSP ING 0185
Snails Riot I depicts an outbreak of an uprising or a revolt. When the crowds take to the streets, a mass reconciliation takes the place of a violent encounter. Social divisions are erased, and previously opposing groups create a new form of statehood. The artists portrait famous activists: Ewa Hołuszko, member of the Solidarity movement; Marsha P. Johnson, American activist and drag queen; Sylvia Rivera, Latin American trans rights activist; and Stormé DeLarverie – one of the key participants of Stonewall riots.
The vase was created and painted using pottery techniques brought to Poland by Mennonite settlers from Münster. The permission for the Olęders to settle and practice their own religion was unprecedented in Europe due to their revolutionary views. The snail theme is inspired by the Delftware from the Nieborów Palace. Snails often accompanied the Olęders, settling on the riverbanks and draining the swamps. The snail is also an important element of the artistic and religious theme of vanitas, reminding us of the vanity and transiency of life.
Mikołaj Sobczak
b. 1989, Poznań
Painter, filmmaker, performance artist. A graduate of the Academy of Fine Arts in Warsaw (Studio of Spatial Activities) and winner of a scholarship to Universität der Künste in Berlin, since 2015 he has studied at Kunstakademie Münster. He cofounded the Polen Performance duo (with Justina Los) and often cooperates with the German artist Nicholas Grafia. In his work he raises issues of construction of the politics of memory, the fate of marginalised groups, and erasure of the history of minority groups from official narratives. He received the ING Polish Art Foundation Award at Warsaw Gallery Weekend 2019. He lives and works in Münster and Warsaw.
b. 1989, Poznań
Painter, filmmaker, performance artist. A graduate of the Academy of Fine Arts in Warsaw (Studio of Spatial Activities) and winner of a scholarship to Universität der Künste in Berlin, since 2015 he has studied at Kunstakademie Münster. He cofounded the Polen Performance duo (with Justina Los) and often cooperates with the German artist Nicholas Grafia. In his work he raises issues of construction of the politics of memory, the fate of marginalised groups, and erasure of the history of minority groups from official narratives. He received the ING Polish Art Foundation Award at Warsaw Gallery Weekend 2019. He lives and works in Münster and Warsaw.