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    Eden Rock Brass Floating Vase by Agustina Bottoni
    Quantity
    1,320
    Unique Signed Table by Jörg Pietschmann
    Quantity
    4,400
    Pipe,Pair of Steel Sculpted Vases, Signed by Lukasz Friedrich
    Quantity
    1,320
    Dot Chair, Hand-Sculpted and Signed by Cedric Breisacher
    Quantity
    2,970
    Unique Signed Console by Jörg Pietschmann
    Quantity
    12,100
    Unique Sculpture Signed by Jörg Pietschmann
    Quantity
    2,860
    Double Poulie Sculpted Wall Lighting, Jérôme Pereira
    Quantity
    46,409
    Hygge Lounge Chair by Collector
    Quantity
    7,140
    Bronze Bowl by Rick Owens
    Quantity
    2,120
    Unique Signed Table by Jörg Pietschmann
    Quantity
    6,600
    Marble Slate Dining Table Signed by Frederic Saulou
    Quantity
    13,500
    Spektrum Lamp by Jan Garncarek
    Quantity
    8,360
    Contemporary Y Table by dAM Atelier
    Quantity
    28,600
    Thoronet Dish Polished Bronze by Henry Wilson
    Quantity
    968
    Shave Bench, Hand-Sculpted and Signed by Cedric Breisacher
    Quantity
    4,620
    Spalted Maple Stool by Fritz Baumann
    Quantity
    2,420
    U2 Brass Suspension by Jan Garncarek
    Quantity
    6,710
    Unique Ensemble of Bottles, Hand-Sculpted and Signed by Lukasz Friedrich
    Quantity
    4,840
    Oyster Wall-Ceiling Mounted Midnight Blue, Carla Baz
    Quantity
    4,070
    Marbled Bench "Neo-ancient", Savvaz Laz
    Quantity
    3,300
    Total:
    165,947

    Language of art as expression of everyday observations

    Language of art as expression of everyday observations

    By Ewelina Makosa

    Being a good observer of surrounding environment is crucial in the process of creating art.
    Art to me is a reflection of feelings and sensitivity, things which happen around us.
    Neither positive, calming, beautiful or tough, difficult, often socially involved topics which can not go without notice. Sometimes I go back to the times of the childhood. It is a valuable source of inspirations.

    Through my art I express emotions and tell a certain story which captures elusive and emotional moments of my life. This, I can express best through various media.

    When creating the hand-painted screen in collaboration with Jan Garncarek for Gallery Philia my emotions were totally positive and pure. They influenced my artistic activities when I was a graduate student of Academy of Fine Arts in Warsaw. My art at that time was based on calming, positive feelings which I wanted to “infect” the viewer with. I was always enchanted by the face of nature and, how beautiful and dangerous it can be at the same time. I was interested in the way it affects us. My paintings are intended to convey emotions through a minimalist approach to space or landscape. I may say that they express a wish for intimacy with something unknowable – whether because it’s too vast or too far away or too formless. Decorative marks, form and figuration were not important for me, but rather expression of emotions through colour and gesture.

    EWELINA_MAKOSA_JAN_GARNCAREK_HAND PAINTED SCREEN
    makosa_garncarek-2020

    Over time my artistic direction evolved. I decided to express social issues concentrated on human beings. It was 2013 when I first started experimenting with large scale paintings, followed by photography and artifacts. The field of my artistic research became corporeality, traces of existence and posthuman memory in connection to analysis of forms of its content. First, I created painting projects that examined the experience of entropy of visible matter. The fascination with the issue of corporality is associated with both the symbolic capacity and sensual extent of the human body, as well as its usefulness. Issues such as fragility of existence, transience and finally death were my main point of interest.

    Currently, my artistic activities are a story of cultural and existential transformation through the prism of the disappearance of the world of traditional objects and tools. I am focusing on a very current topic, which I define as the “crisis of the traces”. That is the irreversible disappearance of tradition and forms of intergenerational communication. This communication was once full of sensual sensations and experiences. Now, we can notice the loss of all the richness of virtual and tactile diversity of the past century. We become posthumans entangled in technological everyday life, unconsciously rejecting some of humans natural habits. This is especially visible now when we are locked down at our homes deprived of the natural forms of communication with other people.

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