Leszek Skurski
Orange Harbor
Acrylic on canvas
50 x 75 cm
2022
€ 5.000,00
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A vast, seemingly infinite plain forms the foundation for the scene: As if from nowhere, people appear on the surface of the image. They emerge from layers rich in nuances of light white or hazy gray, leaving plenty of room for interpretation. The artist Leszek Skurski, who is a native of Poland, repeatedly devotes his paintings to figurative storytelling. In his works, he depicts many stories, that remain open-ended and allow the most diverse interpretations. They are paintings depicting narratives that seem to have paused or stopped in action, and Skurski captures these forms with a narrative density. Many evanescent moments of our existence and interactions are captured on the canvas like excerpts or snapshots between their occurrence and disappearance. Hence, the images of the artist, who lives and works in Fulda, are reminiscent of film stills or still images that outline a content, character, or mood.
Born in Danzig, Poland
Studies of Painting and Graphic Design at Academy of Fine Arts, Danzig with Prof. Włodzimierz Łajming and Prof. Jerzy Krechowicz
Award of Culture and Art Ministry Poland
Diploma
lebt und arbeitet in Fulda
Gallery Barbara von Stechow
Galerie Von & Von, Nürnberg
Theo Art, Seoul, South Korea
„New Post Impressionism“, Spreegold Collection, Berlin
„Afghanistan Syndrome II“, East Side Gallery Berlin, Berlin
„Afghanistan Syndrome I“, Military Cemetery, Berlin
„Vermeer Reloaded“, Europäischer Kunstverein, Berlin
„Moments of Being“, Gallery DOOIN, Seoul, South Korea
„La mémoire des histoires“, Heimat Galerie, Saint Remy, France
„On Stage“, Red Corridor Gallery, Fulda
„Decade“, Galerie VON&VON, Nuremberg
Galerie Crone, Wien
Gallery Barbara von Stechow, Mallorca
Red Corridor Gallery, Fulda
Gallery Barbara von Stechow, Frankfurt
Red Corridor Gallery, Fulda
Theo Art, Seoul, South Korea
Ernst Ludwig Kirchner Verein Fehmarn e. V., Fehmarn
„Sense of White“, Galeriehaus Hamburg
Heimat Galerie, Saint Remy, France
Gallery DOOIN, Seoul, Südkorea
Kunsttage Winningen
„11 in 4“, GALERIE VON&VON, Nuremberg
Galerie Alex Schlesinger, Zurich, Switzerland
Stadtmuseum im Spital, Crailsheim
Gallery JJ, Seoul, South Korea
«Mémoridentité», Maison des Arts et Loisirs, Lyon, France
Galerie Brötzinger Art, Pforzheim
Janknegt Gallery, Laren, Netherlands
„Aller Guten Dinge sind 3. Malerei“, Gallery Von Stechow, Frankfurt
Gräfe Art Konzept, Berlin
„Ausflug“, Red Corridor Gallery, Künzell
„Stranger than Paradise“, Gallery JJ, Seoul, South Korea
Gallery JJ, Seoul, South Korea
„Was soll das viele Weiß auf der Leinwand?“, Frankfurter Neue Presse, Frankfurt
aqua art miami, USA
Affordable Art Fair, Hamburg
Centre de la Vieille Charité, Marseille, France
Alexandra Chiari, Marseille, France
GALERIE VON&VON, Nuremberg
„Einzelnachweise“, Vonderau Museum, Fulda
Alexandra Chiari, Marseille, France
Gallery Image au Carré, Brussels, Belgium
colourblind Gallery, Cologne
Gallery Image au Carré, Brussels, Belgium
„Der Lieblingstag“, colourblind Gallery, Cologne
Red Corridor Gallery, L’Agulhas, South Africa
Soho Gallery LLC, Los Angeles, USA
Lurie-Kavachnina Gallery, Miami, USA
Red Corridor going Mallorca, Sailer Galeria d’Art, Mallorca, Santanyí, Spain
Galerie Prinsenhoek, Netherlands
Red Corridor Gallery, Fulda
Scarlet Gallery, Greyton, South Africa
art Transfer, Kunststation Kleinsassen
Gallery Prinsenhoek, Netherlands
„Übergangen“, Frankfurt
„Verwaschene Spuren“, Projekt „bettTuch“, Textiles Museum Crimmitschau
Dorp Street Gallery, Stellenbosch, South Africa
Gallery Akademie der Schönen Künste, Danzig
Still images
17.01.2018
A vast, seemingly boundless plain forms the ground for the action: As if from nowhere, dark figures appear on the picture surface, emerging, as it were, from their deep levels, from layers rich in nuances in light white or hazy gray, leaving plenty of room for their presence, for their story.Polish-born artist Leszek Skurski, who studied at the Gdansk Academy of Art, repeatedly devotes his monochrome painting to figurative narrative. In his works, he depicts many small and large stories that remain open on all sides. They are images of standstill, of pausing and remaining in an action, out of an attitude, which he captures in concentrated form and narrative density. Many evanescent moments of an existence or togetherness are captured on the canvas: like excerpts from a sequence, like snapshots between their appearance and disappearance. In this way, they are reminiscent of film stills or still images that reveal a content, a character, or a mood.
That is to say: they refer to a scene that began outside the representation and continues there, that is captured in the picture, that comes to rest here, so to speak. In this sense, the artist today, in the times of rapid floods of information and images, concentrates again and again on the "one" image that tells a whole story. In doing so, he shows many things from a distance and thus gets particularly close to what is happening. He renders his subject from a distance in small, sometimes blurred views that sharpen the eye for the whole, for the concrete. In the works of Leszek Skurski, which have been shown in numerous solo and group exhibitions in Europe, the USA and South Africa, the image of man is always at the center of the representation. From the beginning, his interest has been in the 'living being', initially still in large form and strong color, in shadowy physicality.
Today his figures are reduced to the essential: To a vanishingly small black figure in expressive posture and gesture, taken out of their surroundings, rendered in an environment that is sometimes only fragmentarily hinted at, but for the most part completely blanked out. And this in favor of a largely object-free surface, which spreads out on the canvas in bright painting, rich in shades. Above all, the non-color white, which is at the same time the sum of all the colors of light, occupies an increasingly large space in his paintings: it works here in a multi-layered way, open to many projections. For white embodies not only emptiness and nothingness, stillness or silence, but also the spiritual, intangible, unknown or undiscovered: something not visible, absent, which sensitizes perception and points to what is present. Against these backgrounds, everything focuses on the center: on the protagonists appearing individually or in groups, moving freely on the surface and yet always grounded, taking up space and forming it at the same time.
Thus they appear on the stage of life in strong contrasts of light and dark, lonely together, isolated from the others or in close connection with each other. Here, in these abstract worlds, his small-figure scenes appear in varying narrative contexts that reveal themselves depending on the perspective. On view are various scenes to be "perceived" of the everyday or non-everyday, reflecting much that is familiar and trivial, but also unique or spectacular and provocative. Among other things, they show a "meeting" and an "interview", they present a "date", a "parade" or an "arrival" and they introduce a "help" and a "warning". Again and again, pictorial worlds emerge that reflect something seemingly inconspicuous, something interpersonal, and at the same time question it cryptically. Scenes of a convivial gathering or of isolation, of relaxation or alienation, of observation or surveillance, of trust or conspiracy. All these images condense a reality that can be viewed from several sides. They all bear witness to something visible, while leaving plenty of room for the invisible. As it were, the stories of the artist, who lives and works in Germany, seem to be from another time, from a distant land, and yet always timeless or placeless. They seem taken out of their context or torn.
Everything remains open, without a recognizable outcome. Only a few, but essential things come to light as an initial "information" that only develops further in the viewer's imagination: Takes its own beginning and its own end.
What is the place of human beings in today's world?
Alexandra Chiari
22.11.2017
How can we make tangible the galloping changes our societies are experiencing today? This is the question Skurski's figurative painting raises by rendering almost incidental scenes from everyday life. Although his works belong to representational painting, the people he sketches approach the abstract field. Isolated figures or groups of people are sparingly projected onto large pictorial spaces. The depiction concentrates on banal events, seemingly registered at random: They show people doing their jobs, a sporting competition, or beach scenes; captured moments in time that are familiar to everyone from their own lives.
The momentary nature of the situation is skillfully captured, but the monochrome background remains diffuse, as if waiting for redefinition. The figures give the impression of being abandoned in an immense void due to the almost complete lack of vertical and horizontal structures. At the same time, the precise features of the subjects contrast persistently with the blur surrounding them. They stand outside any chronological framework and nothing seems to give them a foothold or direction. And it is precisely this emptiness that strongly emphasizes the presence of the actors in the images. They are interwoven by a bond or a pact that chains them together, which is represented in the paintings by flight, struggle, rivalry, or even trust.
Is the lack of clarity of the environment a sign that borders and boundaries no longer exist, and in their place has taken a supposed boundless freedom? Or is it not rather the refuge in a reciprocal engagement, in a dialectical connection that grants the characters a certain cohesion, while the imprecise, shadowy background symbolizes our constantly changing world, in which the metaphorical context is eroded.