Królestwo Boże (Józefa Czapskiego podróż do Hiszpanii w roku 1930)
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Author:
Franaszek, Andrzej
xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-citation: Annales Universitatis Paedagogicae Cracoviensis. 327, Studia Historicolitteraria 21 (2021), s. [256]-271
xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-iso: pl
Subject:
Józef Czapskimalarstwo polskie XX wieku
związki kultury polskiej i hiszpańskiej w XX wieku
oddziaływanie malarstwa Goi i El Greca na sztukę polską w XX wieku
tematyka mistycyzmu w kulturze polskiej XX wieku
Józef Czapski
Polish painting of the 20th century
Polish and Spanish cultural relationships in the 20th century
the influence of Goya’s and El Greco’s paintings on Polish art in the 20th century
mysticism in Polish culture of the 20th century
Date: 2021
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The author of the article describes a trip to Spain made by Józef Czapski in 1930. This outstanding painter and
essayist, witness to the Katyń massacre, co-creator of the Parisian magazine Kultura [Culture] and Polish
intellectual life in exile, at the time of visiting Madrid and its nearby areas for nearly two months was still
a young artist, looking for the painting poetics closest to his soul. The visits to the Prado brought him two great
discoveries: the works of El Greco and Goya. For Czapski, El Greco is a captivating example of religious painting
and simultaneously – fidelity to the vision, the way of seeing the world. Goya fascinated Czapski with the thematic
and stylistic range of his art – from “official” court portraits to dramatic records of nearly surreal visions,
reflecting the artist’s fundamental belief in human depravity. The trip to Spain also had another meaning for
Czapski – it was in away a journey in the footsteps of St. Teresa of Avila, broadly: areflection on the role of
mystical experience in the spiritual life of man. From these two perspectives: artistic and religious, the
encounter with the Spanish culture appears to be one of the more important and fateful episodes in the biography of
Józef Czapski.