Tag: Poland

Painting the Unseen: Kasia Muzyka on Art as Portal, Presence, and Personal Resurrection | Exclusive Interview

Born into the shadows of political unrest in communist Poland, artist Kasia Muzykaโ€™s earliest years were shaped by silence, resistance, and the emotional hush of survival. Yet from that silence emerged a powerful inner worldโ€”one that would later blossom into a deeply intuitive artistic practice. In this intimate interview, Muzyka reflects on her journey from early creative expression to profound inner collapse and, ultimately, to a sacred reawakening through painting. Her work defies categorization, blending mysticism, quantum philosophy, and ancient wisdom into โ€œliving transmissionsโ€ โ€” pieces that breathe, speak, and transform. As she prepares for her upcoming solo exhibition The Sacred Condition of Being, Muzyka opens a window into the forces that shaped her, the materials that move her, and the mystery she invites us all to feel.

Biennale MArteLive Announces Winners of 16 Art Disciplines and Establishes as Only Multidisciplinary Festival in Europe

Despite a global pandemic and a devastating war just a few kilometers from two of the project’s partner countries – Poland and Lithuania – the first European edition of the MArteLive Biennial finally comes to an end with the announcement of the winners in the 16 artistic disciplines in the competition.

This concludes the long path of scouting and selection of the 16 best European emerging talents discovered out of over 1100 entries from 47 countries including 27 members of the European Union and 20 neighboring countries because art has no borders and barriers but is open to all.ย 

The MArteLive Biennial is officially over, but the activities will continue! Next MArteLive Biennial scheduled for October 11-20, 2024.

Czeslaw Znamierowski: Multicultural Artist from the Soviet Union

โ€œFor him there were no boundaries between nationalities. He readily made friends with the natives of any countryโ€ฆ. He was no stranger to Latvians, Lithuanians, Jews, Tatars, Karaites, Russians. He was ready to help everyone if possible.โ€

At a time of great division in the Eastern European community a lesson in multiculturalism, unity and brotherhood can be learned from an unusual person, a Soviet Lithuanian artist Czeslaw Znamierowski (23 May 1890 โ€“ 9 August 1977). He was born in Imperial Russia on Latvian territory into a Polish family. At the age of 32 he became a citizen of the Soviet Union and soon after moved permanently to Lithuania, where he lived until his last day.