Krwiak
Szymon Kobylarz
watercolour crayon and charcoal on paperboard
121.5 × 90.5 cm (framed)
2010
Acquisition 2010
Inv. No. 0203
Szymon Kobylarz’s works combine fiction and reality. These two drawings – the artist refers to them as “plain cartoons” – have a mysterious denominator in common. They show two musicians who pursued different approaches and came from different backgrounds, yet shared similar fates. Both of them died young, shortly after their respective careers had begun.
The restless itinerant musician Robert Johnson, born in
The career of the pianist and composer Krzysztof Komeda (1931–1969), who was considered a prodigy in
The technique of collage lends additional depth to these two drawings, whose almost photorealistic rendering accounts for their oppressive presence. In these portraits, Kobylarz plays with disclosure and disguise, and it seems as if the artist retrieved the two fabled musicians from the realm of death. After all, Robert Johnson was said to have concluded a deal with the devil, and Krzysztof Komeda, through his involvement in Rosemary’s Baby, is likewise associated with the diabolic and uncanny.
Wolfgang Kos, Heike Maier-Rieper, 2011 (translation: Wolfgang Astelbauer)
Continue readingExhibitions
evn collection / institutional presentation, Viennafair, Vienna, 2011
Publications
DUST. Science, Art & Dust, Moscow 2012, p. 111
evn collection. 2006–2011, Cologne 2011, p. 262–265