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Dance

Part of the collection: European classics of modernity

Popularization note

Moscow-born Marian Tomaszewski (1904-1968) began his education in a Russian gymnasium but moved to Poland with his parents after the October Revolution. He passed his baccalaureate examinations at the Juliusz Słowacki State Teachers' Seminary in Lublin (1926). It enabled the future painter to find employment in the educational sector, in which he was active almost his entire professional life. After receiving his diploma from the Warsaw Academy of Fine Arts, he began teaching the art of drawing in the capital city's secondary schools. During the Nazi occupation, the artist returned to Lublin, where he became an instructor at the art courses of Janina Miłosiowa (1896-1983) and subsequently at the German School of Painting and Drawing. Alongside his teaching career, Tomaszewski was involved in underground cultural life. After the liberation of the city, he created the foundations of an institution with the Provisional Board of the Trade Union of Visual Artists, of which he became president. His experiences in Lublin led him to be entrusted with organising artistic life in Szczecin, where he arrived in September 1945. At the Provincial Department of Culture and the Arts, he was a specialist in the arts; at the local branch of the ZZAP - he was a vice president; he also founded the Society for the Promotion of Culture in Western Pomerania and the Free College of Visual Arts (from 1947 the School of Visual Arts, and from 1948 the National Visual Arts Cultural Centre), of which he became director. Wartime memories and pioneering work became an influential theme in his works, and tied him permanently to the Szczecin milieu, despite the artist's return to Warsaw in 1951. He established the National Visual Arts Cultural Centre in Warsaw in 1953, maintaining a lively connection with children's art, which, alongside Pablo Picasso's paintings (1881-1973), Fernand Léger (1881-1955), and "primitive sculpture", remained his leading formal inspiration. In his painting Dance (1956), Tomaszewski drew on the patterns of Bushmen's rock painting. A year later, during a scholarship in Paris, he was able to view their originals alongside other artefacts of primal and non-European cultures at the Musée de l'Homme - a repository of visual motifs of international modernism. Szymon Piotr Kubiak



Signatures and inscriptions:

Inscription;signature: tm.56

Information about the object

Information about this object

Author / creator

Tomaszewski, Marian (1904–1968)

Object type

painting

Technique

tempera

Material

canvas

Origin / acquisition method

purchase

Creation time / dating

1956

Creation / finding place

powstanie: Warszawa (województwo mazowieckie)

Owner

Muzeum Narodowe w Szczecinie

Identification number

MNS/SE-M/316

Location / status

object is not displayed now

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