
untitled
2010
National Museum in Szczecin
Part of the collection: Critical and post-critical art
Working in sculpture, video installation, photography and performance, Zuzanna Janin's (1961- ) work explores the fascinating psychological identity of contemporary man. The sculpture Boy Dreaming is a wire construction in the form of a preternaturally large figure. He sits hunched over on a Plexiglas plinth, his head bent between his bent knees from which his arms hang helplessly, his hands intertwined between his feet. The entire openwork figure is covered in airport baggage tags collected by the artist during her travels around the world. The eponymous boy could be a portrait of a contemporary everyman, asking existential questions about the meaning of life. By basing his identity on mobility rather than a traditionally understood connection to a physical place, he is constantly on the move and has lost his own roots. In his changed life situation, he is forced to reconsider his point of reference from a different perspective, to confront the true nature of his own identity. Created almost a decade ago, the sculpture takes on additional meaning at a time marked by the Covid-19 virus pandemic and the lockdown, when the whole world was grounded and individual freedoms were severely restricted. For many, this was a time of radical re-evaluation of life. In her work, this resulted in the 2020 piece Waiting for a Journey, part of the Domestic Sculptures series, which Janin initially presented as a separate online blog, describing it as "a visual diary 'written' by moments of solitary living in isolation". Janin's work is rooted in her own biography, memory and time. She draws not from facts, history or literal narratives, but from emotional experiences, feelings, events in the spiritual realm. Identity, memory and transience are the foundations of her rich oeuvre. "She transforms sensation, experience, premonition into the blueprints of a concept. She interpolates without using words. She plays with points of view, changing worlds depending on where she places herself - the instrument of cognition, the most sensitive lens". (Olga Tokarczuk) Marlena Chybowska-Butler
Author / creator
Object type
sculpture
Technique
sculpture, gluing, cutting, welding
Material
brass wire, luggage tags, acrylic glass
Origin / acquisition method
purchase
Creation time / dating
Creation / finding place
Owner
Muzeum Narodowe w Szczecinie
Identification number
Location / status
Szeszycka, Katarzyna
2010
National Museum in Szczecin
1934
National Museum in Szczecin
Piroli, Tommaso
1797 — 1805
National Museum in Szczecin
DISCOVER this TOPIC
Castle Museum in Łańcut
DISCOVER this PATH
Educational path
0/500
We use cookies to make it easier for you to use our website and for statistical purposes. You can manage cookies by changing the settings of your web browser. More information in the Privacy Policy.
We use cookies to make it easier for you to use our website and for statistical purposes. You can manage cookies by changing the settings of your web browser. More information in the Privacy Policy.
Manage cookies:
This type of cookies is necessary for the website to function. You can change your browser settings to block them, but then the website will not work properly.
WYMAGANE
They are used to measure user engagement and generate statistics about the website to better understand how it is used. If you block this type of cookies, we will not be able to collect information about the use of the website and we will not be able to monitor its performance.