





, 2022. Courtesy of the artist and Piktogram Gallery.jpg)




Betwixt is a place that requires two separate points of reference to be created. These points can be people or objects. When they are put together, a kind of axis is built. Separate points on the map are quickly joined with a thread that is invisible to the eye. This line can tighten and relax in a controlled way depending on how close or far they are from each other. The bodies that clash with one another create tension – the relationship space. In between, everything becomes blurry. It’s hard to tell which is one and which is the other. Together, they create an open room that everyone has access to. Its space shrinks or expands depending on how many guests stay in it. We can find many similar networks of this kind around us. Together, they all create an ongoing project of a house where everyone has a corner of their own. The stories of individual rooms mesh and overlap on top of each other. They create a ground for us to walk on. Each of us become coordinates, points of reference on a map that measures this abstract space. The distance from her to her is the same as from me to you. From guests, we turn to hosts. The moment we change our role is instant. The length of this second changes depending on the time we become aware of what the betwixt is.
Ant Łakomsk, Betwixt
Zuza Golińska is a multidisciplinary artist who explores the seemingly binary relationship between modernism and contemporary romanticism, between discipline and magical thinking. She analyses the events from her life in a broader socio-political context, noting the patterns of which she is a part of. Zuza is interested in the heritage of the former Eastern Bloc in the construction of her own cultural and gender identity. In her work she explores the impact of space and architecture on human beings. She analyses the relationship between an organized structure and the body. The public and the private sphere. Using different means, Zuza tries to build new models of shared spaces. She wonders what it means to be together and to what extent this is possible nowadays. Is it possible to create a community through a properly constructed space? She consciously refers to familiar functional forms or architectural models, which she then deconstructs. Through her projects, Zuza tries to build new, less hierarchical relationships with people and the environment.
Text by Zuza Golinska.
The key to Teresa Pągowska’s work is (as art theoreticians had written) the human figure. The artist was associated with the international New Figuration movement. Even though everything seems to be right: the silhouette, expression, subjectivism or deformation, the term “figure” has multiple meanings that seem to drift away from the human body itself – a figure is in fact devoid of a body, it’s simply a shape on a surface, an idea of human physique. Therefore we need to look not at the figure in Pągowska’s paintings but at the body because it dominates in her work. Through it she wants to convey something special to us. It is not just some abstract body, it’s a woman’s body.
“My painting becomes my image and its strength becomes my strength,” said Pągowska, emphasizing the integrity of her work and her artistic focus. In Pągowska’s paintings subjected to the highest notion of work discipline and constant simplification, one feels very directly the anxiety, tension and strong emotional charge creating an unclear situation that’s happening or is about to happen.