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Marek Cecula

Marek Cecula. www.marekcecula.com. PowerPoint Prepared by Brian Harper. MAREK CECULA ARTIST STATEMENT

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Marek Cecula

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  1. MarekCecula www.marekcecula.com PowerPoint Prepared by Brian Harper

  2. MAREK CECULA ARTIST STATEMENT My artwork has no typical uniformity in its subject matter. I experiment with many physical and conceptual representations of ceramic objects and explore their meanings in contemporary culture. I am seduced by the role ceramic plays in our lives and the esthetical values it carries. I am a watcher, an anthropologist, who is constantly discovering how we form relationships with these objects and their functions. By rendering my ideas in three dimensions, I attempt to involve the viewer in the same process of focused imagination, leading through the landscape of ideational space that I passed through.

  3. "FOR THE HEROES" The Stand. For The Heroes is a singular structure constructed from very thin white porcelain slabs looking cracked, deformed, and loosely assembled into Olympic winner stand. This stand, physically is unstable and fragile, making this piece clearly unusable for originally designated purpose, eliminating the possibility to place people, one above another.

  4. “For the Heroes” The Stand

  5. The Porcelain Carpet

  6. Porcelain Carpet The natural (obvious) tendency of walking on, or through the carpet, is directly undermined by the presence of fragile (breakable) material and the association with the recognizable origin of porcelain dinner plates. The galley viewer is faced with a self-awareness, which manifests itself in tension and caution. Limitation of movement is imposed on the viewer by the sheer fragile nature of the material and the placement of the work. The outcome of this restriction effects the physical and visual interaction with the work and offers a paradoxical experience.

  7. The Porcelain Carpet

  8. The Porcelain Carpet

  9. The Porcelain Carpet

  10. Look Into My Mind

  11. Look Into My Mind The act of looking into the artist’s mind, is in this work a physical invitation designed for the viewer. The viewer must make a decision to either follow his curiosity and peep into the designated opening, or to ignore it. The main content of this work is hidden in its interior. In the cavity of the form there are images (visible in dim light penetrating through translucent porcelain) representing the personal life of the artist within a private and mysterious atmosphere.They are biographical and the content might be banal for the stranger. Nevertheless, the stories of the artist’s private life are in public domain now, and serve as the only diversity between these five forms, indicating the many multifaceted representations of the artist life.

  12. Look Into My Mind

  13. Interface

  14. Interface The activation of internal space (volume) becomes the central theme, which demands investigation on the part of the viewer. The viewer here is enticed to participate in this experience through interaction with the empty space of the ceramic forms. The interiors of the forms are prime, rich, luminous and seductive. They draw a viewer into the cavities, stimulating the formation of meaning in the work and alert his perception to the relationship of the inside and outside of the form. "Interface" provides a contrasting vision between the external and internal character of being. The meaning of these contacts and their suggested tactility become open material for further individual interpretation.

  15. Interface

  16. Interface

  17. Interface

  18. Interface

  19. Interface

  20. Violations The strategy behind the process of creating this work title Violation was to reduce the typical labor-intensive ceramic processes and to extract and emphasize strong conceptual content existing in the domestic objects. These new conditions transcended their visual representation beyond their originally designated goals.The "violation" as an idea and expression is manifested through those objects and the objects becoming a documents representing their own history. Carrying forward the marks of makers and the marks of users as the evidence of their cultural, social and political standards.

  21. Violation

  22. Violation

  23. ShardThis ceramic piece provides a viewpoint that Nazism was not merely overt violence but a voracious totality, which required its conquest of the domestic sphere and the innocent forms of daily life.

  24. Violation

  25. Hygiene The idea of cleanliness and protection imposes specific conditions on related forms and objects, requirements which render them simultaneously intimate and impersonal. The forms of the "Hygiene" series are created primarily in vitreous china, a material which exudes archetypical associations with sanitary ware. Each of the works in this series are multiples of identical forms in various accumulations, a strategy followed for conceptual and esthetic ends. My intention is to disassociate the appearance of the work from any hand made processes and avoid the quasi-uniqueness of art studio production.

  26. Hygiene

  27. Hygiene

  28. Hygiene

  29. Hygiene

  30. Hygiene

  31. Hygiene

  32. Hygiene

  33. Hygiene

  34. In Dust Real

  35. In Dust Real The project In Dust Real is a creative collision between Art, Craft and Design aiming to inject randomness into the standard manufacture production.Selected forms from various porcelain manufactures were “burned again” in high temperature in traditional anagama wood fire kilns to achieve totally opposite condition from conventional industrial standards. The strategy was to remove my self as a physical manipulator of the objects and use only the critical ceramic process-THE FIRE as an element of creative and destructive force. In this work, the imperfections and deformation are intentional values, bringing the formal esthetic content under the scrutiny.

  36. In Dust Real

  37. In Dust Real

  38. In Dust Real

  39. In Dust Real

  40. Beauty of Imperfection I used different elements of nature to disturb, deconstruct and defunctionalize the classic industrial porcelain. Air, Fire, and Water were used separately in each group as a creative force making radical impact on the form, it’s designation and the meanings. In reaction to this fact I chose to reverse the conventional process of creating ceramic objects; ready-made industrial china was subjected to the individual destructive process, which was designed to inject randomness into standardized production.In this transformation, mass-produced porcelain objects became one of kind originals, challenging notions of beauty and functionality and repositioning the values of mass product crossing over to the art territory.

  41. Beauty of Imperfection

  42. Beauty of Imperfection

  43. Beauty of Imperfection

  44. Beauty of Imperfection

  45. www.marekcecula.com Marek Cecula

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