The Impermanent

Four Takes on the Collection

21.02–05.10.2025
The first presentation on this scale of the collection of the Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw.
 
 
CURATED BY
Sebastian Cichocki, Tomasz Fudala, Magda Lipska, Szymon Maliborski, Łukasz Ronduda and Natalia Sielewicz

The works presented in the exhibition all come from the same historical period, from the 1950s to the present. Among the works from the museum’s own collection, visitors will also find significant works from the collections of other institutions and private collections.

The MSN Warsaw collection is made up of artworks and documents testifying to the changes occurring in the visual arts over the last seven decades in Poland and around the world.

Artists

Magdalena Abakanowicz
Lawrence Abu Hamdan
AKF Nowa Huta (Jerzy Ridan, Wojciech Korus)
The Archive of Public Protests (A-P-P)
Korakrit Arunanondchai
Kader Attia
designers of the proposed monument to the victims of fascism in Auschwitz-Birkenau (Oskar Hansen, Zofia Hansen, Jerzy Jarnuszkiewicz, Edmund Kupiecki, Julian Pałka, Tadeusz Plasota, Lechosław Rosiński)
Evelyne Axell
Mirosław Bałka
Maria Bartuszová
Agata Bogacka
Miriam Cahn
Mateusz Choróbski
Roman Cieślewicz
Nathalie Djurberg
Edward Dwurnik
Anna Ehrenstein
Ruth Ewan
Wojciech Fangor
Sylvie Fleury
Isa Genzken
Jill Godmilow
Aneta Grzeszykowska
Izabella Gustowska
Petrit Halilaj
Sharon Hayes
Edi Hila
Lubaina Himid
Leszek Hołdanowicz
Sanja Iveković
Karolina Jabłońska
Arthur Jafa
Zuzanna Janin
Maria Jarema
Ewa Juszkiewicz
Nikita Kadan
Zhanna Kadyrova
Nikolay Karabinovych
Gülsün Karamustafa
Elektra KB
Kiluanji Kia Henda
Dominique Knowles
Kiki Kogelnik
Grzegorz Kowalski
Kris Lemsalu
Tau Lewis
Zbigniew Libera
Natalia LL
Sarah Lucas
Kateryna Lysovenko
Piotr Łakomy
Goshka Macuga
Tala Madani
Teresa Margolles
Nadia Markiewicz
Soshiro Matsubara
Lucy McKenzie
Gizela Mickiewicz
Małgorzata Mirga-Tas
Jan Młodożeniec
Sandra Mujinga
Ciprian Mureşan
Iwona Mysera
Henrike Naumann
Senga Nengudi
Diane Severin Nguyen
Otobong Nkanga
Paulina Ołowska
Prabhakar Pachpute
Włodzimierz Pawlak
William Pope.L
Mariola Przyjemska
Anni Puolakka
R. H. Quaytman
Karol Radziszewski
Jimmy Robert
Daniel Rycharski
Wilhelm Sasnal
Mariela Scafati
Ser Serpas
Monika Sosnowska
Roman Stańczak
Frances Stark
Zygmunt Stępiński
Sturtevant
Vivian Suter
Alina Szapocznikow
Wolfgang Tillmans
Vasyl Tkachenko (Lyakh)
Andrzej Tobis
Henryk Tomaszewski
Trương Công Tùng
Teresa Tyszkiewicz
Cecilia Vicuña
Cathy Wilkes
David Wojnarowicz
Danwen Xing
Lynette Yiadom-Boakye
Wojciech Zamecznik
Cajsa von Zeipel
Jerzy „Jurry” Zieliński
Alicja Żebrowska
Artur Żmijewski

The MSN Warsaw collection also includes artists’ archives and the museum’s Filmoteka, a collection of hundreds of films. The collected works reflect a great diversity of media and artistic approaches, and convey the dynamism of artists’ engagement in the life of the society, the flow of information, and the development of new technologies.

The first part of the exhibition, Banner: Engagement, Realism, and Political Art, includes works related to political engagement and a faith in the power of art to make a difference. The works come from different countries, decades, and ideological systems. The human figure, advocacy, and belief in the universal language of art set the tone. Part of this history is also propaganda: art in action, linked with current politics, for better or worse. This part of the exhibition opens with Alina Szapocznikow’s sculpture Friendship from 1954, which stood in the entrance hall of the Palace of Culture and Science in Warsaw for almost half a century. After 1992, it was decided to scrap the work—the arms of the figures and the banner they held were stripped so the sculpture could be removed from the building. These missing elements were never found. Near Szapocznikow’s sculpture “flutters” a steel banner by Ukrainian artist Nikita Kadan. It was made from fragments of the body of a car that was shelled in the city of Severodonetsk, Ukraine, which was occupied by pro-Russian military forces in 2014. After Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022 (following the annexation of Crimea in 2014), the order in Europe has once again fallen apart.

The second part of the exhibition is titled Synthetic Materialities: Body, Commodity and Fetish from the Cold War to the Present. It contains works expressing consumerist desires, a fascination with pop culture, advertising and mass media—not only in societies that experienced the economic boom and the onslaught of consumerism after World War II, but also among the poorer “peripheral” countries of Eastern Europe and the Global South. The main metaphor here is the “plastic body” in a totalitarian regime, consuming images from the other side of the Iron Curtain. Plastics (and petroleum), achievements of post-industrial capitalism, had a sensational run in the second half of the 20th century in both prosperous Western societies and socialist economies.

A work that exposes the military and consumerist sources of plastics, and the fantasies surrounding them, is a sculpture by the Swiss artist Sylvie Fleury made of synthetic resin and fiberglass, a material invented for the army. The sculpture depicts slender, crossed female legs in turquoise, wrapped in a silver vinyl coat. In the 1950s, both the post-military trench coat and fiberglass were popularized in fashion and design. The wry title of the work, Silver Rain, conveys a sexual innuendo in English slang but also means military action.

This part of the exhibition includes Alina Szapocznikow’s Lamps from her experimental period. Made of polyester resin and metal, Illuminated Breast seems to be an everyday object, but also has an extremely complex form and character: a flower made of casts of breasts and lips opens up from a long, slender stem—an embodiment of female sexuality. Szapocznikow’s work touches on the traumatic themes of the memory of the Holocaust, illness, and limitations and weaknesses of the body, but also offers a unique affirmation of life, and is full of references to forms of decorative art of the 1950s and 60s. This part of the exhibition questions the binary division between Western Pop Art, steeped in commodity fetishism and eroticism, and its communist imitation in the form of Soc Art.

The third chapter of the exhibition, Dark Planet: Art, Spirituality, and Future Coexistence, comprises works drawing on uncompromising imagination as well as non-modernist traditions: folk, amateur and indigenous art, and isolated artistic practices. The objects and artistic attitudes featured here are united by an effort to “see through” the existing reality, to reach its depths, extracting its dark spiritual and existential potential. The juxtaposition of artists from sometimes very distant geographical and political contexts reveals the possibility of a future community.

This chapter of the collection exhibition was inspired by the work of Roman Stańczak. He belongs to the generation of artists debuting during the post-communist transformation in Poland. He captures the tensions of that period of rapid change which, in his view, abandoned what was most important for art and existence itself: sensitivity to humanity and the experience of depth, when production of things and acquisition of goods overshadowed any reflection on the essence of life. For Stańczak, “skinning” mass-produced objects (such as a kettle or a bathtub), turning them inside-out, stripping away the polychromes of factory-made furniture, is a method for gazing deep into reality and into himself. While Stańczak probes the disintegration and social atomization of the late capitalist era, the works in the exhibition show the possibilities for reintegration, and the essence of what is held in common.

The third part of the exhibition also features a spectacular sculptural installation from 2014 by Cathy Wilkes. The scene of “unsettling” recreated by the artist is made up of a mixed tableau of found objects—vessels, table coverings, and trinkets—as well as mannequins handmade from yarn and old fabrics.

The last part of the MSN Warsaw exhibition is entitled Real Abstractions: The Autonomy of Art Against the Catastrophes of Modernity. It revisits the issue of the limits of art, its independence, and the ability of art to maintain autonomy from other systems of knowledge and experiencing reality. The works collected in this chapter of the exhibition often employ the idiom of abstraction, one of the basic categories of modern art. This time we view the works through the prism of the debate over the crisis of modernity as a dream of progress and unlimited growth. Will modernity manage to face the catastrophes it has accelerated or even caused itself?

Monika Sosnowska’s Façade, a sculpture addressing modern architecture by depicting its decay and collapse, takes a central place in this part of the exhibition. In this work, the artist employs the magic trick of making a metal modernist structure sag and wither, like a figure in the terminal stage of life. The modern form undergoes processes of decay as in nature and biology. Sosnowska perversely evokes modernist fascinations with shapes found in nature. Maria Jarema’s works are also key to this part of the exhibition. They rely on opposites, blurring the boundaries between the autonomy of art and engagement, the matter of the image and the matter of the body.

Modernity’s post-Enlightenment visions and promises of improving the human lot, also found in modern art, combined with notions of progress, growth, and the primacy of culture over nature, are viewed through the prism of the contemporary catastrophe of these approaches. From the very beginning of these visions we perceive that they contained the seeds of exclusion and violence. Development and decay, growth and degradation, construction and destruction, autonomy and dependence, are revealed here not as binary opposites but as fluidly interpenetrating, coexisting. Artists attempt to capture this ambivalence by resorting to formlessness as a language for describing and representing the social and political reality of late capitalism.

This exhibition is “impermanent” not only because it runs only until the autumn of 2025, but first and foremost because the canon of contemporary artworks is not fixed, but remains in constant motion.

The presentation of works from the MSN Warsaw collection is accompanied by an extensive program of events: tours, meetings, workshops, and performative interventions. We invite you to get to know our collection “in action.” 

Chapters

Banner: Engagement, Realism, and Political Art  
Curator: Sebastian Cichocki

Synthetic Materialities: Body, Commodity and Fetish from the Cold War to the Present 
Curators: Tomasz Fudala, Natalia Sielewicz

Dark Planet: Art, Spirituality, and Future Coexistence  
Curators: Magda Lipska, Szymon Maliborski

Real Abstractions: The Autonomy of Art Against the Catastrophes of Modernity
Curator: Łukasz Ronduda

ARTWORKS FROM THE MSN WARSAW COLLECTION AT THE EXHIBITION

See all (120)
Alina Szapocznikow
Illuminated Breast
1966
mass-dyed polyester resin, metal, electric light
56 × 14.5–17.5 × 16 cm
Collection of Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw, Copyright The Estate of Alina Szapocznikow / Galerie Loevenbruck, Paris
Alina Szapocznikow
Belly
1968
plaster
20 × 36 × 16.5 cm
Collection of Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw, Copyright The Estate of Alina Szapocznikow / Galerie Loevenbruck, Paris
Alina Szapocznikow
Sculpture-Lamp III (Fetish IX)
1970
mass-dyed polyester resin, plastic lace, electric light
18.5 × 44.5 × 25.5 cm
Collection of Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw, Copyright The Estate of Alina Szapocznikow / Galerie Loevenbruck, Paris
Sharon Hayes
In the Near Future. Warsaw
2008
5 slide projections from 5 projectors (each projection with 27 slides); color photography, slide
dimensions variable
Collection of Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw
Sanja Iveković
Invisible Women of Solidarity
2009–2010
lightbox (transparent foil, printout on semi-transparent plastic, milky Plexiglas, fluorescent lamps, aluminum), portraits (printout on paper attached to synthetic plastic), documentation (printout and print on paper)
dimensions variable
Collection of Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw
Zbigniew Libera
Lego. Concentration Camp
1996
Lego bricks modified by the author, Lego boxes designed by the author (color photography, printout on paper, synthetic plastic)
dimensions variable
Collection of Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw
R.H. Quaytman
And Still a Garden by the River Blows
2000
screenprint (serigraphy), gypsum primer on plywood
91.5 × 148 × 2.5 cm
Collection of Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw, Copyright R.H. Quaytman
Frances Stark
The Inchoate Incarnate: Bespoke Costume for the Artist
2009
fabrics, synthetic plastic, synthetic resin, metal, wood, paper
ca. 150 × ca. 180 × ca. 81 cm
Collection of Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw, Copyright Frances Stark

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