WAYS OF THE BLACK SPREAD OVER THE WHITE LAND

26.06.2026–10.01.2027
Ewa Kuryluk, The Iks Are Us, 1975, acrylic and collage on canvas. Courtesy of the artist and the National Museum in Warsaw. Photo by Piotr Ligier
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Curator
Oliwia Mimi Bosomtwe

Artists

Ali Abdel Ghayoum
Jimoh Akolo
Wiesław Antosik
Jakub Barua
Stanisław Barua
Krzysztof M. Bednarski
Marian Bogusz
Bureau of Loose Associations
Max Cegielski
Teodora Dąbrowska
Mustafa Derkaoui
Worku Goshu
Barbara Grądzka-Łowkis
Wiktor Gutt
Oskar Hansen
Władysław Hasior
Fayçal Hassairi
C.T. Jasper and Joanna Malinowska
Józef Kaliszan
John Alex Karanja
Abdul Khalik
Leszek Knaflewski
Ewa Kuryluk
Beverly Joan Marcus
Zbigniew Matuszewski
Hyacinthe Mienandi
Jan Morek
Maja ∀. Ngom
Mariella Nitosławska
Bruce Onobrakpeya
Dariusz Panas
Leon Podsiadły
Danuta Rago
Waldemar Raniszewski
Józef Robakowski
Erna Rosenstein
Witold Rozmysłowicz
Zbyszko Siemaszko
Danuta Sienkiewicz
Janek Simon
Jonasz Stern
Władysław Strzemiński
Tadeusz Sumiński
Mariusz Szyperko
Ricardo Torres Ramirez
Hailu Tsigie
Janusz Uklejewski
Roman Wionczek
Paulin Wojtyna

Archives

Jerzy Borejsza Archive
Archives of the Leon Schiller Polish National Film, Television and Theatre School in Łódź
Polish Radio Archive
National Film Archive – Audiovisual Institute
Archeology of Photography Foundation
National Digital Archives
The State Museum of Ethnography in Warsaw
Polish Press Agency
Feature and Documentary Film Studio
Ways of the White Spread Over the Black Land was a 1948 painting by Marian Bogusz. The reversed title of this exhibition illustrates the peculiar dynamics of Poland’s relationships with Blackness and Sub-Saharan Africa in times of the Polish People’s Republic (PRL). With the end of World War II, Poland came under the Communist social-political system, adopting with it an anti-fascist and anti-imperial ideology that condemned racism and colonial projects. Art, politics, and ethnography combined to produce an entanglement of meanings and agendas. As more and more African states declared independence at the turn of the 1950s and 60s, Poland forged new alliances, reflecting the ideologically determined Cold-War efforts to gain influence no less than they did reflect a genuine interest in the decolonized continent. These international relations eventually resulted in an increased exchange of ideas as well as individuals, which had an effect on artistic circles and visual culture of the time.
Marian Bogusz,
The Paths of Whites Force their Way onto Black Shores, 1948
oil on canvas  
Museum of Middle Pomerania in Słupsk
Photo by Alina Częścik
In Ways of the Black Spread Over the White Land, fictions and notions tell a story—vibrant and full of contrasts—about escaping the centrally planned actuality whose politics paved the way for African diasporas to emerge in Poland. By bringing together works by Polish and Nigerian artists as well as by graduates of Poland’s art universities who came from Ethiopia, Sudan, and Kenya, among other countries, we examine our past connections—overshadowed at some point by the democratic transition and mostly sidelined since then.

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WAYS OF THE BLACK SPREAD OVER THE WHITE LAND