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Igor Mitoraj was a monumental sculptor who kept his brand of classicism in fashion by combining technical ability with a certain postmodern malaise
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Igor Mitoraj (born 1944) - Polish sculptor who used to live in Italy. He draws inspiration from ancient Greek sculpture. A characteristic motif in his work is human frailty; the bandaged body, hollowed out figures. Well-known works by Mitoraj include 'The head', 'Venus' and 'Eros'. In 2006, Igor Mitoraj created the new bronze doors and a statue of John the Baptist for the basilica of Santa Maria degli Angeli in Rome. His monumental works are found in squares and courtyards, from Paris to Tokyo, in Pietrasanta, Bologna, Rome, Cracow and Warsaw. The monumental works by this artist of Polish origin born in Germany recover the spirit from Greece, from Rome, from the great sculpture masters of the Renaissance and are inspired by history and mythology subjects from a contemporary perspective.
Igor Mitoraj has recovered the spirit of Greek and Roman art of the great masters of Renaissance sculpture. His monumental works are inspired by the themes in history and mythology, and he reinterprets them from a contemporary perspective. Enigmatic images, of gods and heroes take the streets and plazas and present their interrogation to the citizens. Although it deals with recent creations, they take the appearance of archaeological pieces and remind us of the persistence, under today’s modernity, of the great themes which worry men: reason and spirituality, violence or beauty?
Beyond Limits Exhibition 2009 Chatsworth House – Eros Bendato
Testa Addormentata located in Canada Square, Canary Wharf, London
Some suggest that this mutilated head represents a loss of history, myths and of a connection with higher powers; to others it is a criticism of contemporary civilization and a warning against its destructive power Heros de Lumiere, Carrara marble (1986) at the Yorkshire Sculpture Park
2006 The exhibition, organized by "la Caixa" and the Palma Town Council, groups 23 sculptures by Igor Mitoraj.