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With Art in a Disrupted World, art historian Agata Pietrasik presents a study of artistic practices that emerged in Poland during and after World War II. Pietrasik highlights examples of artworks by a number of Polish-born artists that were created in concentration camps and ghettos, in exile, and during the years of social, political, and cultural disintegration immediately following the war. She draws attention to the ethics of artistic practice as a method of fighting to preserve one’s own humanity amid even the most dehumanizing circumstances. Breaking out of entrenched historical timelines and traditional forms of narration, this book brings together drawings, paintings, architectural designs, and exhibitions, as well as literary and theatrical works created in this time period, to tell the story of Polish life in wartime.
Employing an accessible, essayistic style, Pietrasik offers a new look at life in the ten years following the outbreak of World War II and features artists—including Marian Bogusz, Jadwiga Simon-Pietkiewicz, and Józef Szajna—whose work has not yet found substantial audiences in the English-speaking world. Her reading of the art and artists of this period strives to capture their autonomous artistic language and poses critical questions about the ability of traditional art history writing to properly accommodate artworks created in direct response to traumatic experiences.
Employing an accessible, essayistic style, Pietrasik offers a new look at life in the ten years following the outbreak of World War II and features artists—including Marian Bogusz, Jadwiga Simon-Pietkiewicz, and Józef Szajna—whose work has not yet found substantial audiences in the English-speaking world. Her reading of the art and artists of this period strives to capture their autonomous artistic language and poses critical questions about the ability of traditional art history writing to properly accommodate artworks created in direct response to traumatic experiences.

Reviews
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
A Note on Translation
Introduction
Chapter 1
Instances of Material Resistance: Portraiture in the Concentration Camps
Material Resistance
Drawing Faces
The Face and Facelessness in the Portraits of Xawery Dunikowski
Gestures of Resistance: Jadwiga Simon-Pietkiewicz’s Sketchbook
The (Self-)portraits of Józef Szajna
Chapter 2
The Dialectics of Ruins and Rubble in Postwar Representations of Warsaw
Ruins and Rubble
Warsaw Accuses: Ruins On Display
Affective Chronicles of a Place and Time
In a Heap of Rubble
Chapter 3
Homelessness, Homecoming, and the “Joy of New Constructions”
The Destruction of Houses and the Politics of Homelessness
Imagining Homes for the Homeless
Art as a Home for All
Programmatic Lack of Program
Modernism Against Itself
(Un)doing Modernism
From Friction to Faction
Social Fabric and the Canvas Surface
Bibliography
List of Works
Index
A Note on Translation
Introduction
Chapter 1
Instances of Material Resistance: Portraiture in the Concentration Camps
Material Resistance
Drawing Faces
The Face and Facelessness in the Portraits of Xawery Dunikowski
Gestures of Resistance: Jadwiga Simon-Pietkiewicz’s Sketchbook
The (Self-)portraits of Józef Szajna
Chapter 2
The Dialectics of Ruins and Rubble in Postwar Representations of Warsaw
Ruins and Rubble
Warsaw Accuses: Ruins On Display
Affective Chronicles of a Place and Time
In a Heap of Rubble
Chapter 3
Homelessness, Homecoming, and the “Joy of New Constructions”
The Destruction of Houses and the Politics of Homelessness
Imagining Homes for the Homeless
Art as a Home for All
Programmatic Lack of Program
Modernism Against Itself
(Un)doing Modernism
From Friction to Faction
Social Fabric and the Canvas Surface
Bibliography
List of Works
Index
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