Difference between revisions of "Zero-61"

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(New page: Art group, active 1961-69. Members included Jozef Robakowski, Czesław Kuchta, Jerzy Wardak, Andrzej Różycki, Antoni Mikołajczyk, Wojciech Bruszewski. According...)
 
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Art group, active 1961-69. Members included [[Jozef Robakowski]], [[Czesław Kuchta]], [[Jerzy Wardak]], [[Andrzej Różycki]], [[Antoni Mikołajczyk]], [[Wojciech Bruszewski]].
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Artist group, active 1961-69. Members included [[Jozef Robakowski]], [[Czesław Kuchta]], [[Jerzy Wardak]], [[Andrzej Różycki]], [[Antoni Mikołajczyk]], [[Wojciech Bruszewski]].
  
 
According to Robakowski, the group drew inspiration from the "tradition of metaphorical montage known from interwar painting, photography, and avant-garde cinema."
 
According to Robakowski, the group drew inspiration from the "tradition of metaphorical montage known from interwar painting, photography, and avant-garde cinema."
  
 
One of Zero-61's most important presentations was an independent exhibition at a deserted smithy in 1969, where instead of photographs the viewer encountered 'objects for photographing'.
 
One of Zero-61's most important presentations was an independent exhibition at a deserted smithy in 1969, where instead of photographs the viewer encountered 'objects for photographing'.

Revision as of 23:19, 6 June 2009

Artist group, active 1961-69. Members included Jozef Robakowski, Czesław Kuchta, Jerzy Wardak, Andrzej Różycki, Antoni Mikołajczyk, Wojciech Bruszewski.

According to Robakowski, the group drew inspiration from the "tradition of metaphorical montage known from interwar painting, photography, and avant-garde cinema."

One of Zero-61's most important presentations was an independent exhibition at a deserted smithy in 1969, where instead of photographs the viewer encountered 'objects for photographing'.