Neoplastic Room - designed by Władysław Strzemiński, the space of the Museum of Art in Łódź corresponding to the works of Katarzyna Kobro, Theo van Doesburg or Henryk Berlewi. Neoplastic Room, photo by P. Tomczyk
The Neoplastic Room was opened in 1948 in the new post-war seat of the Museum of Art in Łódź, in the nineteenth-century palace of the Łódź industrialist Maurycy Poznański at Więckowski Street. Originally, in the hall arranged by Władysław Strzemiński, which was the realization of theses from his Composition of space, a collection of the European avant-garde of the group "a.r." Was presented in the 1930s.
The Neoplastic Room survived only until 1950, when it was repainted, and the works contained in it, as contrary to the style of real socialism, were moved to the magazines. The room was reconstructed in 1960 by Bolesław Utkin, a student of Strzemiński, based on the surviving photographs. There were again sculptures by Katarzyna Kobro, paintings by Henryk Stażewski, works of Theo van Doesburg or furniture designed by Strzemiński. Bolesław Utkin also designed the so-called a small Neoplastic Room, where Strzemiński's paintings were placed.
In April 2013, the Neoplastic Room was made available to the public as part of the Neoplastic Room project. Open composition. As part of it, the room presents works by contemporary artists who refer and conduct dialogue with Strzemiński's work and avant-garde heritage.
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