Jan de Weryha-Wysoczański

Jan Michał, 6th Chevalier de Weryha-Wysoczański-Pietrusiewicz[1] (born 1 October 1950), known as Jan de Weryha-Wysoczański, is a Polish sculptor,[2][3] process artist[4] and concrete artist.[5] He was born in Gdańsk.[2][3] From 1971 to 1976 he studied sculpture at the Academy of Fine Arts in Gdańsk.[2][3] Since 1981, he has been living and working in Hamburg.[2] In 1998, he won the 1st prize, the Prix du Jury, awarded by the Ministry of Culture of the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg at the 'Salon de Printemps 98', Luxembourg.[2][3][6] In 1999, he created a monument in memory of the deportees of the 1944 Warsaw Uprising for the memorial to the victims of the Neuengamme Nazi concentration camp at Hamburg,[2][3][7][8] in 2012 a memorial for the Nazi forced labourers in Hamburg-Bergedorf.[9][10] He was represented by Galerie Kellermann in Düsseldorf.

Jan de Weryha-Wysoczański
De Weryha-Wysoczański in 2014
Born(1950-10-01)1 October 1950
EducationAcademy of Fine Arts in Gdańsk
Known forSculpture
The Wukry coat of arms

He comes from an old noble family of Walachian[11] boyar[12] stock and legend has it that his coat of arms is borne by the descendants of Attila the Hun.[13] His only son Rafael is a writer, his uncle Basil was a rich 19th century philanthropist.[1][11] A son of his aunt Anna[14] was composer Yaroslav Yaroslavenko.

Works in museum collections

Sammlung de Weryha

Hamburg is the location of the “Sammlung de Weryha”, which is based in the former depository of the palace museum Hamburg-Bergedorf. Most of the collection, composed of works by the artist and supported by a Friends organisation, is permanently being on display in the exhibition rooms.[15]

Exhibitions (selection)

  • 1978 60th Anniversary of the Greater Poland Uprising in Art, City Gallery BWA Arsenał, Poznań
  • 1989 Autumn Salon, Kunsthaus Hamburg, Hamburg
  • 1990 Germany in Montana, Gallery of Visual Arts, Missoula, Montana
  • 1993 Selected Art Work from the Federal Republic of Germany and The United States: A Traveling Exhibition, Paris Gibson Square Museum of Art, Great Falls, Montana
  • 1998 Spring Salon '98, Luxembourg Artist Center, Municipal Theater, Luxembourg
  • 2004 Strictly Wood. Heiner Szamida, Helga Weihs, Jan de Weryha, Kunsthalle Wilhelmshaven, Wilhelmshaven
  • 2004 Jan de Weryha-Wysoczański – Wooden Cube from the Wooden Cube Series, Chapel Gallery, Polish Sculpture Center, Orońsko
  • 2005 Jan de Weryha-Wysoczański – Epiphanies of Nature in the Late-Modern World, Szyb Wilson Gallery, Katowice
  • 2005 Jan de Weryha-Wysoczański – Wood – Archive, Patio Gallery, Łódź
  • 2006 Jan de Weryha-Wysoczański – Revelations in Wood – Orońsko 2006, Museum of Contemporary Sculpture, Orońsko
  • 2006 XV International Sculpture Triennial – Sensitivity, "Zamek" Culture Center, Poznań
  • 2006 Jan de Weryha-Wysoczański – Revelations in Wood, City Gallery BWA, Jelenia Góra
  • 2008 Alphabet of the Sculpture DEF..., Museum of Contemporary Sculpture, Orońsko
  • 2009 Jan de Weryha-Wysoczański – Tabularium, Gdańsk City Gallery, Gdańsk
  • 2009 XVI International Sculpture Triennial – Crisis of the Genre, "Zamek" Culture Center, Poznań
  • 2010 Wood as Sculpture Material, Museum of Contemporary Sculpture, Orońsko
  • 2011 Hamburg Art Week 2011, Chilehaus, Hamburg
  • 2013 NordArt 2013, Carlshütte, Büdelsdorf
  • 2013 PROJECT BERLIN RELOAD, FACTORY-ART GALLERY, Berlin
  • 2015 Alphabet of the Sculpture VWZŹ..., Museum of Contemporary Sculpture, Orońsko
  • 2015 Mailights 2015: Günther Uecker, Otto Piene, Heinz Mack, Jan de Weryha, Manfred Binzer, Galerie Kellermann, Düsseldorf
  • 2018 Wood Sculpture in the Work of Polish Artists 1918-2018, Władysław Count Zamoyski City Gallery in Zakopane, among others from the collections of the Zachęta National Gallery of Art, Warsaw, and the State Art Gallery, Sopot

References

  1. Genealogisches Handbuch des Adels, Adelige Häuser XXX, Limburg a. d. Lahn 2008, vol 145, pp. 412–420, ISBN 978-3-7980-0845-8, OCLC 1570546.
  2. Encyklopedia polskiej emigracji i Polonii (Encyclopedia of the Polish Emigration and of the Poles Abroad), Toruń 2005, vol V, pp. 234–5, ISBN 83-89376-15-6, OCLC 315323037.
  3. Polak w świecie. Leksykon Polonii i Polaków za granicą (The Pole in the World, Encyclopedia of the Polish Living Abroad), Warsaw 2001, p. 336, ISBN 83-223-2693-9, OCLC 47863843.
  4. Jan de Weryha-Wysoczański – Revelations in Wood – Orońsko 2006, Orońsko: Museum of Contemporary Sculpture, Polish Sculpture Centre 2006, p. 6, ISBN 8389327376, OCLC 957590173.
  5. Daniel Spanke, Strenges Holz. Heiner Szamida, Helga Weihs, Jan de Weryha, Bielefeld 2004, p. 7, ISBN 3-936848-05-X, OCLC 1049130586.
  6. Kürschners Handbuch der Bildenden Künstler. Deutschland, Österreich, Schweiz, Munich 2005, vol II, p. 864, ISBN 3-598-24734-6.
  7. Taz Hamburg, 27 April 1999.
  8. Hamburger Abendblatt, 27 April 1999.
  9. Bild, 22 September 2012.
  10. Hamburger Morgenpost, 22 September 2012.
  11. Gothaisches Genealogisches Handbuch, Adelige Häuser IV, Marburg 2018, vol 8, p. 487, ISBN 978-3-9817243-7-0, OCLC 995606854.
  12. Chevalier Rafael de Weryha-Wysoczański, A Chevalier from Poland. The Memoirs of Chevalier Rafael de Weryha-Wysoczański, Kibworth Beauchamp 2016, p. 1, ISBN 978-1785891618, OCLC 956765261.
  13. Kasper Niesiecki, Herbarz Polski, vol IX, Leipzig 1841, pp. 447-9.
  14. Gothaisches Genealogisches Handbuch, Adelige Häuser IV, Marburg 2018, vol 8, p. 498, ISBN 978-3-9817243-7-0,OCLC 995606854.
  15. Chevalier Rafael de Weryha-Wysoczański, A Chevalier from Poland. The Memoirs of Chevalier Rafael de Weryha-Wysoczański, Kibworth Beauchamp 2016, p. 46, ISBN 978-1785891618, OCLC 956765261.
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