Age, Biography and Wiki
Ewa Gargulinska was born on 27 August, 1941 in Kraków, Poland, is a Polish painter. Discover Ewa Gargulinska's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is she in this year and how she spends money? Also learn how she earned most of networth at the age of 82 years old?
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Age |
82 years old |
Zodiac Sign |
Virgo |
Born |
27 August 1941 |
Birthday |
27 August |
Birthplace |
Kraków, Poland |
Nationality |
Poland
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We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 27 August.
She is a member of famous painter with the age 82 years old group.
Ewa Gargulinska Height, Weight & Measurements
At 82 years old, Ewa Gargulinska height not available right now. We will update Ewa Gargulinska's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.
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Dating & Relationship status
She is currently single. She is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about She's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, She has no children.
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Ewa Gargulinska Net Worth
Her net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is Ewa Gargulinska worth at the age of 82 years old? Ewa Gargulinska’s income source is mostly from being a successful painter. She is from Poland. We have estimated Ewa Gargulinska's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.
Net Worth in 2024 |
$1 Million - $5 Million |
Salary in 2024 |
Under Review |
Net Worth in 2023 |
Pending |
Salary in 2023 |
Under Review |
House |
Not Available |
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Not Available |
Source of Income |
painter |
Ewa Gargulinska Social Network
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Timeline
The dream like mood of her dark painting form this era brings to mind the Romantic Movement in art of 1800 with its surreal mysticism, reflection upon life, death and the unconscious.
Ewa Gargulinska (born 27 August 1941) is a Polish painter.
She is known for her Romantic Expressionist work.
Gargulinska received her MA degree from the Academy of Fine Art in Warsaw 1960-1966.
Her work from this period was taken into the Academy of Fine Arts Archive and exhibited at The Young Talents exhibition at Foksal Gallery in Warsaw.
During the rise of the Polish Film School movement poster art reached its peak and was enthusiastically received in the west.
Gargulinska's poster images were shown in a group exhibition at the ICA in London in 1971.
In 1972 Gargulinska managed to obtain permission from the communist security office to travel to London where she worked as a set and textile designer as well as a visual artist for a year.
In 1973 she was required to return to Warsaw.
Following a disturbing incident with the communist secret police Gargulinska decided to leave Poland permanently which was forbidden under the communist regime.
A German friend helped Gargulinska across the border and took her to Hamburg.
While waiting for an English Visa Gargulinska sold her first paintings and images of film posters to private clients in order to survive.
Following her return to London 'Gargulinska's versatility has been apparent through her wide-ranging career.
Her art has been exhibited internationally and is represented in several public collections including: the National Museum of Women in the Arts, Washington DC and the "Zacheta" National Gallery of Contemporary Art in Warsaw, Poland.
Her paintings are collected worldwide, most notably by Doctor Arthur Sackler (founder of the new wing at the Royal Academy, London and the extensions to the Metropolitan and Smithsonian Museums in the United States), Cusacks, Jeremy Irons, Sir Michael Scott and Vernon Ellis, Chairman of the English National Opera.
She has painted portraits in New York, designed theatre sets for the Gate Theatre in Dublin, posters for Madam Tussauds in London.'
Stylistically a romantic expressionist, Gargulinska's work interchanges the abstract and figurative in unpredictable, powerful combinations.
Gargulinska's paintings often include subjects from Greek mythology where the dramatic portrayal of human emotions expresses her creative imagination at its best.
"The inverse of Horace's 'ut pictura poesis', here we have painting like poetry, the poetry of W B Yeats or Ezra Pound, for instance. Indeed one might say that Ewa Gargulinska has brought the poetry back into painting. Poetry is a free association of ideas and images within a loose, but not altogether disconnected, framework. Gargulinska's framework is classical mythology, the sculpture representing it, and modern psychology. These two are not entirely alien to each other, as Freud has shown. Of particular interest is that images emerge out of the paint, as it were, and rarely reach anything like naturalism. This is truly painterly poetry, the most fascinating aspect of which is the emerging mirror-image."
These works, rendered in a variety of reds, from subtle orange to deep Alizarin and brown Madders are drawn from the subjects of mythology and drama.
Gargulinska's powerful use of colour and form symbolically represents the tragic and timeless history of human relationships.
"Where then, is relief? In shedding tears or wrestling down my grief?"
The Irish poet Seamus Heaney, with his Polish friend Stanislaw Baranczak recently translated a book of ‘Laments’ by the Renaissance Polish poet Jan Kochanowski.
These beautiful, passionate outpourings of grief on the death of his two-year-old daughter are a perfect expression of that Polish intensity of feeling which surfaces in Ewa Gargulinska's dark, brooding paintings.
Her consistent colour range of deep blue, red, purple, offset by occasional outbursts of acid yellow, explores a world of melancholy and sorrow, the ‘haunts of pain’ of the poets mourning.
But the active surface of the paintings nevertheless bespeaks the living rather than the dead.
The compassionate presence of the guardian spirit wards off ‘the eternal iron slumbers’ of despair, by the power of art ‘to purge our human thought of all its dread’, ‘where angels dwell beyond distress and fear.’
Gargulinska was a visiting lecturer at The School of Visual Arts in New York, US, from 1982 to 1983 and Central Saint Martins, London, England, from 1984 to 2011.
Gargulinska currently lives and works in London, England.
Gargulinska was born into a family of old Polish nobility from Lwów and Kraków.
During the Second World War her family's estate was confiscated by the Russians when they invaded Lwów.
Subsequently, Gargulinska's paternal grandmother was taken to a camp in Siberia where she was later liberated by General Sikorski's army and took part in its exodus through the Middle East.
Gargulinska, her mother and maternal grandmother were taken to Pawiak concentration camp during the Warsaw uprising and escaped before it was destroyed by the Nazi's.
After the war Gargulinska and her family moved to Sopot, a sea side resort where there were more work opportunities for her father.
Gargulinska attended primary school there until her parents divorced and the family moved back to her grandmother's apartment in Kraków.
The numerous relocations the family had to endure interfered with Gargulinska's education causing her to have a sense of displacement, however, it encouraged the development of her artistic talent.
After a three-month stay in Paris at the age of seventeen, Gargulinska decided to change her initial plan to study French Philology, and entered the Academy of Fine Art in Kraków.
After a year studying in Kraków she moved to the Academy of Fine Art in Warsaw, the leading art school in Poland, providing new teaching methods from Bauhaus as well as the Russian avant garde movement.
Gargulinska's studies included tuition under Professor Henryk Tomaszewski (the most influential poster designer of his day).
Poster Design became a new futuristic art form, considered at the time to surpass traditional fine art for its imaginative expression.