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2011 2012 adam mickiewicz institute | report | season 2011/2012 It was an excellent season for the growth of the Polska brand as well as for the development of the Adam Mickiewicz Institute’s reputation among our global partners. Paweł Potoroczyn, director of the Adam Mickiewicz Institute The 2011/2012 season will be remembered as a period of great challenges and spectacular outcomes. With whole-hearted accountability, we can say today that through the success of the International Cultural Programme of the Polish EU Presidency we have gained a level of experience that prepares us to meet any challenge head on. This experience is already paying dividends, as evidenced by projects like Polska Arts Edinburgh 2012, Polska Music, the Asia Project and the latest concert tour of the I, CULTURE Orchestra. The International Programme of the Polish Presidency surpassed even our boldest expectations – 20 million spectators in 10 world capitals, more than 7,500 write-ups in the most influential media and hundreds of valuable new contacts. At the Adam Mickiewicz Institute, we do not speak about the success of the Presidency; we speak about its effects, thanks to which Poland now has a face and our national brand is ever more robust and ever more reflective of the most desirable traits. Equally important to us is the fact that, due to the geographic reach of the Presidency, we gained valuable and practical experience in the Far East, which we plan to capitalise on in upcoming seasons. Though the Presidency is now behind us, two of its pillar projects will continue to shine with a new lease on life and, thus, a new energy: the I, CULTURE Orchestra and the Karol Szymanowski project. Initially established for the duration of the Presidency, the orchestra composed of young musicians from Poland and countries of the Eastern Partnership met with such great enthusiasm from the public, critics and diplomatic circles that we decided to make it the Partnership’s de facto flagship institution. Garnering praise as one of the most interesting projects of the Presidency as well as of the entire music season, and being honoured with a distinction from the European Commission, it has been renewed as a long-term project. In the summer of 2012, a new edition of the ICO set out on a tour of Eastern Partnership nations, while the following season will see them visit the Baltic states. The Presidency also played a key role in the re-appearance of works by Karol Szymanowski in the repertoires of the world’s leading orchestras and in the most prestigious concert halls. The composer’s music resounded at the Royal Festival Hall and Cadogan Hall (London), La Monnaie and Palais des Beaux-Arts (Brussels), Berliner Philharmonie, Theatreo Real (Madrid), Theatre de Chatelet and Salle Pleyel (Paris), the Central Conservatory of Music in Beijing and the Asahi Concert Hall (Tokyo), as well as the National Philharmonic of Belarus, the National Philharmonic of Ukraine and the Ukrainian National Opera. The London Symphony Orchestra’s performance of Szymanowski’s complete symphony cycle and both of his violin concertos, under the baton of Valery Gergiev, turned out to be real sensation at the Edinburgh International Festival. In the summer of 2012, as part of the Cultural Olympics, Poland had a strong presence at four Edinburgh festivals simultaneously – from the extremely popular and attendance-record-setting Fringe, to the Edinburgh Jazz & Blues Festival, the Edinburgh Art Festival and the Edinburgh International Festival (one of the world’s longestrunning festivals). The Edinburgh International Festival was opened by the play Macbeth directed by Grzegorz Jarzyna. In all, Polish performances drew nearly 30,000 spectators at the massive international competition, with the Song of the Goat Theatre and Theatre ZAR winning awards in all of the most noteworthy categories. It was an excellent season for the growth of the Polska brand as well as for the development of the Adam Mickiewicz Institute’s reputation among our global partners. The strength and credibility of our institution are measured in the trust that other Polish and international institutions put in us, while our ISO certification is a formal assurance of our rigorous commitment to quality. In keeping with tradition and good practice, let us use this moment to thank the officials, colleagues and friends at the Ministry of Culture and National Heritage, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the various Polish Institutes and Polish diplomatic outposts throughout the world for their invaluable support, wise advice and gracious cooperation. season 2011/2012 Contents Klopsztanga KLOPSZTANGA10 COMING SOON 12 THE COAL RIVIERA 16 PART BIBLE, PART RECIPE BOOK 20 COMPOSERS AT WORK 24 Edinburgh CULTURAL OLYMPICS polish jazz storms sCOTLAND 28 30 Asia Project POLISH MUSIC IN ASIA GREAT MUSIC AND GREAT POLITICS A COMPELLING EPITAPH CHOPIN IN SEOUL POLAND IN CLOSE-UP 36 38 40 44 48 Theatre Hysterically about Love Walpurgisnacht in New york RUSSIA LOVES (A)POLLONIA A TRIUMPH OF DIVERSITY 52 54 58 62 Music MARIA RESURRECTED SZYMANOWSKI LONDON-STYLE CHOPIN REINVIGORATED LIVERPOOL SOUNDS POLISH WAVES ON THE ENGLISH CHANNEL NEIghBOURS AT THE GATE ORCHESTRA JOINS EAST AND WEST 66 68 70 74 76 80 84 Visual Arts AND EUROPE WAS STUNNEd AN INTENSELY POLISH PARIS action above object DESIGNERS ON THE OFFENSIVE A CRUISE TOWARD A BETTER LIFE THE DEVIL IN THE HOTHOUSE 90 94 96 100 104 106 Publications PANUFNIK ON DISC AND ON PAPER LUTOSŁAWSKI WITH THE BBC ORCHESTRA POLAND FOR BEGINNERS PRINTED MASTERPIECES 110 111 112 113 About us ami culture award THE HIGHEST QUALITY XPERTIS FOR EXPERTS staff Structure 2011/2012 Budget 116 118 120 120 122 k lo p s z ta n g a AGathering by the Carpet Beating Rack An immense presentation of contemporary Polish culture in North Rhine-Westphalia More than 70 cultural events were held in North Rhine-Westphalia as part of a large-scale presentation organised by the Adam Mickiewicz Institute. The programme aimed to expose German audiences to the young, experimental and avant-garde face of Polish culture. The project showcased Poland as a creative nation, full of artistic fervour, where many unique and unusual things come to life. Klopsztanga, as the project was named, is a Silesian word for carpet beating rack. In the past, both in Poland and in Germany, the carpet beating rack was the epicentre of community life. It was where childhood friendships were forged, first loves blossomed and crazy ideas were born. The carpet beating rack functioned like a network, like an early facebook. Klopsztanga. Poland without Borders 2012/2013 hopes to create just such opportunities for cultures to meet: without ceremony or proprieties. The presence of Polish culture in North Rhine-Westphalia was felt most intensely in April and June of 2012. Concerts, performances, exhibitions, screenings and discussions abounded in more than 20 cities, including Aachen, Cologne, Düsseldorf, Bochum, Essen, Dortmund, Straelen, Unna and Witten. The large-scale project was inaugurated on 15 April 2012 with the FEST MIT POLEN event at the Schauspiel theatre in Cologne. The event featured concerts by Mitch & Mitch and Baaba, an exhibition of photography by Piotr Wójcik, Andrzej Tobis and Arkadiusz Gola, and a performance of the play “Sierakowski” by komuna//warszawa theatre. The evening’s rich programme was rounded out by special multimedia presentations and discussion panels. For the Klopsztanga project, the Adam Mickiewicz Institute did more than just organise presentations of Polish art in North Rhine-Westphalia. The Institute also made sure Polish artists and people of culture were present at all of the most noteworthy cultural events in the region. A series of discussions on Polish contemporary art was organised to coincide with the Art Cologne Fair on 18 – 22 April, while June and July saw Polish musicians take the stage at the c/o pop and Juicy Beats festivals respectively. Klopsztanga is just a prelude to long-lasting and regular cultural cooperation between Poland and North Rhine-Westphalia that will include coproductions in various fields of art (music, dance, theatre) and creative workshops. The Klopsztanga project is also significant from a political perspective – the events enable the German public to see Poland as a creative and modern country that acts as a moderator in the dialogue between Western and Eastern Europe. Mitch&Mitch concert at the inauguration of the Klopsztanga project photo: Marcin Oliva Soto Coming Soon! season 2011/2012 > klopsztanga 012 Coming Soon (arrière-garde) Temporary Gallery, Cologne, 16 – 26 April 2012 (arrière-garde) Uncertainty about the future, the anticipation of the end of the way things are, not knowing what will come later – these are common elements of the works of art gathered at the Coming Soon exhibition at the Temporary Gallery in Cologne The exhibition is steeped in a sense of impending disaster, but it is also a manifestation of artistic freedom and individuality. Like all of the projects organised by the Institute, it deals with vital social questions. In Cologne, Radek Szlaga exhibited burned automobiles, which brought to mind the recent riots in the UK. Konrad Smoleński assembled an installation from microphones that emitted sound instead of capturing it – the work is titled “The End of Radio” and it uses simple imagery to show how, in the age of the Internet, the traditional distinction between broadcaster and listener has been irrevocably shattered. Jacek Malinowski’s film “Nosferatu – The Fearful Dictator” tells the story of a vampire who comes to Warsaw to buy real estate (watching the film, one immediately thinks of investors and speculators, and the degree to which they dictate terms for ordinary people). There was also a wanderer spewing beautiful scenery as well as a man trying unsuccessfully to build an ark, and the superhero The Incredible Hulk speaking with Abraham Lincoln in phrases taken from the film “Planet of the Apes”. Sometimes it’s difficult to shake the disturbing thought that Poland took on the task of assimilating into old Europe too late, and thus, in vain. The European project is bursting at the seams, and the West is silent about its future. There is the feeling that we are learning a role for a performance that is nearing the end of its run curator Stach Szabłowski “The artists taking part in Coming Soon,” explains curator Stach Szabłowski, “belong to a generation that did not overthrow communism and was not involved in Poland’s heroic transformation. Waiting for a new paradigm, each one of them defines it in their own way. This is reflected in the shape of the exhibition, which juxtaposes differing artistic practices that cannot be pigeonholed into any specific political or aesthetic avant-garde.” Artists taking part in the Coming Soon exhibition at the Temporary Gallery, Cologne photo: Marcin Oliva Soto season 2011/2012 > klopsztanga 014 Coming Soon (arrière-garde) Temporary Gallery, Cologne, 16 – 26 April 2012 Works by Radek Szlaga at the Comming Soon exhibition at the Temporary Gallery, Cologne photo: Marcin Oliva Soto In the works brought together at Coming Soon, the Western world – rooted in democracy, liberty and human rights – appears to be brittle and doomed, if not to annihilation then certainly to a defensive stance. “Sometimes it’s difficult to shake the disturbing thought,” relates Szabłowski, “that Poland took on the task of assimilating into old Europe too late, and thus, in vain. The European project is bursting at the seams, and the West is silent about its future. There is the feeling that we are learning a role for a performance that is nearing the end of its run.” According to the exhibition’s curator, in such a situation, artists willingly shift from the avant-garde to the arrièregarde of society, where there is more room for freedom, individual pursuits, experiments and slackened discipline. Konrad Smoleński, The End of Radio, 2012 photo: Marcin Oliva Soto season 2011/2012 > klopsztanga 016 Laboured Memory Weltkulturerbe Zollverein, Essen, 16 May – 30 June 2012 T h e R i v C i o e a r l a A dramatic installation offers a glimpse into labour in the postindustrial Upper Silesia and Ruhr regions “You must descend into the depths of the earth to reach earth,” says the subheading of the main part of the exhibition in Essen. Laboured Memory is a multimedia project at the old Zollverein mine presented as part of the Klopsztanga. Poland without Borders project. Visitors are led into one of the mine’s halls where they are greeted by Wilhelm Sasnal’s film depicting work in the mines and Arkadiusz Gola’s photography series, which presents people of Silesia at rest amongst slag heaps on the flooded grounds of the mine. There are also some startling photos of the abandoned homes of miners in buildings that have been slated for demolition in Bytom. The rooms have colourful walls – the vibrant colours appear to be a reaction to having to work in darkness and to the drab world outside the windows. Personal items left behind seem to be crying out in the deserted living spaces; a sign that the departing families wanted to leave their entire lives behind. Another contrasting bright and lively splash of colour are the paintings created by Silesian amateur artists, shown alongside works by professional artists at the Essen exhibition. Upper Silesia has the largest concentration of amateur artists in all of Poland. For the inhabitants of this region, creativity is an antidote to the greyness of everyday life and the darkness of their subterranean toil. In all, the Essen exhibition consists of works by nearly fifty artists – Polish and German. As a whole, it is rich and varied in content but also very cohesive. The Ruhr region and Upper Silesia do not resemble each other today but there is much linking them, especially their past – as the title says, a laboured memory. The exhibition showing the twilight of the culture of heavy industry enjoyed great success and impressive attendance numbers. A fragment of Laboured Memory at Zollverein Essen photo: Marcin Oliva Soto season 2011/2012 > klopsztanga 018 Laboured Memory Weltkulturerbe Zollverein, Essen, 16 May – 30 June 2012 Piotr Wójcik, Bytom Karb – Homes with Memories photo: Marcin Oliva Soto Wojciech Kucharczyk, Erinnerung an morgen photo: Marcin Oliva Soto Marek Schovanek, Hunter-Gatherer photo: Marcin Oliva Soto Andrzej Tobis, German-Polish Dictionary photo: Marcin Oliva Soto season 2011/2012 > klopsztanga 020 Chorus of Women Dresden, Dusseldorf, Muellheim, Strasburg, May – June 2012 Pa r t B i b l e , Pa r t R e c i p e B o o k 28 women of various ages and professions shout out in revolt “Marta Górnicka’s Chorus of Women is a true revelation; surely a breakthrough in Polish theatre,” wrote Thomas Irmer of the German site nachtkritik.de. German audiences got a chance to experience the chorus thanks to the Klopsztanga. Poland without Borders project. Górnicka’s project is part play and part performance piece, with a libretto (selected and edited by Górnicka and Agata Adamiecka of the Warsaw Theatre Institute) composed of fragments from a wide array of texts, from Greek tragedies, Biblical passages and newspaper and television advertisements, to recipes and pop songs. “We have to bring the chorus back to the stage, to find new forms for its presence in theatre and we must bring women back to the chorus,” Marta Górnicka remarked describing the aims of her artistic undertaking. The Chorus of Women is a project created with the Theatre Institute in Warsaw and consists exclusively of amateurs of various ages and occupations selected through auditions. The women sing, whisper, shout, dance, threaten and lament to music composed by Aleksandra Gryka. At times, the chorus speaks in unison while at others it breaks up into separate parts, such as duets. Thanks to the use of multiple forms of expression and an effective arrangement of the voices available, the performance creates an irresistibly authentic impression. The ensemble presented both of their performances – “This is the Chorus Speaking” and “Magnificat” – at Klopsztanga. Both pieces are centred on women’s refusal to accept the societal position that patriarchal tradition forces upon them and are a revolt against the way women are seen and how they are expected to see themselves. Marta Górnicka’s Chorus of Women is a true revelation; surely a breakthrough in Polish theatre Thomas Irmer, nachtkritik.de A scene from the play “This Is the Chorus Speaking” by the Chorus of Women, dir. Marta Górnicka photo: Antonio Galdamez Muñoz, Witold Meysztowicz season 2011/2012 > klopsztanga 022 Chorus of Women Dresden, Dusseldorf, Muellheim, Strasburg, May – June 2012 The Chorus of Women in their play “This Is the Chorus Speaking”, dir. Marta Górnicka photo: Antonio Galdamez Muñoz, Witold Meysztowicz season 2011/2012 > klopsztanga 024 Composer collider: Poland workshops Cologne, 7 – 10 June 2012 C o m p o s e r s a t w o r k Thanks to the Adam Mickiewicz Institute, a group of young Polish composers were granted a unique learning opportunity Seven students of the art of composing – Mateusz Ryczek, Jarosław Płonka, Michał Ossowski, Jacek Sotomski, Karol Nepelski, Emil Bernard Wojtacki and Katarzyna Dziewiątkowska-Mleczko – travelled to Cologne to take part in workshops with the renowned musikFabrik group, one of the world’s leading contemporary music ensembles. Above all, the focus of musikFabrik is artistic innovation, with an emphasis on discovering new means of expression. The musicians explore novel combinations of electronics, dance, theatre, film and literature. The four-day workshops saw the young Polish composers collaborate with the group on their new compositions. The projects turned out to be a great success – the world-class musicians and the knowledge and collection of instruments they have at their disposal proved a wonderful source of inspiration for the Polish artists. One of the workshop participants will be awarded a stipend from the Adam Mickiewicz Institute and musikFabrik to compose a piece of music in 2013. The resulting composition will be performed by musikFabrik live on air on WDR radio and issued as a record release. The Composer collider: Poland workshops were organised as part of the Klopsztanga season of Polish culture in Germany. musikFabrik composers workshop photo: Adam Grabolus Edinburgh C u l t u r a l O l y m p i c s Polish artists set to shine at Edinburgh festivals Each summer, Edinburgh becomes Europe’s culture capital. Countless plays, exhibitions and concerts attract not only the city’s residents but also crowds of art lovers from all over the world: more than four million attendees in all! In 2012, an unprecedented number of Polish artists brought their work to these cultural olympics. But what really made the Polish contingent stand out was its quality. The Adam Mickiewicz Institute teamed up with the leading festivals and stages to showcase the most noteworthy achievements Polish art has to offer. The Edinburgh International Festival was kicked off by TR Warszawa’s play “2008: Macbeth” in a specially-prepared Lowland Hall. The play was performed at the venue a total of seven times, each of them a sell-out. Performances of Polish music were a highlight of the music section of the Edinburgh International Festival. The programme included the London Symphony Orchestra’s performances of Karol Szymanowski’s four symphonies and two of his violin concertos. Meanwhile, the Cleveland Orchestra delighted audiences with two concerts of music by Witold Lutosławski. Edinburgh’s Fringe Festival featured an even more abundant bill of Polish accents. The Old College Quad played host to a number of outdoor performances including Teatr KTO’s “The Blind”, and Teatr Biuro Podróży’s “Macbeth”, “Carmen Funebre” and “Planet Lem”. The festival line-up also included a performance of Aleksandra Borys’s “Lost in Details” at Dance Base, one of the world’s foremost dance centres. Surely, the epicentre of Poland’s activity during the Fringe festival was Summerhall – a former veterinary school converted into a culture centre. This is where Paweł Passini’s “Puppet. The Book of Splendour” had its premiere. The venue also hosted the latest offering from the Song of the Goat Theatre Company, entitled “The Songs of Lear”; Robert Kuśmirowski’s “Pain Thing” installation (specially prepared for the venue), and Wojtek Ziemilski’s video installation “Relatives”. Visitors to Summerhall also saw exciting presentations by the groups: komuna// warszawa, Teatr ZAR, Teatr Usta Usta, and the National Film School in Łódź, along with concerts of contemporary music, meetings, and animated film screenings for children and adults. Earlier this year, in July, Polish music resounded at brilliant concerts during the Jazz & Blues Festival. All in all, Poland’s representation in Edinburgh leaves no doubt as to the country’s position as a cultural hotbed in Europe. festival club installation Relatives by Wojtek ZieMilski 3-12 Aug, 11:00 am – 9:00 pm If You See a Cat & Other Animal Tales (aniMations for children) 12 and 19 Aug at 10:30 am Little Black Riding Hood & Other Surreal Stories (aniMation for adults) 9 and 16 Aug at 11:15 pm Borowczyk Shorts/ Boro in the Box 16 Aug at 9:15 pm Guide to the Poles 14-16 Aug at 7:30 pm as a part of festival club at tickets: Summerhall (venue 26), Summerhall 1, EH9 1PL / box office 0845 874 3001 www.summerhall.co.uk To explore, engage, and enjoy all that Polska Arts has to offer in Edinburgh this year check out: Wojtek Ziemilski SmaLL NarraTioN Performances: 3-4, 13-19, 21-23 Aug at 7:15 pm Summerhall neTTheatre PuPPET. Book of SPLENdor directed by PaWeł Passini © krzysztof bieliński Preview: 3 Aug at 9:00 pm Performances: 4-13 Aug at 9:00 pm Summerhall as a part of edinburgh festival fringe tickets: The Hub, Castlehill (EH1 2NE) / 0131 473 2000 www.edinburghjazzfestival.com To explore, engage, and enjoy all that Polska Arts has to offer in Edinburgh this year check out: as a part of edinburgh festival fringe tickets: Summerhall (venue 26), Summerhall 1, EH9 1PL / box office 0845 874 3001 www.summerhall.co.uk To explore, engage, and enjoy all that Polska Arts has to offer in Edinburgh this year check out: season 2011/2012 > EDINBURGH 030 Edinburgh Jazz & Blues Festival Edinburgh, 25 – 28 June 2012 p o l i s h j a z z storms scotland Five Polish acts perform at the largest jazz and blues festival in Scotland This year’s edition of the Edinburgh Jazz & Blues Festival saw performances by Aga Zaryan, Marcin Masecki’s band Profesjonalizm, the Marcin Wasilewski Trio, the Maciej Obara Quartet and Mitch & Mitch with their Incredible Combo. The Edinburgh summit of jazz and blues artists is among the largest events of its kind in Europe and the biggest in the UK. The approximately one hundred concerts at each year’s edition give audiences a chance to hear everything from big band standards to skiffle, ragtime and free jazz. While selecting the Polish line-up for the festival, the Adam Mickiewicz Institute opted to showcase young musicians of the highest artistic calibre. A shining example of this would be Aga Zaryan, whose unique voice is already known to audiences the world over (her 2010 album Looking Walking Being was released on the world’s most famous jazz label – Blue Note Records). Marcin Wasilewski, meanwhile, is a three-time winner of the Fryderyk award in the Jazz Artist of the Year category. He is signed to the Munich-based ECM Records and has already graced stages throughout Europe as well as the USA, garnering the praise of critics at every turn. The saxophonist Maciej Obara is probably best known for his work with Antoine Roney, a leading figure of New York’s jazz avant-garde. The festival in Edinburgh was a perfect occasion for Obara to present his new quartet, of which Dominik Wania is also a member. Maciej Masecki’s Profesjonalizm sextet achieved notoriety with their record Chopin, Chopin, Chopin.. Capping off the Polish series in Edinburgh was Mitch & Mitch. Established in 2002, the group started out playing alternative country but later embarked on a musical journey that would see nearly every type of music imaginable appear in their repertoire. Their Edinburgh performance featured an expanded roster of players with the addition of a brass section, known as the Incredible Combo. Mitch&Mitch in concert photo: Douglas Robertson Photography season 2011/2012 > EDINBURGH 032 Edinburgh Jazz & Blues Festival Edinburgh, 25 – 28 June 2012 Marcin Wasilewski Trio on stage photo: Douglas Robertson Photography Mitch&Mitch live photo: Douglas Robertson Photography Profesjonalizm on stage photo: Douglas Robertson Photography Aga Zaryan photo: Mateusz Stankiewicz Asia Project season 2011/2012 > Asia Project 036 szymanowski in the far east China, Taiwan, Japan, 5 – 8 October 2011 P o l i s h Music in Asia The Szymanowski Quartet tours the Far East The Adam Mickiewicz Institute’s Asia Project took the Szymanowski Quartet on a tour of Taiwan (Jhongli and Taipei), China (Hong Kong and Beijing) and Japan (Tokyo). The Quartet presented works by Szymanowski, Laks, Beethoven, Mozart, Ravel, Dvorak, Barber and Chopin. In Beijing, the Institute also organized a symposium in the Central Conservatory of Music devoted to Szymanowski and to Polish music in the 20th century, with the participation of both Polish and Chinese musicologists. Poland was represented by Dr. Agnieszka Chwiłek (University of Warsaw) and Dr. Marcin Gmys (Adam Mickiewicz University). The event was accompanied by an exhibition devoted to the composer organized by the Polish Embassy in Beijing and a master workshop for young Chinese musicians conducted by the artists of the Szymanowski Quartet. Members of the Szymanowski Quartet: Andrzej Bielow, Grzegorz Kotów, Vladimir Mykytka and Marcin Sieniawski photo: Marco Boggreve season 2011/2012 > Asia Project 038 Poland – secret garden of sounds National Center for the Performing Arts (NCPA), Beijing, China, 19 December 2011 G r e at M u s i c a n d G r e at P o l i t i c s The China portion of the Culture Programme of the Polish EU Presidency concludes with a festive concert in Beijing The end of the Polish Presidency programme also means the beginning of new projects. The concert organised by the Adam Mickiewicz Institute was in itself an important political event as one of the spectators was the President of Poland Bronisław Komorowski. The concert was staged under the banner “Poland – Secret Garden of Sound” and featured the National Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra under the baton of Antoni Wit. The concert programme included four compositions: Spring Festival Overture by the Chinese composer Li Huanzhi; Violin Concerto No. 2 in D-minor , Op. 22 by Henryk Wieniawski with solo by Jojo Wang; the symphonic poem Steppe, Op. 66 by Zygmunt Noskowski; and the symphonic poem Krzesany by Wojciech Kilar. Culminating the evening was a performance of Fryderyk Chopin’s Etude Op. 10 No. 3 by one of China’s most acclaimed pianists, Lang Lang. The concert hall, with its capacity of over two thousand, was filled to the brim with Chinese politicians, businessmen and people of culture. The audience’s response was very enthusiastic and both the orchestra and the soloists were called out for encores. The Presidential Couple is welcomed to the NCPA in Beijing photo: Paweł Maciejewski, Polish embassy in Beijing Jojo Wang playing the solo in Henryk Wieniawski’s Violon Concerto No. 2 on stage with the National Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra photo: Paweł Maciejewski, Polish embassy in Beijing season 2011/2012 > Asia Project 040 TR Warszawa’s 4.48 Psychosis at thw Hong Kong Arts Festival hong kong, 22 february 2012 A Compelling Ep i t a p h Grzegorz Jarzyna’s adaptation of Sara Kane’s celebrated drama staged in Asia for the first time on 22 February 2012 TR Warszawa’s “4.48 Psychosis” was one of the main attractions at the 40th edition of the Hong Kong Arts Festival. The play was performed four times, playing to a full house on each occasion. “We hope that, this way, Poland can become a fixture in the festival programme; by offering Asian audiences that which is the very best in Polish contemporary culture and art,” commented Marcin Jacoby, the manager of the Asia Project at the Adam Mickiewicz Institute. “4.48 Psychosis” is a startling portrayal of depression written by Sara Kane, who herself suffered from this devastating illness. TR Warszawa’s adaptation of the play directed by Grzegorz Jarzyna and starring Magdalena Cielecka in the leading role has made waves all over the world, with particular fanfare in the author’s homeland of the UK: We hope that, this way, Poland can become a fixture in the festival programme; by offering Asian audiences that which is the very best in Polish contemporary culture and art Marcin Jacoby, manager of the Asia Project at the Adam Mickiewicz Institute “TR Warszawa’s phenomenal adaptation of Sarah Kane’s moving and extremely powerful 4.48 Psychosis is a frank and all-too-true insight into the desperation of a tragically tortured mind,” wrote Scott Clair in The Herald. “In addition to the unparalleled acting of Cielecka and the supporting cast, the director’s use of stage language really does astound. It is indeed a rarity for a play to end leaving the audience with no idea how to react, as the action seems too real to applaud as a drama. (…) This performance really is an astounding experience, and a tragic, yet compelling epitaph to its playwright, the late Sarah Kane.” Scenes from the play “4.48 Psychosis” by TR Warszawa photo: Stefan Okołowicz season 2011/2012 > Asia Project 042 TR Warszawa’s 4.48 Psychosis at thw Hong Kong Arts Festival hong kong, 22 february 2012 In addition to the unparalleled acting of Cielecka and the supporting cast, the director’s use of stage language really does astound. It is indeed a rarity for a play to end leaving the audience with no idea how to react, as the action seems too real to applaud as a drama. Scott Clair, The Herald S cenes from the play “4.48 Psychosis” by TR Warszawa photo: Stefan Okołowicz season 2011/2012 > Asia Project 044 Royal String Quartet at the Sejong Center seoul, 10 – 12 April 2012 C h o p i n i n S e o u l Polish chamber musicians make waves at South Korea’s premiere concert hall The Royal String Quartet, one of Poland’s leading chamber music ensembles, gave three concerts in Seoul at the Sejong Center, the country’s most prestigious culture centre. The repertoire consisted mainly of pieces by Fryderyk Chopin but also included works by Debussy, Liszt and Mozart. All three performances generated a very warm and enthusiastic reaction from the audience. The Polish string quartet was joined at the Seoul concerts by the renowned bassist Tomasz Januchta as well as a couple of international piano stars – Austria’s Ingolf Wunder and the Korean William Youn. The concerts were organised as part of the Asia Project, during which the Adam Mickiewicz Institute, in collaboration with the Sejong Center and the Polish embassy in South Korea, has been bringing cultural events featuring Polish artists to countries of the Far East for the past three years. The Royal String Quartet performs and garners critical acclaim all over the world. They have won many awards in prestigious string quartet competitions such as: 1st Prize and Grand Prix in Casale Monferrato (2000); Special Jury Prize in Kuhmo, Finland (2004); and 3rd place in Banff, Canada (2004). In 2004 – 2006 the quartet took part in the BBC’s New Generation Artists programme, which promotes the most talented young artists from around the globe. Their participation in the programme included appearances at many festivals, recordings and broadcasts of concerts, recording sessions and performances in collaboration with other artists in the programme. A highlight in the quartet’s career thus far came in 2004 when they played a special concert for Queen Elizabeth II of England in London. Ingolf Wunder performing a sound check before his concert in Seoul season 2011/2012 > Asia Project 046 Royal String Quartet at the Sejong Center seoul, 10 – 12 April 2012 A concert by the Royal String Quartet with Ingolf Wunder and Tomasz Januchta at the Sejong Center in Seoul season 2011/2012 > Asia Project 048 Poland in close-up Hong Kong International Film Festival Hong Kong, 24 March – 5 April 2012 P o l a n d i n C l o s e - Up A special presentation of Polish films was the highlight of the festival in Hong Kong The Hong Kong International Film Festival (HKIFF) is one of the most important film events in the Far East. In 2012, during the thirty-sixth edition of the festival, 330 films from 50 countries were screened. The programme featured a presentation of Polish movies, called Poland in Close-Up, during which audiences saw eight Polish films from the last two years. Among the films presented were Lech Majewski’s “The Mill and the Cross”, Agnieszka Holland’s “In Darkness”, Wojciech Smarzowski’s “Rose”, Bartosz Konopka’s “Fear of Heights”, Antoni Krauze’s “Black Thursday and Greg Zgliński’s “Courage”. There was also a screening of Tomasz Leśniak’s, Wojciech Wawszczyk’s and Jakub Tarkowski’s animated film based on the cartoon “Jerz Jeży” [“Jerzy the Hedgehog”]. Agnieszka Holland’s “In Darkness” was among the films screened during the project photo: Robert Pałka / Fotos-Art, prod. Studio Filmowe Zebraa The British actress Charlotte Rampling, who starred in “The Mill and the Cross”, was a special guest at the festival. Hong Kong press devoted a lot of space to Polish film T h e at r e season 2011/2012 > Theatre 052 In the Solitude of Cotton Fields at the Under the Radar Festival New York City, January 2012 H ys t e r i c a l ly a b o u t L o v e The Stefan Żeromski Theatre of Kielce takes its flagship performance to the avant-garde La MaMa theatre in Manhattan Director Radosław Rychcik’s adaptation of “In the Solitude of Cotton Fields” by Bernard-Marie Koltès is a festival powerhouse. The Stefan Żeromski Theatre has already performed the play in Krakow, Warsaw, Toruń, Szczecin, Koszalin, Wałbrzych and Berlin. In January 2012, the Adam Mickiewicz Institute organised a presentation of the play at the Under the Radar Festival in New York City. All of the eight performances took place in front of a full house. The undertaking as a whole was an indisputably great success for Polish art and for the Adam Mickiewicz Institute, which once again showed their ability to select works worthy of promoting and great expertise in bringing them to new audiences. As stated by the PAP Agency, “‘In the Solitude of Cotton Fields’ is an intimate drama about love.” Yet, it is neither sentimental nor pompously romantic. It tells the story of two people meeting, referred to simply as “the dealer” and “the client,” and their attempt to conduct a mysterious transaction. They try to come to an understanding by various means: by speech, body language and signs. It ultimately proves to be a nearly impossible task. “They utter thousands of words, but to us it seems like only a pretext for getting together,” comments the director, who labels this performance “hysterical theatre.” “In the Solitude of Cotton Fields” directed by Radosław Rychcik season 2011/2012 > Theatre 054 festen directed by Grzegorz Jarzyna New York City, April 2012 Wa l p u rg i s n a c h t i n n e w y o r k Grzegorz Jarzyna triumphs at one of the top stages in the United States Standing ovations and multiple curtain calls concluded nearly all of the 10 performances by TR Warszawa at St. Ann’s Warehouse in Brooklyn. Their play “Festen” was seen by more than 2400 spectators in all. The day after the first performance, headlines in the culture sections of leading New York newspapers hailed success – the reviews were unanimously positive and some were even ecstatic. It’s hard to imagine a work that makes more thorough and effective use of that theater’s cavernous space Ben Brantley, The New York Times “…it’s hard to imagine a work that makes more thorough and effective use of that theater’s cavernous space,” wrote critic Ben Brantley in The New York Times. “As directed by Grzegorz Jarzyna, with a set by Malgorzata Szczesniak, ‘Festen’ induces feelings of both claustrophobia and agoraphobia. Through artful lighting (by Jacqueline Sobiszewski) and strategic placement of furniture (including one very, very long table), this production manages to conjure a mazelike building of many rooms that finally offers no place to hide. Everything seems to be happening both in public and private at the same time.” Grzegorz Jarzyna’s “Festen” is an adaptation of the Danish film of the same title, directed by Thomas Vinterberg. The story unfolds during a gathering where members of an esteemed and wealthy family come together to celebrate the 60th birthday of the head of the family. The meeting quickly turns into a nightmare when the guest of honour’s son reveals that the father molested both him and his late sister when they were children. “While retaining some of the poker-faced sobriety of Mr. Vinterberg’s movie, in which scandalous revelations are greeted with repressive stoicism, this ‘Festen’ is far more flamboyantly stylized, as a ritualized celebration turns into a full-fledged Walpurgisnacht,” observes the New York Times critic. “Poltergeists fling cutlery. Old men turn into automatons. A bathtub glows with eerie luminescence. Thunder rumbles. A piano tinkles like a funereal music box. And, in one truly terrifying image, Helge is revealed fleetingly, as if by lightning, as the monster he truly is.” In addition to newspaper critics, Jarzyna’s play was attended by many eminent figures from the world of theatre and culture, including the directors of the Under the Radar festival Mark Russell and Meiyin Wang, and the heads of theatre departments at such institutions as Bard College, Yale University, Brown University, CUNY Graduate Center and Tisch School of Fine Arts. “Festen” photo: Stefan Okołowicz season 2011/2012 > Theatre 056 festen directed by Grzegorz Jarzyna New York City, April 2012 “Festen” photo: Stefan Okołowicz season 2011/2012 > Theatre 058 (A)pollonia Golden mask festival, moscow, april 2012 If you ask me, it is one of the best plays of the last decade Jelena Kowalska, Afisz Russia Loves ( A ) p o l lo n i a Nowy Theatre’s play is honoured with Russia’s most prestigious theatre award On 16 April 2012, the creators of the play “(A)pollonia” received the Golden Mask award in Moscow for the best performance staged in Russia in 2011. The award was accepted by director Krzysztof Warlikowski, set designer Małgorzata Szczęśniak and co-writer Piotr Gruszczyński. The honour is not only a wonderful recognition for Warlikowski and Nowy Theatre but also a sign of the great renown Polish theatre enjoys in Russia. In 2011, Poland was the special guest of the Golden Mask festival, and the plays performed in Moscow were met with great enthusiasm from audiences and critics alike. One incident even called for police intervention as theatre lovers became agitated when tickets ran out. For young Russian directors who are rebelling against the conservative Russian theatre establishment, Polish directors today, and especially Warlikowski, are a leading inspiration. “(A)pollonia” enjoys masterpiece status in Russia. “If you ask me, it is one of the best plays of the last decade,” wrote Jelena Kowalska in the Russiawide bi-weekly Afisz. “Firstly, it’s a truly modern theatre language. The dialogue is so tight and gripping that the five hours pass in a single breath.” The Golden Mask festival is the most prestigious theatre festival in Russia. Each year, Russia’s best achievements in theatre take the stage at the festival in Moscow, while the last 6 years have seen the festival expand its international programme significantly. During the 2011 Golden Mask festival the spotlight was on Poland. The Polish Theatre in Moscow project was organised by the Adam Mickiewicz Institute specifically for this edition of the festival and was the first Polish theatre presentation of such scope at the prestigious and highly influential event. The presence of Polish theatre was felt equally strongly at the subsequent edition of the festival in 2012 with performances of two plays directed by Krystian Lupa: “Persona. Simone’s Body” and the highly anticipated return of “Persona. Marilyn”, back by popular demand after its much-praised showing in 2011. Meanwhile, the approaching presentation of Russian theatre in Warsaw in 2013 has theatre insiders abuzz with anticipation at the prospect of seeing many of this year’s Golden Mask winners take the stage in Warsaw next year. “(A)pollonia” photo: Stefan Okołowicz season 2011/2012 > Theatre 060 (A)pollonia Golden mask festival, moscow, april 2012 “(A)pollonia” directed by Krzysztof Warlikowski photo: Stefan Okołowicz “(A)pollonia” directed by Krzysztof Warlikowski photo: Stefan Okołowicz Group scene, “(A)pollonia” directed by Krzysztof Warlikowski photo: Stefan Okołowicz “(A)pollonia” directed by Krzysztof Warlikowski photo: Stefan Okołowicz season 2011/2012 > Theatre 062 Focus Polska programme Sibiu, 25 May – 3 June 2012 Focus Polska was the best national programme in the history of the festival Constantin Chiriac, director of the Sibiu International Theatre Festival A t r i u m p h of diversity The Focus Polska programme at the Sibiu festival praised as the best ever Poland was represented by four theatre companies at the Sibiu International Theatre Festival: Theatre Strefa Ciszy (Poznań), Theatre ZAR (Wrocław), TR Warszawa (Warsaw) and Theatre Provisorium (Lublin). Such an assortment offered an effective cross-section of the Polish theatre scene and its many faces. Theatre ZAR’s intimate and picturesque “Triptych” employing archaic vocal techniques is a story about longing for an impossible resurrection. It is composed of fragments of writings by Dostoyevsky and Simone Weil as well as Biblical and apocryphal texts. An entirely different style characterises the mad outdoor play “Salto Mortale” by Theatre Strefa Ciszy. This is a spectacle inspired by an unusual story from the end of the Second World War, as Soviet troops plundered the city of Stettin (today Szczecin) of its pianos to send back to the USSR. The soldiers lined up hundreds of the instruments along the railway tracks but never managed to transport them out. The pianos languished for years and eventually crumbled to pieces. Behind each one of them was a human tragedy and together they became a symbol of a culture desecrated by the horrors of war. TR Warszawa’s “No Matter How Hard We Tried” written by Dorota Masłowska is a contemporary play through and through. It depicts three generations living together under one roof: an old lady who lives in her wartime memories, an adult woman absorbed in television and tabloids, and a girl who leads a semi-virtual existence in the digital world. Using multimedia projections as a backdrop, the play is marked by an utterly mocking and sarcastic tone. In stark contrast to TR Warszawa’s play is the fourth and final Polish presentation at the festival – the serious, contemplative and deeply philosophical adaptation of “The Brothers Karamazov” by Theatre Provisorium. To round out the presentation of Polish theatre, the WRO Art Centre prepared a special display of some of its remarkable works of visual and conceptual art. The Polish programme turned out to be a bull’s-eye. “Focus Polska was the best national programme in the history of the festival,” assessed the festival’s director Prof. Constantin Chiriac. Thanks to the efforts of the Adam Mickiewicz Institute, these remarkable Polish plays were seen by throngs of theatre lovers. The Sibiu festival is the world’s third largest event of its kind with respect to attendance (about 60,000 spectators daily) and every year, plays from about 70 countries are presented at the festival. Piotr Krajewski (exhibition curator), Joanna Kiliszek, Marek Szczygieł (Polish Ambassador to Romania), Constantin Chiriac (director of the Sibiu International Theatre Festival) “Alternative Now On Tour” exhibition organised by the WRO Art Centre. photo: Bartosz Konieczny Music season 2011/2012 > Music 066 roman statkowski’s maria in ireland Wexford, Ireland, 22, 28 & 31 October and 4 November 2011 M a r i a R e s u rr e c t e d Forgotten century-old Polish opera triumphs in Ireland Thanks to the initiative of the Adam Mickiewicz Institute and its involvement in the production, Roman Statkowski’s 1904 opera “Maria” was brought to audiences in Wexford. The Wexford Festival Opera is a venerable review that focuses on unjustly forgotten works of opera, giving them a new life and a chance at contemporary recognition. That was exactly the case with “Maria”, whose four performances at the festival garnered rave reviews. “The moody piece seemed to fit this Irish band like a glove and the shifting moods and modulations of the (estranged) love duet were evocative and romantic,” wrote James Sohre in Opera Today. The moody piece seemed to fit this Irish band like a glove and the shifting moods and modulations of the (estranged) love duet were evocative and romantic. James Sohre, Opera Today Today, Roman Statkowski is considered Poland’s foremost composer of the 20th century next to Karol Szymanowski. His 1904 entry to a competition for an opera based on Antoni Malczewski’s “Maria” took first place and the opera was staged in 1906 in Warsaw. Sadly, however, it would be performed only another five times in the 20th century. “Maria” was rediscovered in 2008 and lauded as one of Poland’s most important operas after those written by Moniuszko. The opera bears clear influences of Statkowski’s favourite composer, Pyotr Tchaikovsky, but retains a strong Polish air and, at times, even Ukrainian colours. The libretto is set in the Polish borderlands of the 17th century and tells a story of crime and ill-fated love. The performances of “Maria” at the Wexford festival saw the orchestra conducted by Tomasz Tokarczyk, the Music Manager of the Krakow Opera. “Under Tomasz Tokarczyk’s baton, the awesome collection of musicians outdid themselves, playing with brio, depth, and attention to detail,” praised James Sohre. “Maria” by Roman Statkowski at the Wexford Festival Opera photo: CLIVE BARDA/ArenaPAL season 2011/2012 > Music 068 London Symphony Orchestra plays szymanowski London, Paris, Brussels, 29 April – 8 May 2012 Post-Wagnerian chromatic harmonies convey man’s desire for union with God, while its kaleidoscopic, Straussian orchestration suggests the whirling world of phenomena beyond which the mystic vision might be glimpsed Tim Ashley, The Guardian Szymanowski London-Style The London Symphony Orchestra plays music by Karol Szymanowski in European capitals In commemoration of the 75th anniversary of Karol Szymanowski’s death, the Adam Mickiewicz Institute invited the renowned London Symphony Orchestra to play concerts of music by the brilliant Polish composer. The orchestra played five wonderful concerts between 29 April and 8 May: two at Barbican Hall in London, two at the Salle Pleyel in Paris and one at the Bozar in Brussels. Each of the evenings featured a piece by Karol Szymanowski: Symphony No. 3 Song of the Night or Violin Concerto No. 1. The Concerto by Szymanowski is considered to be a milestone in modern music – it is the first fully original violin concerto of the 20th century to depart from the great romantic tradition in violin music. The starting point in the inception of this fascinating and sensual piece of music was the imagery of a spring night in Tadeusz Miciński’s poem May Night. Szymanowski’s Symphony No. 3 also arose thanks to a literary inspiration – a poem by Jalal’ad-Din Rumi, the 13th-century Persian mystic. Rumi was the spiritual leader of the dervishes and he extolled an almost erotic relationship between man and God. His was a sort of religion of love in which the deity is like Dionysus, Christ and Eros all in one. The concerts saw the orchestra led by Peter Eötvös, a Hungarian conductor and renowned composer in his own right. Under his baton, the London Symphony Orchestra rose to the challenge with grace, with the last of the five concerts getting a write-up in The Guardian. Critic Tim Ashley had this to say about Symphony No. 3: “PostWagnerian chromatic harmonies convey man’s desire for union with God, while its kaleidoscopic, Straussian orchestration suggests the whirling world of phenomena beyond which the mystic vision might be glimpsed.” Earlier, on 22 February, Szymanowski’s Symphony No. 3 was performed by another British ensemble, namely the London Philharmonic Orchestra. The orchestra was directed by Vladimir Jurowski during the concert at the Royal Festival Hall and BBC Radio 3 was on hand to broadcast the event. Leonidas Kavakos plays the violin solo in a composition by Karol Szymanowski season 2011/2012 > Music 070 Nederlands Blazers Ensemble plays chopin Holland, 18 – 23 April 2012 C HO P IN R EINVI G O R ATED Renowned Dutch wind instrument ensemble plays Chopin’s preludes The Nederlands Blazers Ensemble is one of the world’s best wind instrument orchestras. It is composed of soloists from the Concertgebouw Royal Orchestra, the philharmonic orchestras of Rotterdam and the Hague and Holland Symfonia. The Adam Mickiewicz Institute inspired the Dutch outfit to play a series of unique concerts of Fryderyk Chopin’s 24 Preludes Op. 28. To join them for this special presentation of the Preludes, the Nederlands Blazers Ensemble invited the young Dutch virtuoso Hannes Minnaar, winner of the prestigious competitions in Geneva and Brussels. Half of the preludes were performed by the young pianist and the other half by the Ensemble. The preludes were arranged for wind instruments by the Polish composer Zygmunt Krauze. As a special touch, Krauze composed a 25th prelude that was played by all of the musicians to conclude each concert. The Nederlands Blazers Ensemble performed their unique Chopin concert a total of five times: in Zutphen, Helmond, The Hague and twice in Amsterdam. One of Holland’s leading dailies, Handelsblat, wrote: “Krauze’s arrangements revealed unexpected aspects of Chopin’s music. Through the grand resounding tones of the wind instruments, the Prelude in C-minor gained an expressive force that is difficult to achieve on the piano. The Prelude in D-flat major supported by a bass pizzicato exuded a grace that often gets lost in the background in piano versions of the piece.” Krauze’s arrangements revealed unexpected aspects of Chopin’s music. Through the grand resounding tones of the wind instruments, the Prelude in C-minor gained an expressive force that is difficult to achieve on the piano. The Prelude in D-flat major supported by a bass pizzicato exuded a grace that often gets lost in the background in piano versions of the piece. Handelsblat Before the concert in Helmond season 2011/2012 > Music 072 Nederlands Blazers Ensemble plays chopin Holland, 18 – 23 April 2012 The Nederlands Blazers Ensemble on stage at the ‘t Speelhuis in Helmond, 19 April 2012 season 2011/2012 > Music 074 polish bands play Liverpool Sound City Mello Mello club, Liverpool, 19 May 2012 L i v e rp o o l S o u n d s Polish bands play Liverpool Sound City for a second time Liverpool Sound City is one of the most important music festivals in Europe – not only on account of the attendance numbers (40,000 spectators) but mainly because so many music industry people are involved. Each year, roughly 3,000 music industry movers and shakers – producers, managers, critics – come to Liverpool to attend the conferences and concerts. So, it would be a difficult task to find a better way to promote Polish music than showcasing it at Liverpool Sound City. The Polish evening organised by the Adam Mickiewicz Institute at one of the festival venues (Mello Mello) featured the avant-garde folk act Paula & Karol, the electro-pop group Kamp!, the world-class noise-rock trio Plum, and Natalia Fiedorczuk’s solo project Nathalie & The Loners. The Polish contingent played Mello Mello under the banner “Don’t Panic! We’re from Poland”. This is a heading that the Adam Mickiewicz Institute attaches to concerts promoting Polish music in the world’s leading music centres. It is also the name of a Warsaw mini-festival organised for foreign guests as part of the CoJestGrane European Music Fair. The “Don’t Panic! We’re from Poland” brand is becoming more and more recognisable throughout Europe and the world, and the appearance of Polish bands at Europe’s premier festivals is finally the norm instead of an anomaly. Liverpool Sound City, Tomasz Szpanerski from the band Kamp! photo: Honorata Mikołajew season 2011/2012 > Music 076 the Great Escape Brighton, United Kingdom, 10 – 12 May 2012 P o l i s h wav e s o n the English Channel Polish pop and folk music centre stage at Brighton’s renowned festival The Great Escape festival features artists that are on the verge of making it big and it is often this very festival that gives them that extra push towards international stardom. The festival attracts music industry people from all over the continent as well as the most discerning audiences. That’s why a good showing at The Great Escape can be a springboard to the international circuit for up and coming musicians. The 2012 edition of The Great Escape saw two Polish acts take the stage. One of them was Paula & Karol, with their ambitious alternative folk music (i.e. anti-folk). The band was founded by Karol Strzemieczny and the Canadian-born Paula Bialski. Today, Paula & Karol are no longer a duo but a large ensemble with a vast assortment of instruments. The festival in Brighton was just one stop on their international tour in support of their latest record “Whole Again”. The other Polish act at The Great Escape was the vocalist Novika with her band The Lovefinders. The polish songstress is already known to fans of electro-pop music all over the world. A track from her first album was praised by Gilles Peterson, the host of BBC Radio’s “Worldwide” programme, and appeared on internationallyreleased compilations by Tom Middleton (The Trip 2) and Towa Tei (Motivation Five). Novika’s latest hit “Lovefinder” is an energetic cocktail of club rhythms and pop appeal. The band Paula & Karol, from left: Krzysztof Pożarowski, Szymon Najder, Paula Bialski, Karol Strzemieczny, Christoph Von Thun season 2011/2012 > Music 078 the Great Escape Brighton, United Kingdom, 10 – 12 May 2012 Bueno Bros season 2011/2012 > Music 080 Music weekends at the Golden Gate Kiev, Ukraine, 1 – 23 June 2012 N e i g h b o u r s a t t h e G a t e Polish and Ukrainian music – from traditional and folk to avant-garde jazz and electronic – bellowed from the famous Kiev landmark While the Euro 2012 European football championships were under way, the Golden Gate in Kiev hosted a series of concerts by Polish and Ukrainian musicians. The choice of venue was not random: the Golden Gate (constructed in the 11th century and rebuilt in the 20th century) is a structure that embodies the rich history of Eastern Europe. The Summit at the Golden Gate series exposed tourists to ambitious music from both host countries. The concerts took place on June weekends, each a showcase of a different genre of music, both Polish and Ukrainian. With the stage being in the Gate, which looks out onto the street, the music could be enjoyed by anyone who was interested. Electric guitar music was the focus of the first weekend concerts. Poland was represented by the HooDoo Band from Wrocław, with their cocktail of funk, soul and R&B, as well as The Poise Rite from Rzeszów, who presented songs from their latest project “Milosz Hated Rock and Roll”. From the Ukrainian side, the weekend featured the group Los Colorados (playing mainly ironic covers of pop songs) and rockers Gapochka, who took first place at the Ukrainian finals of the Global Battle of the Bands competition. The second weekend was dedicated to electronic music. Poland’s offering came courtesy of An On Bast & Maciej Fortuna (a collaboration between producer and performer An On Bast with Maciej Fortuna, who is one of the most highly-regarded and dynamic jazz musicians of the new generation in Poland). The Ukrainian performer was Zavoloka, a Kiev-based composer of experimental electronic music greatly inspired by old Ukrainian culture. The set design was created by Cinemanual, an artist from Krakow specialising in analogue visuals for concerts. VJ CUBE photo: Sergii Anishchenko season 2011/2012 > Music 082 Music weekends at the Golden Gate Kiev, Ukraine, 1 – 23 June 2012 That same weekend also saw Wrocław’s Karbibo group present their sound installation which transformed the Golden Gate into a sonic sculpture. The third weekend at the Golden Gate featured an assembly of jazz players. Performing were the Polish fusion outfit Saku Family alongside Ukrainians Natalia Lebedewa Trio and the Hrychorij Parszyn Quintet. The jazz weekend also featured the band Mariia Guraievska Ethno Jazz Synthesis, in which Polish instrumentalists back the Ukrainian vocalist Mariia Guraievska. The final instalment of the music series brought classical music to the Golden Gate. The band Hortus Atrium from Poland and A cappella Leopolis from Lviv recreated Kiev music from the days of the Polish Republic and the Hetmanate. Sunday saw a collaborative performance titled Faktura Rytmu by Krakow’s Amadrums Trio and Kiev’s Nostri Temporis. VJ CUBE live photo: Sergii Anishchenko Mariia Guraievska and Ethno Jazz Synthesis in concert photo: Olena Zoc Concerts at the Golden Gate attracted throngs of music lovers photo: Olena Zoc A concert by Music4Buildings photo: Olena Zoc season 2011/2012 > Music 084 I, CULTURE Orchestra Orc h e s t r a J o i n s East and West The greatest concert halls of Europe open their doors to young musicians from Poland and Eastern Partnership nations Berliner Philharmonie, Conservatoire Royal de Bruxelles, Royal Festival Hall in London, Theatreo Real in Madrid – these premier venues on Europe’s music map all hosted the I, CULTURE Orchestra in 2011. The remarkable ensemble was called into being by the Adam Mickiewicz Institute and is composed of young instrumentalists from Poland and countries of the Eastern Partnership: Ukraine, Belarus, Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia. The orchestra also performed for audiences in Gdańsk, Krakow, Warsaw, Lublin, Kiev and Stockholm. Their repertoire varied somewhat with each performance yet the programme always included pieces by Karol Szymanowski. Outside of its diplomatic, social and educational significance, the I, CULTURE Orchestra is above all an accomplished musical outfit. The 104 musicians were selected from among hundreds of candidates and given a unique chance to learn from the best and to perform in front of the most discerning audiences in Europe. The artistic director during the orchestra’s inaugural tour was Paweł Kotla, who is known for his work with the London Symphony Orchestra. The first guest conductor was Sir Neville Marriner, with solos performed by Peter Jablonski (piano) and Arabella Steinbacher (violin). For its young members, the I, CULTURE Orchestra was a crucible for intense professional development. The musicians honed their skills and gained valuable experience on their way to becoming full-fledged members of the European artistic community. In 2012, the I, CULTURE Orchestra recruited musicians for a new season and set off on tour. After a two-week period of workshops where the musicians were guided by leading members of the world’s foremost orchestras, the ensemble took the stage in Warsaw, Minsk, Kiev, Chișinău and Tbilisi. Ilyich Rivas, conductor of the I, CULTURE Orchestra 2012 photo: Mark McNulty season 2011/2012 > Music 086 I, CULTURE Orchestra I,CULTURE Orchestra 2012 in Tbilisi photo: Konrad Ćwikk Visual Arts season 2011/2012 > Visual Arts 090 poland at the venice biennale Venice, 2 June – 27 November 2012 A n d E u r o p e Wa s S t u n n e d… Polish presentation astounds at the Venice Biennale Influential European newspapers such as The Guardian, The Economist and Frankfurter Algemanie Zeitung considered the Polish pavilion to be among the most important ones at the 2012 Venice Biennale. Western European press recognized the Polish presentation not only for artistic merit but also for its political significance. And no wonder: Poland worked in collaboration with the Israeli artist Yael Bartana, who came to Venice with her film trilogy about the fictional Jewish Renaissance Movement in Poland. The trilogy, titled “…And Europe Will Be Stunned”, left no one cold and visitors had to stand in line to get into the Polish pavilion. At first it may seem surprising that it was Poland, which bears the image of a nationalist, Catholic, and conservative country, that nominated an Israeli artist, but the effect was stunning Süddeutsche Zeitung “Nightmares” is the first film in the series. Sławomir Sierakowski, a young Polish intellectual playing the role of the JRMiP’s leader, makes a speech at the almost empty “Dziesięciolecie” Stadium in Warsaw, calling for Jews to return to Poland. Using the structure and tools of propaganda movies, Yael Bartana takes up, on the one hand, the problem of modern anti-Semitism and xenophobia and, on the other, the nostalgia of Polish intellectuals for the past in which Jews are still present. She also alludes to the Zionist dream of the return to Israel. The plot of the second film, “Wall and Tower”, takes place at the site of the former Warsaw Ghetto. Members of the Movement come to Warsaw to build a kibbutz, cut off and isolated from the world. They construct it in one night, as it used to be the case in the 1930s in Palestine. The last film, titled “Assassination”, shows the funeral ceremony of the Movement’s leader killed by an unknown assassin. The viewer is left in a state of uncertainty regarding the status of the Jewish Renaissance Movement in Poland: has it been an illusion, an art project, or a token of a potential future of Poland, Europe, or some other place on Earth? “At first it may seem surprising that it was Poland, which bears the image of a nationalist, Catholic, and conservative country, that nominated an Israeli artist, but the effect was stunning,” writes Süddeutsche Zeitung. Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung considers the Polish pavilion to be among the ten most important presentations at the Biennale. The British press is even more enthusiastic: “An unexpected political statement is another way to make your mark in Venice. Nowhere has this been done more effectively than in the Polish pavilion which has been given over to Yael Bartana,” says The Economist. Polish Pavilion at the 54th International Biennale in Venice Photo: Ilya Rabinovich courtesy of the Zachęta National Gallery of Art season 2011/2012 > Visual Arts 092 poland at the venice biennale Venice, 2 June – 27 November 2012 The Guardian also focuses on the political impact. Clearly moved, the reviewer observes that “[t]he whole thing is both real and unreal, heartfelt and parodic. Perhaps such a movement may now become a reality. Bartana’s final film ends with the funeral of the assassinated leader of the movement; there is an implicit critique of Israeli politics, and of xenophobia and nationalism everywhere.” The Polish presentation in Venice, organized by the Adam Mickiewicz Institute and Zachęta Gallery, kick-started Yael Bartana’s international career. In 2012, her films were shown at the Van Abbemuseum in Eindhoven, the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art in Humlebaek, the Icon Gallery in Birmingham, and in Berlin, during the 7th Biennale of Modern Art. An unexpected political statement is another way to make your mark in Venice. Nowhere has this been done more effectively than in the Polish pavilion which has been given over to Yael Bartana The Economist Yael Bartana’s installation “… And Europe Will Be Stunned”. Polish Pavilion at the 54th International Biennale in Venice. Photo: Ilya Rabinovich courtesy of the Zachęta National Gallery of Art “Making the walls quake...” A project by Katarzyna Krakowiak at the Polish Pavilion in Venice photo: K. Pijarski. The Polish Pavilion exhibition was organised by the Zachęta National Gallery of Art ael Bartana’s installation “… And Y Europe Will Be Stunned”. Polish Pavilion at the 54th International Biennale in Venice. Photo: Ilya Rabinovich courtesy of the Zachęta National Gallery of Art. More info: www.labiennale.art.pl season 2011/2012 > Visual Arts 094 poland at the paris triennale Palais de Tokyo, 20 April – 26 August 2012 A n I n t e n s e ly Polish Paris Four Polish artists invited to the Triennale at the French capital Konrad Smoleński’s performance opened the third edition of the prestigious Paris exhibition. One of the most promising Polish artists of the young generation, he presented his performance titled “BNNT Sound Bombing”. Smoleński and his four colleagues shocked Paris by driving around the city in a truck on which a loud concert was being staged. At the Triennale, the artist also exhibited his film “Energy Hunters” (2011). This year’s edition of La Triennale was dubbed “Intense Proximity”, and it focused on the problem of movement and on the relation of human beings to social and private spaces. The shows and performances were staged mostly in the renovated Palais de Tokyo, today one of the most important centres for contemporary art in the world. Art director Okwui Enwezor invited four Polish artists to La Triennale: apart from Konrad Smoleński, there were Ewa Partum, Teresa Tyszkiewicz and Aneta Grzeszczykowska. Ewa Partum, one of the pioneers of feminist art, showed her “Self-identification” series of photo-montages from 1980. The artist had pasted her own nude portraits into Warsaw cityscapes. She creates an illusion that she is wandering around naked in the crowd of grey, tired people. Her figure walks down the main city streets, crosses them, and stands in a line in front of a grocery store. In the most famous of the collages, the artist is standing next to a policewoman directing traffic. Teresa Tyszkiewicz, who has been working in Paris since the 1980’s, showed two 1980 films at the Triennale, both working with the atmosphere of intimacy and privacy: “Day after Day”, filmed at the artist’s Warsaw apartment with her husband-filmmaker Zdzisław Sosnowski, and “Grain”, showing Tyszkiewicz’s family home in Ciechanów. Aneta Grzeszczykowska also works with film. At the Palais de Tokyo, she exhibited, among other pieces, “Headache”, in which the artist’s body seems to be fragmented, with each of the fragments—the arms, the legs, the head, the corpus—wandering chaotically on a black background. The Polish presentation was well received by both critics and the audience. BNNT is an audio-performative project by Konrad Smoleński, with Daniel Szwed on drums. In the project, the artists place equal importance on the sound and the visual form of the performance. The project was presented at La Triennale in Paris. Photo: Konrad Smoleński promotional material season 2011/2012 > Visual Arts 096 2012 Berlin Biennale Berlin, 27 April – 1 July 2012 a c t i o n o v e r o b j e c t With his revolutionary approach, Artur Żmijewski changed the character of the Berlin Biennale Berlin will never be the same after the 2012 Biennale of Contemporary Art. Not only because the city witnessed a heated discussion on the social role of art but also literally, because of the 320 birch seedlings brought to the German capital from the forest neighbouring the Auschwitz-Birkenau camp. Some of the trees were planted in front of the Kunst Werke gallery, others were offered to the visitors with a certificate of origin and instructions on how to grow them. These birches from the site of the Shoah will take root in the fabric of the city, making it more beautiful, but also reminding it of the Holocaust. The transplanting of the birches, or the Berlin-Birkenau project by the Polish artist Łukasz Surowiec, is an excellent example of the approach to art which dominated the 7th Berlin Biennale in 2012. Artur Żmijewski, chosen as the curator of the Biennale, decided to depart from the model which focuses on artwork as an object and decoration. Instead, he showed art based on discussion, on the struggle with current problems, art which does not safely reside in protected museum spaces but reaches out into the public sphere and comments on matters of social importance. According to Żmijewski, all art has a social and political context. The Polish curator took it as his goal to uncover that context, to unearth it from beneath the artworks. Together with co-curator Joanna Warsza and the Russian group Voina, Żmijewski invited artists who work along the same lines. Here are several examples. Paweł Althamer’s “Draftsmen’s Congress” is a project open to the audience. International figures from the world of art (artists, professors and students of fine arts) and of other professions in which drawing is a central element (architects, engineers, designers), as well as amateurs and other interested persons, communicated in complete silence with drawing as the sole form of expression. A society was created in real time, whose main cementing element was art. Yael Bartana, whose film trilogy “...And Europe Will Be Stunned” created a fictional Jewish Renaissance Movement in Poland, decided on a radical move: during the Berlin Biennale she organized a JRMiP convention which made it into a real movement. Its first congress took place at HAU1, one of the stages of the Hebbel am Ufer theatre in Berlin. Three questions were posed during the session: “How should Europe change to revitalize the Jewish community?”, “How should Poland change?” and “How should Israel change?” “Draftsmen’s Congress” initiated by Paweł Althamer. St. Elizabeth Church, 7th Berlin Biennale for Contemporary Art season 2011/2012 > Visual Arts 098 2012 Berlin Biennale Berlin, 27 April – 1 July 2012 The sculptor Mirosław Kazimierz Patecki created a replica of the head of the Christ sculpture from Świebodzin. This work of art has changed the life of Świebodzin’s inhabitants: every year around 60,000 visitors and pilgrims are drawn to the town, bolstering the poor region’s economic development. The Świebodzin figure of Christ is the source of a small economic miracle. The Biennale installation consisted of a 1:1 replica of the head (Mirosław Kazimierz Patecki created it on the spot, during the Biennale), a model of the original figure, a photograph of the Świebodzin sculpture, and a documentary about its construction. “Draftsmen’s Congress” initiated by Paweł Althamer. St. Elizabeth Church, 7th Berlin Biennale for Contemporary Art “ Berlin-Birkenau” by Łukasz Surowiec. KW Institute for Contemporary Art, 7th Berlin Biennale for Contemporary Art, 27 April – 1 July, 2012 season 2011/2012 > Visual Arts 100 Must Have from Poland exhibition at the Milan Design Fair Milan, 17 – 22 April 2012 Designers on the Offensive 25 Polish projects were a success in Italy The show featured Polish design products selected in the “must have” competition by a group of experts. From among 150 nominated objects the group selected the most interesting and most innovative ones. They were products of both large companies and small family businesses. They ranged from cardboard playhouses for children to home appliances, from organic cosmetics to books. The selection was determined by such qualities as: functionality, ergonomics, quality and aesthetics. The collection had been shown first at the Łódź Design Festival, where it garnered enthusiastic reviews. The Adam Mickiewicz Institute supported its presentation at the Design Fair in Milan, the largest and most prestigious show of this type in Europe. 25 out of the 42 products shown in Łódź made the trip to Italy. The collection “Must Have from Poland” was shown at the part of the Milan Fair known as “Ventura Lambrate”, whose curator is the Dutch Organisation in Design. The Polish products met with great interest and led to commercial contracts. Viewing the exhibition was facilitated by a special guide published for the occasion, which may also serve as an excellent introduction to the best of Polish design. “Must Have from Poland”, Milan 2012 photo: Łukasz Piernikowski season 2011/2012 > Visual Arts 102 Must Have from Poland exhibition at the Milan Design Fair Milan, 17 – 22 April 2012 season 2011/2012 > Visual Arts 104 Frieze Art Fair New York City, 4 – 7 May 2012 A C r u i s e Towa r d a B e t t e rL i f e Polish artists travelled across the Atlantic on a container ship, making a film which brought them immediate success in New York Already in the first hour of the Frieze Art Fair in New York, the famous art collector Joseph M. Cohen bought the work by the two young artists Radek Szlaga and Honza Zamojski. The piece, exhibited at the fair by the Polish Leto Gallery, resembles a cabin, with a bunk bed surrounded by a mass of drawings, maps and the ship’s logbook. The character of the whole work is somewhat chaotic, unstable, and thus effectively conveys the spirit of travel across the ocean. The key element of this work of art is the film the artists made while travelling to New York. In “Transatlantyk”, the young artists allude to the experiences of old immigrants who crossed the ocean in search of a better life. Radek Szlaga and Honza Zamojski are aware of the associations such travel by ship must call up in the age of cheap flights. Therefore they describe their journey with a good deal of irony: “MV Commander consumed 80,000 litres of oil daily. We travelled 5,500 kilometres, 3,000 nautical miles, 3,500 miles. I saw 4 dolphins, 1 whale, 1 orca, 1 moth, and a dozen or so birds of all kinds: seagulls, frigate birds, and pigeons. I haven’t spotted a single fish, nor a single cephalopod,” notes Honza Zamojski in his logbook. Radek Szlaga, Honza Zamojski – “Transatlantyk”, Frieze Art Fair, New York 2012 photo: Honza Zamojskii An invitation to “Transatlantyk” by Radek Szlaga and Honza Zamojski, Frieze Art Fair, New York 2012 photo: Honza Zamojski season 2011/2012 > Visual Arts 106 Anna Molska’s exhibition at tate modern London, 25 May – 14 October 2012 T h e D e v i l i n the Hothouse The Polish artist shows her works at the famous Tate Modern Gallery The Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw was invited to collaborate with the Tate Modern Gallery in London. The effect was the London exhibition of Anna Molska under the title Stage and Twist. The Adam Mickiewicz Institute was the co-organizer of the exhibition. Molska, an artist who is under thirty, exhibited her video play which alludes to the Russian and Soviet avant-garde from the beginning of the 20th century. In the film “Tanagram”, she shows a pair of young, muscular men, who assemble Kazimir Malevich’s “Black Square” on a white floor. Russian folk music and a song performed by the Alexandrov Ensemble accompany the actions of the protagonists. Two parallel-screened films, “W=F*s (Work)” and “P=W:t (Power)”, show images apparently disconnected from each other. “Power” shows an invasion of hundreds of tennis balls. Painted white, they are propelled by an invisible force and smashed against the walls of the court. The other film, “Work”, shows workers constructing a scaffolding in order to stand on its three tiers in the final sequence. The film alludes to human sculptures known from the bombastic, totalitarian ceremonies photographed, among others, by Alexander Rodchenko (“The Male Pyramid”). Molska’s newest film, “The Hecatomb”, also shown at Tate Modern, alludes to folk tradition. A young, smartly dressed young man, locked in a hothouse, performs nervous acrobatics on a concrete floor and an inflatable mattress. He is the devil the village women are talking about among themselves. Apart from Molska, the Romanian artist Ciprian Mureşan exhibited his work at the Stage and Twist exhibition. Among his works was the video “4’33”, a tribute to the American composer John Cage. Mureşan filmed a deserted Romanian tractor factory shut down after 1989 as a result of failed privatization. For 4 minutes and 33 seconds the eye of the camera wanders around the abandoned industrial wasteland. As curator Magda Lipska observes, “The language of these works is inspiring. It is a conscious language of contestation, which alludes to the tradition of avant-garde art, but also to specific historical events, especially from the period of transformation. The artists address these events with a good deal of distance and a sense of humour.” The event inaugurated a new space at the Tate Modern Gallery called the Project Space, which will be used to exhibit the work of artists from around the world. The Warsaw Museum of Modern Art was the first institution invited to participate in the project. The exhibition Stage and Twist, 2012 Tate Modern photo: Tate Photography © the artistss P u b l i c at i o n s season 2011/2012 > Publications 110 Andrzej Panufnik Between emotions and intellect Panufnik on Disc and on Paper The Adam Mickiewicz Institute and Boosey & Hawkes launch a new series on Polish composers The publication on Andrzej Panufnik contains an essay titled “Between Emotions And Intellect”, a documentary film on DVD, “Dad from behind the Iron Curtain”, and a CD with the composer’s work and a recording of the essay. Beata Bolesławska-Lewandowska is the author of the text and Krzysztof Rzączyński directed the film. The publication was issued in collaboration with the British music publisher Boosey & Hawkes and is distributed by that company. The Institute and Boosey & Hawkes plan to release other publications presenting the most important composers of Polish contemporary music. season 2011/2012 > Publications 111 Witold lutosławski Lutosławski with the BBC Orchestra The Adam Mickiewicz Institute and Chandos Records are releasing a series of recordings of works by Witold Lutosławski This is the second part of the “Polish Music” series produced by Chandos Records in collaboration with the Adam Mickiewicz Institute. The record will make the best works by the Polish composer available to the international audience, especially the compositions created after 1960, such as Paroles tissées, Les Espaces du sommeil and Chantefleurs et Chantefables. The BBC Symphony Orchestra was led by Edward Gardner, the music director of the English National Opera. Chandos Records has been active on the British and international music market since 1979. The company is a pioneer in producing music series and is highly valued within the field, receiving several awards from the prestigious Gramophone magazine season 2011/2012 > Publications 112 Speak the Culture: Poland P o l a n d f o r B e g i n n e r s From Mikołaj Rej to Inka coffee, from Zakopane design to the Solidarity logo Speak the Culture: Poland is the fifth book from the well-known and liked Thorogood series, which presents in a synthetic, clear and accessible manner the culture, both high- and low-brow, of various countries. Thus far, there were volumes on Italy, Great Britain, Spain and France. The Polish volume is 240 pages long and presents figures, events, masterpieces and symbols key to our culture. The book was edited by the well-known author of guides Andrew Whitaker. season 2011/2012 > Publications 113 Print Control No. 1, Bożena Kowalkowska and Magdalena Heliasz P r i n t e d M a s t e rp i e c e s This book demonstrates the world-class quality of Polish design today Since 2010 the web page www.printcontrol.pl presents the most interesting Polish printed design. Print Control No. 1 is an album based on that page. The book presents the best projects of 2011 (the publication is planned as a series and is to appear annually). The first part of the album is the presentation of one hundred projects: posters, books, gadgets, and so-called visual identification materials. The second part consists of interviews with Polish designers and specialists in the field of printed forms. Four publications copublished by the Institute received special mention in the book: “Welcome Home”, “Out of the Ordinary”, “Bałka/Fragment” and “Fossils and Gardens”. The book was published in Polish and in English and is available in art bookstores around the world. About us season 2011/2012 > About us 116 Culture.pl Superbrands Warsaw, 25 may 2012 a m i c u lt u r e a w a r d Culture.pl Superbrands for the Strongest Brands in the Field of Culture The Culture.pl Superbrands award granted by the Adam Mickiewicz Institute in collaboration with Superbrands for active dissemination of Polish culture abroad was presented for the first time this year. The winners were Krzysztof Warlikowski and Grzegorz Jarzyna. The awards gala of the 6th edition of Superbrands Poland took place in the Sheraton hotel on 25 May 2012. The statuettes were presented to the representatives of the strongest Polish business brands and distinguished persons who contribute to nation branding in Poland and abroad. The awards committee justified its selections in the following manner: Grzegorz Jarzyna, Executive and Art Director of TR Warszawa theatre is awarded for his excellent theatre productions, for exceptional talent and courage in balancing transgressive subjects with formal beauty and harmony, and for the strongest intuition among Polish artists in interpreting the reality of our times and the nature of contemporary human beings. Krzysztof Warlikowski, Art Director of the Nowy Theatre in Warsaw, for courage in explorations and introducing new subjects and new aesthetic solutions in theatre, for breaking taboos in Polish reality and for taking theatre discourse to the level of universal discussion about the human condition in the 21st century. The Culture.pl Superbrands was established by the Adam Mickiewicz Institute in collaboration with The Superbrands Ltd., for persons and institutions of culture which most effectively support the presence of Polish culture abroad. The nominations were made by experts at the Adam Mickiewicz Institute and directors of the Institutes of Polish Culture, and the winner was selected by the members of the awards committee: Piotr Bratkowski (Newsweek), Piotr Mucharski (Tygodnik Powszechny), Zdzisław Pietrasik (Polityka), Marta Strzelecka (Wprost), Jacek Tomczuk (Przekrój), and the director of the Adam Mickiewicz Institute, Paweł Potoroczyn. The Superbrands Ltd. is an international organization rewarding the success of brands which achieve the strongest position in their line of business. This year’s laureates were selected with the votes of the members of the Brand Council: 38 leading Polish experts in the field of branding, marketing and advertising, and a group of 2700 individuals who participated in a consumer study. Culture.pl Superbrands awards ceremony, from left: Paweł Potoroczyn, Grzegorz Jarzyna and Krzysztof Warlikowski season 2011/2012 > About us 118 ISO 9001:2008 certification T h e H i g h e s t Q u a l i t y As of 27 February 2012, we can verify the quality of our activity with the ISO 9001:2008 certification The Adam Mickiewicz Institute is continuously increasing its efficacy, standards and creativity. As of 27 February 2012, we can verify the quality of our activity with the ISO 9001:2008 certification. The Institute employs a Quality Policy, which states that “The cardinal goal of the Adam Mickiewicz Institute is to authenticate Poland as an irreplaceable link in the international exchange of ideas, values and products of culture of the highest calibre as well as to provide high quality service by ensuring professional and friendly assistance to our Partners while continuously improving this process according to the needs and modifications signalled by our Partners.” All of the processes taking place within the organisation have been codified in the Institute’s ledger of quality and catalogue of values, which we regularly consult in our day to day operations. season 2011/2012 > About us 119 xpertis X p e r t i s f o r e xp e r t s The introduction of the system occurred to be a key element to the success of an undertaking as immense as the International Cultural Programme of the Polish E.U. Presidency In our effort to make use of advances taking place in management tools, since 2009 the Adam Mickiewicz Institute has been utilising the XPERTIS information technology system developed by Macrologic. The introduction of the system occurred to be a key element to the success of an undertaking as immense as the International Cultural Programme of the Polish E.U. Presidency, which comprised 400 events. The project management module allows complete control of the entire process from the idea stage to the project’s final evaluation. It supports teams with compound goals by creating schedules and delegating tasks according to the needs of the project. Other functions track document circulation, manage fund disbursal over time and assign documents to their corresponding projects, enabling rational planning and saving valuable time for the staff and managers. XPERTIS also enables the Institute to keep detailed and thorough knowledge bases. The ability to utilise text templates and to source various types of documents easily means significantly improved access to information. Another important element of the system is the integrated and continuously updated base of contact information. season 2011/2012 > About us 120 STAFF ST R U C TU R E CHIEF ACCOUNTANT ACCOUNTING DEPUTY DIRECTOR MINISTERIAL PROGRAMME MANAGEMENT DEPARTMENT PROXY FOR CONFIDENTIAL DATA PROXY FOR QUALITY CONTROL SYSTEM LEGAL SERVICES HUMAN RESOURCES DATA SECURITY ADMINISTRATOR STEERING COMMITTEE ADMINISTRATION DEPARTMENT COMMUNICATIONS DEPARTMENT D I R E C T O R secretarial and reception staff DEPUTY DIRECTOR CONTROLLING DEPARTMENT KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT DEPARTMENT pr o j e c t a pr o j e c t b pr o j e c t c pr o j e c t d pr o j e c t e EXPERTS STAFF INTERNSHIP AND RESIDENCY DEPARTMENT COMMUNITY PROGRAMMES DEPARTMENT season 2011/2012 > About us 122 2 0 1 1 / 2 0 1 2 b u d g e t 49 493 325.03 zł The 2011/2012 season included the following projects: Fossils and Gardens My Father Is Not A Bird – stage production Republic – Young Polish design Stanisław Moniuszko’s The Haunted Manor at the Chişinău National Opera The Power of Fantasy. Modern and Contemporary Polish Art Festival of Polish Film in Spain Czesław Miłosz audio book Series of Polish symphony concerts at the BOZAR in Brussels Polish Film Days in Ukraine Chinese Culture Days 2011 Polish days during ISOLA DEL CINEMA in Rome Polish day at the 2011 Tokyo Jazz Festival European concert tour by the bands Times From Cebula and Riverside Venezia di Miłosz literature festival Musica Electronica Nova festival Polish Music Festival in Moscow filmPOLSKA in Berlin Fokus Polonia at the International Theater Festival in Santiago de Chile I, CULTURE Orchestra Guide to the Poles Józef Robakowski solo exhibition at the Ludlow 38 gallery in New York City Concert performances of King Roger at the Kiev Opera Szymanowski Quartet concerts in China and Tokyo Concerts by Polish bands at the Culture Collide Festival 39 921 442.34 zł Polish stall at the WOMEX World Music Expo Polish design at Matadero Madrid Baroque nights in Varaždin– concerts by the Wrocław Philharmonic Orchestra Exhibition of Polish painting at the Polish Library in Paris Poster exhibition in Moscow I, CULTURE Puzzle Side by Side exhibition in Berlin Wilhelm Sasnal exhibition in London Exhibition of photos from 3 pillars of the I, CULTURE programme on the fences of Łazienki Park and the Zachęta National Gallery of Art in Warsaw Exploratory Music from Poland East European Performing Arts Platform Concerts by the Royal String Quartet Music Weekends at the Golden Gate in Kiev Must have exhibition at Milan Design Week Transatlantyk at Frieze NY Anna Molska and Cyprian Muresan exhibition at Tate Modern Art Cologne Coming soon Laboured Memory Chorus of Women I, Culture Promotion of Polish culture abroad published by Adam Mickiewicz Institute ul. Mokotowska 25 00-560 Warsaw, Poland www.iam.pl; www.culture.pl edited by Łukasz Kaniewski design by Mateusz Kaniewski translated by Simon Włoch english text proofread by Alan Lockwood produced by Agata Wolska ISBN 978-83-60263-18-3