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Paris: Roman Cieślewicz

May 3, 2018 - September 23, 2018

Roman Cieślewicz polish artist

ROMAN CIESLEWICZ, LA FABRIQUE DES IMAGES

From 3 May to 23 September 2018, the Musée des Arts Décoratifs is paying tribute to Roman Cieslewicz (1930–1996). A major figure in graphic design in the second half of the 20th century, he was a key artist of the Polish Poster School before conquering the world of graphic design when he arrived in France. His eclectic oeuvre spanned a variety of graphic expressions ranging from posters and advertising to photomontage, publishing and illustration. His images scrutinize the world, are its reflection and testimony, and reveal the singularity of an artist and politically committed personality. Roman Cieslewicz saw his role as a graphic designer in direct confrontation with current events. More than 700 exhibits chronologically and thematically illustrate the prolific and exceptional oeuvre of one of the greatest graphic designers who still influences the graphic design universe nowadays.

Born at Lwów, Roman Cieslewicz completed his artistic training at the Kraków Academy of Fine Arts, graduating in 1955. He became a major figure of the Polish Poster School, the artists who revitalized the medium and its role in the 1950s, and whose fame and influence spread internationally. But the complex political context and his ambition to expose his talents to the “neons of the West” are two of the reasons why Roman Cieslewicz chose to leave Poland.

He arrived in Paris in 1963. Hired by Peter Knapp as a layout artist, he contributed to Elle magazine and became its artistic director. In 1967, he took part in the creation of a new art magazine, Opus International, defining its graphic image. He also worked for Vogue, the publishing house 10/18 and Jacques-Louis Delpal. He was the first artistic director of the MAFIA agency.

Although he soon abandoned the visual aesthetics and techniques he used in Poland to explore photomontage, he kept the idea that the role of the poster and graphic design is to educate the public both intellectually and aesthetically and “depollute the eye.”

Alongside his commissions, he continued what he called his “studio” production, largely consisting of series of collages and photomontages, creating the “repetitive collages” and “centered collages” that led to other remarkable series such as Change of Climate and No News is Good News. A member of the Panique group, founded in 1960 by Arrabal, Topor, Jodorowski and Olivier O. Olivier, Cieslewicz created Kamikaze, Panique’s news review, in 1976.

Roman Cieslewicz had his first major exhibition in France at the Musée des Arts Décoratifs in 1972. In 1993, the Centre Georges Pompidou paid tribute with a comprehensive retrospective, followed by the Musée de Grenoble in 2001. Although major museums have already celebrated his work, the exhibition at the Musée des Arts Décoratifs analyses Roman Cieslewicz’s creative process by showing documents from his archives for the first time and approaching it in an innovative manner. Taking us on a chronological journey through his work and focusing on themes dear to Cieslewicz such as the eye, the hand, the circle, Che Guevara, the Mona Lisa, it reveals the workings of Cieslewicz’s “image factory.” His works dialogue with his iconographic archives, kept at the IMEC (Institut Mémoires de l’édition contemporaine), some of which are being shown for the first time.