The protagonist of the exhibition Different Faces, Different Places is Tomasz Machciński (b. 1942, lives in Kalisz, Poland), the author of a monumental performance, which has continued uninterrupted since 1966, consisting of more than 22,000 fictional or appropriated identities recorded in photographic self-portraits. Machciński’s open life project is a peculiar atlas of humanity in which various types of people are collected. His earliest metamorphoses recall film stills and draw upon Hollywood’s camp aesthetic, history, and pop culture. With the advent of colour digital photography, the artist began to create improvisatory identities unbound by, and uprooted from, existing systems of representation. The multitude of styles, of ethnic, racial, sexual and social affiliations in his photographs, summons the streets of New York more than those of Kalisz.

As early as the interwar period, Polish Futurists highlighted the core issue with constructed social realities, such as identity and race, which in performance theory are fleeting and fluid. In 1919, the first avant-garde performance in Poland, A Subtropical Evening Organised by White Negroes, took place, initiated by Anatol Stern and Aleksander Wat. The programme included the reading of texts “with outrageous syntax, pornographic and Rabelaisian content”[1], including Stern’s poem “Burning a Fig Leaf”, a piece read by a man wearing only a gauze loincloth. “Much was said and written about us after that. It was not flattery,” Wat later recalled[2]. Futurists, in the role of ‘naked people in the city centre’, overthrew social and cultural norms in a manifestation of moral and artistic freedom.

It is precisely this freedom that Machciński seeks to achieve, not via contestation, but by affirmation, replacing the ‘naked man’ with myriad colourful identities. The artist creates characters and reconstructs them, at the same time processing and questioning the stereotypical categories that divide people, thus exposing the performative nature of all identities. Despite an evident romance with primitivism, Machciński’s creative practice, as with that of the Futurists, is devoid of any intention of causing hurt. Instead, it appears as a universalistic, humanistic strategy that gathers together in one place people of all races, religions and genders. “My characters are not just about Europe – Asia, Africa, the whole world,” says the artist[3], portraying in his atlas of humanity an extensive, detailed and colourful taxonomy of human faces and emotions.

Tomasz Machciński’s exhibition is presented in the Europe–Far East Gallery of the Manggha Museum, a European institution dedicated to supporting cultural dialogue between Europe and the countries of the Asia-Pacific region. This is the first comprehensive display of Machciński’s colour photography, created in the years 2006–2018. The exhibition space –  with its tranquility and economical, minimalist architecture –  would appear to have been designed for the presentation of works intended to express attitudes of equality and openness to diversity, and the multiplicity of aesthetic and cultural patterns. A quotation from Futurist Stanisław Młodożeniec’s “Hymn of Peace” could serve as the epigraph for the exhibition Different Faces, Different Places:

Hail the world!
black, red, yellow, white people –
from Europe – Asia – Australia –
from Africa, America –
recluse of the islands –
kiss your colourful snouts
bruderszaft.
[4]

Curator: Katarzyna Karwańska 
Tomasz Machciński (b. 1942 in Górki, in the Kampinos Forest) is a photographer, performer and videomaker, formally trained as a precision mechanic. He lives and works in Kalisz. Since 1966, he has carried out his life’s project: impersonating a multitude of characters, he creates photographic self-portraits, which comprise a collection currently made up of more than 22,000 photographs. Since 2006, he has recorded private performances of improvised vocal pieces. His artistic credo is as follows: “I don’t use hairpieces or other tricks. Instead, I use everything that happens to my body, such as: regrowth of hair, loss of teeth, illnesses, ageing, etc. The work of art is me, Tomasz Machciński. I have single-handedly created a unique, inimitable oeuvre. I have described my life in photography, literature, my work in sculpture, film and music.” His photographs and films have been shown at, among other venues, the Ujazdowski Castle Centre for Contemporary Art in Warsaw, the City Art Gallery of Kalisz, the Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw, the Silesian Museum in Katowice, the Rencontres d’Arles festival in Arles, Whitechapel Gallery in London, the American Folk Art Museum in New York, and Delmes & Zander in Cologne. In 2018, he was awarded the Art Absolument Prize at the Outsider Art Fair Paris. His photographs are contained in two public collections: those of the Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw and the Museum of Photography in Krakow. In 2018, a foundation operating in his name was established in Warsaw.

Tomasz Machciński’s photographs are presented during the 19th edition of the Kraków Photomonth Festival, at Manggha Museum of Japanese Art and Technology, ul. Marii Konopnickiej 26.

EXHIBITION DATES:
28.05–5.09
TUE–SUN 10.00–18.00

Find more information at: photomonth.com


[1] Aleksander Wat, Wspomnienia o futuryzmie, „Miesięcznik Literacki” 1930, nr 2.
[2] Aleksander Wat, Namopańik barwistanu, 1921.
[3] https://youtu.be/Om_2QaTZe8A. Kalisz 1967.
[4] Stanisław Młodożeniec, Hymn pokoju, 1921.