Krakow
Impossible Objects at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Krakow
Cultural reproduction is at the center of Impossible Objects, an exhibition that returns to Poland after much lauded recognition at the Venice Biennale. On central display is a 1:1 replica of the baldachin designed by Adolf Szyszko-Bohusz at the beginning of the 20th century to honor the revolutionary Polish leader Marshal Józef Piłsudski. The reproduction is accompanied by artist and artistic director Jakub Woynarowski’s large-scale diagrams that point to the dichotomies present in the replica: body/soul, tradition/modernity, monument/modernism, and death/life.

Impossible Objects, 2014; installation view, Impossible Objects, 2015. Courtesy of Instytut Architektury, Krakow. Photo: Jakub Woynarowski.
The decision to exhibit the work in Krakow is motivated by the replica’s proximity to the original, which sits just two miles away. In one long afternoon stroll, it is possible to see both the 1937 original baldachin by Szyszko-Bohusz on Wawel Hill and its contemporary reproduction at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Krakow (MOCAK). For a number of viewers in Poland, the MOCAK show is in itself an apparent duplicate; it is first and foremost a replica of the Venice Biennale exhibition, which creates an additional and welcomed dichotomy within the work.
Szyszko-Bohusz’s baldachin is concerned with representing tradition, an aspect that is stressed in Woynarowski’s diagrams. While working on the baldachin, Szyszko-Bohusz was also involved in the restoration of the Wawel Castle. The restoration project sought care for its national soothsayers by bringing the ashes of Poland’s romantic poets—Adam Mickiewicz, Juliusz Słowacki, and Cyrpian Norwid—and burying them at the Wawel Cathedral. The gesture was taken in an attempt to construct a national cultural reliquary that would unite a fractured Polish identity, which desperately needed an allegorical presence at the helm of its political office. The baldachin was a conscious part of this restoration project. It too serves as a reliquary, laying bare the romantic symbols in the crypt, which are also present in Woynarowski’s diagrams. The only words that appear on the structure are “Corpora dormiunt; vigilant animae” (The body rests; the soul is vigilant), which echoes the Polish-romantic sentiment of combining both power and spirit. Likewise, the Corinthian columns stand like a silent procession, bringing to mind Vitruvius, who in his drawings measured the columns in the proportions of the human body.




















