Memoria [EN] Nr 83 | Page 32

MIKOŁAJ GRYNBERG AND WILHELM SASNAL PERMANENTLY AT THE POLIN MUSEUM

POLIN Museum

1000-year long history of Polish Jews did not end with the Holocaust, or with the waves of postwar emigration.

“When we were opening the Core Exhibition, it seemed that, post-1989, a bright and safe future awaited the Polish society, along with all the minorities that constitute it. Is that still true today? What do Polish Jews think, how do they feel about it? We strive to answer this question in the new arrangement of the last section of POLIN Core Exhibition which deals with the Jewish life in today’s Poland,” says Joanna Fikus, head of the POLIN Museum's exhibition department, responsible for work on the new museum space.

Designers from the WWAA studio created a symbolic house where the visitors to the Core Exhibition will be able to watch Mikołaj Grynberg’s film titled Who We Are. The director asks Polish Jews who they are and what kind of a home Poland is for them.

‘The subtle interplay of colour is of major importance—blue refers to the natural dye used in the Antiquity to produce a talit—Jewish prayer shawl,’ says Natalia Paszkowska, from the WWAA studio responsible for the design of the new space. ‘The dye was obtained from a Mediterranean snail called chilazon in Aramaic. Silver is the second dominant colour. Silver walls of the house reflect the clouds, echoing the painting by Wilhelm Sasnal visible through the window,” she added.

We look at the Polish landscape with a disturbing element in it—a concentration camp tower. Debates on the memory of the difficult Holocaust history and the postwar period continue to affect contemporary Polish-Jewish relations. In his painting, Wilhelm Sasnal points to the traces of this past in the Polish landscape and its impact on the awareness of the country’s residents. Following in the artist’s footsteps, we want to ask to what extent does the memory of the past shape our present, and what will the landscape of Polish-Jewish relations look like in the future?

The new arrangement of the last section of the Core Exhibition is an element of the program for POLIN Museum’s 10th birthday, which we will celebrate in the fall.

The refurbishment of the last section of the Postwar gallery was possible thanks to the support of the Capital City of Warsaw, Association Européenne du Musée de l'Histoire des Juifs de Pologne POLIN, and the Association of the Jewish Historical Institute of Poland.

The Postwar Gallery - the last of the POLIN Museum's permanent exhibition galleries - has acquired a new space telling the story of Jewish life after 1989. It brings together works by two acclaimed Polish artists: Wilhelm Sasnal and Mikołaj Grynberg. The new arrangement, designed by the WWAA architectural studio, is open to the public from 11 July. With this symbolic meeting, the POLIN Museum heralds its 10th birthday, which it will celebrate in the autumn of 2024.

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