Exhibition
Marta Czok - EX_PATRIA
26 Mar 2024 – 19 May 2024
Regular hours
- Monday
- Closed
- Tuesday
- Closed
- Wednesday
- 16:00 – 19:30
- Thursday
- 16:00 – 19:30
- Friday
- 16:00 – 19:30
- Saturday
- 16:00 – 19:30
- Sunday
- Closed
Free admission
Address
- Campo Rialto Novo 544
- Venice
Veneto - 30125
- Italy
A new exhibition of work by Marta Czok, curated by Jacek Ludwig Scarso, exploring the concept of homeland through narratives of war and migration.
About
In response to the theme of the Sixtieth Venice Art Biennale "Foreigners Everywhere", Fondazione Marta Czok presents EX_PATRIA, under the patronage of the Polish Embassy in Rome: a collection of recent and historical works by Marta Czok, from the eighties to the present day, which reflect on the construction of the concept of homeland and the ideologies that make this concept ambiguous. On the one hand, the idea of homeland conforms to the need to call a place "home" and to feel that such a home is designed to protect rights and ensure an adequate standard of living. On the other hand, the construction of this concept involves the identification of a "border", the physical and metaphorical barrier that implies the distinction of the self from the other. Migration, political asylum, xenophobia and nationalist populism confront this principle, reinforcing its symbolic meaning and the true experience of living its consequences. In these works, we find a gap between those who need to change location and those who have the power to determine their destiny: the politics of war, transnational bureaucracies, the impact of a global economy blur into one another, making even more vulnerable those who remain in limbo: without a place, without rights, without a homeland.
Marta Czok's work develops hand in hand with her "stateless" identity: born in Lebanon in 1947, Marta Czok comes from a family of Polish political refugees: her Mother's family, at the beginning of the War, resided in the city of Ostrog, now part of present-day Ukraine, and was deported to Siberia, before rejoining the Polish army and the Allies. In the horrors of World War II, his family was subjected to prison camps, forced labour and the Katyn massacre, where 25,000 officers and members of the Polish intelligentsia, including his grandfather Stanislaw Zurakowski, were shot by the Soviets. During and after the war, her family was in the Middle East: in Iran, in Lebanon, in Palestine, then back to Lebanon, before arriving in Egypt. Their hoped-for return to Poland, however, was not possible and they found political asylum in London, where they started again as landless and where Czok grew up, until she moved to Italy in the seventies.
Marta Czok's childhood was marked by these events, because the impact of the war continued in the stories told by her family, in the precariousness of a start to life as a refugee, in the fear of further deportations and new conflicts that could arise at any moment.