MNK The Szołayski
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The exhibition explores the ways in which textiles have been used to reflect the rhythm of seasonal changes in domestic interiors. Today, as we spend most of the time in centrally heated apartments and air-conditioned offices, we have become indifferent to the circadian rhythm and nuances of nature’s changing cycles. Recalling bygone domestic rituals can help us tune in with the seasons again: cultivate our relationship with the natural world and react more attentively to its changes.
In the pre-electricity era, textiles were widely used as seasonal clothing for architecture. They helped adapt domestic spaces to the twelve phenological seasons characteristic of the Central European climate zone. The recurring appearance of textiles in domestic interiors allowed for conscious participation in the cycles of nature – in celebrating the passage of time, with an enhanced sense of immersion in the circadian rhythm and the sequence of light and darkness. As a result, ‘The Clothed Home’ functioned as a resonator, helping residents feel the pulse of the natural world..
The exhibition, organised by the Adam Mickiewicz Institute, was shown in the Polish pavilion at the London Design Biennale 2021.
Concept and design of the exhibition: CENTRALA (Małgorzata Kuciewicz, Simone De Iacobis)
Curator: Aleksandra Kędziorek
Artist: Alicja Bielawska
Visual identification: Anna Kulachek
Coordinator: Olga Pawlak
Graphic design: Piotr Chuchla
The Adam Mickiewicz Institute
The Adam Mickiewicz Institute is a national cultural institution whose mission is to develop and disseminate the cultural dimension of Poland by fostering international collaboration and cultural exchange. Over the last 20 years, the Institute has organised more than 6,000 cultural events with almost 55 million participants. The Institute has carried out projects in countries including the United Kingdom, the United States, Russia, Israel, Germany, Turkey, Brazil, the Benelux, Korea, Japan and China, thereby gaining unique experience from working within a diversity of cultures, worldviews, and traditions. The relations developed and maintained over the years with major institutions and festivals from around the globe have enabled Polish artists to take part in projects organised in 70 countries across five continents.
The framework of the Institute’s programme for 2020–2023 is pivoted on the unique qualities of Polish culture with its strong European roots, whose values have been shaped through centuries of Christian tradition, the country’s geographic location, and the historical events of the 19th and 20th centuries that led to Poland’s transformation. Underpinned by strong notions of both community and the individual, these values make Poland’s remarkable culture exceptionally robust.
The Institute publishes the Culture.pl web portal with daily updates on the most interesting events related to Polish culture across the world. Culture.pl is available in three languages: Polish, English, and Russian, with selected content also available in Ukrainian, Chinese, Korean, and Japanese. In addition to news on numerous events organised by the Institute, Culture.pl carries biographical notes on selected artists, reviews, and essays – with more than 51,000 articles published to date, an English podcast entitled Stories from The Eastern West and Multimedia Guides to Polish Culture. The Adam Mickiewicz Institute operates under the auspices of the Ministry of Culture, National Heritage and Sp