Other texts

Shift – Consequences (1988)

It was a fascinating discovery that the Pole Jan Niksinski made around 1985 on the coast of Bulgaria when he took black and white photographs of barren sticks on porous rocky ground. Elements emerged in the real world of things that he had previously only consciously perceived in his own, at least partially abstract, artificial world of forms.

Doubter between the styles (1988)

He presented his drawings at the Nuremberg Triennial three years ago and his paintings and collages at the Varlsella Gallery in 1986; now he is showing paintings at Schmidt-Bank (until 16 September) and drawings at Faber-Castell in Stein (3 August to 28 September): Jan Niksinski from Warsaw, guest of the Institute of Modern Art.

Experiences and proposals of young (1987)

Two interesting exhibitions are presented at the BWA “Piwnice” Gallery in Kielce. The first one, an individual exhibition, was proposed by the 35-year-old Jan Niksiński, a searching artist, but with an already established style, fluent in graphics. He is one of the best-educated Polish graphic designers – he studied in Gdansk, Warsaw, Vienna, worked as an assistant, in Salzburg, and more than that, he cooperated with Polish and Austrian publishing houses, had individual exhibitions in West Germany, Austria, Yugoslavia; West Berlin. He is currently one of the leading Polish graphic designers.

Colorful impossibility (1987)

     Warsaw stays on the margin, it only appears on a couple of pictures using mixed technique – showing buildings’ facades, hallways, and dark courtyards. Jan Niksiński, born in 1952 in Przasnysz, does have a studio in the Polish capital, but he is neither a painter of the city, nor a realist.

Reality has many faces (1986)

Reality has many faces and an artist like Jan Niksinski (he) also finds new ones at Galerie Varisella: the vision of a landscape is abruptly interrupted by a sudden wedge that extends over the edge of the picture and, both sobered and astonished, one recognises one part of the landscape as spatially elevated, the other as flat.

Text by Przemysław Brykalski (1986)

It is with real pleasure that I take the opportunity to write these few sentences about the works of Mr Jan Niksiński. They are striking for their excellent technique, precision of execution. However, this is not empty virtuosity. In each of the works we can see an attempt to express those dark and difficult contents, which in the European tradition have for centuries constituted the true value, the humanism of art simply.

In a world of symbols (1986)

…The works of Jan Niksinski, who, incidentally, is also a participant in the Nuremberg Drawing Triennial, are also characterised by independence. Currently, Niksinski’s work is exhibited extensively at the Varissel Gallery. What stands out are mainly the drawings of this young Pole, in which fears, longings and dangers are captured in an expressive way.

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