Oct 24, 2008

I just need the light of Love here!!!

These photos refer to the opening of the exhibition of Yoko Ono in Warsaw CCA in September 2008, her performance 'Onochord' with flashlights and the art work 'My Mummy was beautiful'.
This event elicited among us different reflections. One concerns Love directed to neighbours, the second one brings the feministic accent to our krasnals society.

At the opening the light of love sent by Yoko Ono didn't get to the place that I needed it. Fortunately I took it home with me.
I am a mother, after my 30s, I like sex and as most women I need it. But I feel some imbalance in treating or presenting us as mechanical objects. Some parts of the body if they appear publicly, they are shown like sexual objects of desire, or opposite - without respect, in vulgar way. And I need just adoration; our genitals need the same love - also spiritual - as our souls and hearts.


Sleeping Beauty “I am a beautiful Mummy! – I love you my pussy!”. 2008. Photography / frame from the private performance in front of the mirror.


Sleeping Beauty “I am a beautiful Mummy! – I love you my pussy!”. 2008. Photography / frame from the private performance in front of the mirror.

Yoko Ono - I love you / Catholic voice at your home

The message "I love you" sent by Yoko Ono at her opening in Warsaw in September, as well as other spiritual suggestions, were just repetition from the hippie times, with no power today. They rather would be situated in the context of Polish Catholic fanaticism represented by its leader father Rydzyk. Yoko Yono keeps the fleshlight and sends the light to the public as to the worshippers of father Rydzyk.

Whielki Krasnal „Must kill this Love / Great Poles – Yoko Ono”. 2008. Oil on canvas. 114 x 130 cm


Krasnal Hałabała „I love you / Catholic voice at your home / Great Poles – father Rydzyk plus cattle”. 2008. Acrylic on canvas. 50 x 70 cm

Polish girls prefer French guys


Krasnal Hałabała "Serve the People / Ryszard Kalisz / Great Poles". 2008. Acrylic on canvas. 55 x 45 cm


Krasnal Hałabała "Polish girls prefer French guys / Jean Reno / Great Poles". 2008. Acrylic, oil on canvas. 45 x 55 cm

Krasnal with Slavoj Zizek in Miami

Whielki Krasnal was invited by Artoconecto and Bakehouse Arts Complex to take part in the exhibition A-B(o)MB - Art Basel (of) Miami Beach pre-Basel Showcase @ Bakehouse Arts Complex.
There is presented at the exhibition the portrait of one of the most popular philosophers among contemporary artists - Slavoj Zizek. At the painting he formulates one of his famous statements.



more info:
www.bacfl.org/events.html
artoconecto.blogspot.com/

Whielki Krasnal "Slavoy Žižek / Great Poles”. 2008. Oil on canvas. 66 x 81 cm

One of the significant statements of Zizek concerns the role of excrements in art world and replacing by them the masterpieces of art.

Whielki Krasnal „How much is worth the shit of Sasnal?” 2008. Oil on canvas. 50 x 50 cm


Whielki Krasnal „Brain wash”. 2008. Oil on canvas. 100 x 73 cm

Oct 6, 2008

Maria Peszek

Polish new music star Maria Peszek, provokes and enchants the audience.

Whielki Krasnal "Maria Awaria / Great Poles, Maria Peszek". 2008. Oil on canvas. 92 x 73 cm

additional titles translated from Polish songs of the artist:
"Lick me lick me, I'm Polish"
"I have a pussy"
"I have no time for sex"
"Fuck you city"
"Broth"
"Superglue"
"Toadstools"
"Women-pistols"
"Teddy bear"

Sep 27, 2008

Barack Obama – it’s too early for a black president!

We decided not to stay away from the topic and we painted Obama, even twice! There are rather two versions - ‘whitening’ and ‘beautifying’ the candidate for the American president.

Krasnal Bansky "I am White / Barack Obama". 2008. Oil on canvas. 70 x 60 cm

Whielki Krasnal "I'm White / Barack Obama". 2008. Oil on canvas. 30 x 22 cm

The Polish journalist wrote from Washington in a ‘Rzeczpospolita’ daily newspaper on the 22 of Sept, that ‘it’s too early for a black president’ in United States. ‘Racist prejudice of the part of white electors can finish Obama, according to new surveys.’
Let’s hope the racist state of opinion will not dominate the elections.
Good Luck!
The Krasnals support Obama!

Daily reporting on the world of Barack Obama artwork, prints and auctions:
http://www.obamaartreport.com/

Group sex with Angela Merkel


The German town of Bodman-Ludwigshafen in the far south of Germany isn't exactly a hot tourist attraction. But lately it has been a magnet for tourists armed with cameras and camcorders. The sudden fame is due to a controversial tryptich at the center of town - a work by the German sculpture, Peter Lenk.

The sculpture is called "group-sex relief" and features prominent politicians and corporate players in various states of undress and completely nude. One panel stars German Chancellor Angela Merkel and former Chancellor Gerhard Schröder laughing and grabbing each others private parts.

In a ‘Wprost’ weekly (on 21 of Sept) they ask; where are the boundaries of satire and the freedom of the artistic statement?
‘There are no boundaries – German politics said unanimously.’
Meanwhile, not so far from Germany, polish art critics are indignant with The Krasnals drawings.
What a difference just a border makes…

Whielki Krasnal "Go on Wili". 2008. Markers on paper
(on the drawing: Slavoj Zizek, Kuba Banasiak, Slawomir Sierakowski, Wilhelm Sasnal)

Sep 26, 2008

The Animal Pyramid


Whielki Krasnal "The Animal Pyramid / based on the work of Katarzyna Kozyra". 2008. Oil on canvas. 92 x 65 cm

Sep 23, 2008

"We love The Krasnals"

Gorilla Magazine about the Krasnals and Homo Sovieticus:
http://www.gorillamagazine.it/approfondimenti/we-love-krasnals-riflessioni-sullhomo-sovieticus

Sep 20, 2008

Concrete brain of Homo Sovieticus


Whielki Krasnals "Concrete brain of Homo Sovieticus / based on the work of Monika Sosnowska". 2008. Oil on canvas. 90 x 100 cm

Recent activity of the Polish artist Monika Sosnowska inspired us for reflections about Homo Sovieticus.
The artist, who succeeded in the Venice Biennale 2007 and has just her show in Schaulager in Basel, contributed to rising one of the most aggressive fractions of commerce in Polish contemporary art. She uses our sad history and grey PRL (previous socialistic system) past refering to socmodern aesthetics only for career and money reasons.
For western art institutions this is just attractive and exotic because they didn't experience that reality. And for us this is socialistic kitch.

Whielki Krasnal "Concrete mask of socmodern Polish contemporary art/ from the Great Poles series / Monika Sosnowska". 2008. Oil on canvas. 50 x 60 cm

From Wikipedia:
"Homo Sovieticus (pseudo Latin for "Soviet Man (human)") is a sarcastic and critical reference to a category of people with a specific mindset that were allegedly created by the governments of the Soviet bloc. The term was coined by well-known Soviet writer and sociologist Aleksandr Zinovyev as the title of his book of the same name. [1] A similar term in Russian slang is sovok (Совок), which is derived from Soviet but also means scoop.

The idea that the Soviet system would create a new, better kind of person was first postulated by the advocates of the Soviet system; they called it the "New Soviet man". Homo Sovieticus, however, was a term with negative connotations, invented by opponents to describe what they said was the real result of Soviet policies. In many ways it meant the opposite of the New Soviet man, someone characterized by the following:
Indifference to the results of his labor (as expressed in the saying "They pretend they are paying us, and we pretend we are working"), and lack of initiative.
Indifference to common property and petty theft from the workplace, both for personal use and for profit. A line from a popular song, "Everything belongs to kolkhoz, everything belongs to me" ("все теперь колхозное, все теперь мое"), meaning that people on collective farms treasured all common property as their own, was sometimes used ironically to refer to instances of petty theft. The Law of Spikelets, which made stealing from the collective punishable by ten years’ imprisonment, was a failed attempt to break this attitude.
Isolation from world culture, created by the Soviet Union's restrictions on travel abroad and strict censorship of information in the media (as well as the abundance of propaganda). The intent was to insulate the Soviet people from Western influence; instead, "exotic" Western culture became more interesting precisely because it was forbidden. Soviet officials called this fascination "Western idolatry" (идолопоклонничество перед Западом).
Obedience or passive acceptance of everything that government imposes on them (see authoritarianism). Avoidance of taking any individual responsibility on anything."