Monument III

Ihor Podolchak

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  • Monument III 3
Basic information
ID
Г-IV-5784
Author
Ihor Podolchak
Name
Monument III
Date of creation
1987
Technique
etching aquatint
Material
paper
Dimensions (height x width, cm)
25.1 x 19
Additionally
Information about author
Author
Ihor Podolchak
Artist's lifetime
b.1962
Country
Ukraine
Biography
Ihor Podolchak (born April 9, 1962, Lviv) is a Ukrainian director, screenwriter, producer, artist, and curator of contemporary art. He co-founded the creative association "Masoch Fund" and co-authored all its artistic projects. He lives and works in Lodz and Lviv.
Object description
Rectangular vertical print (13.9 х 10 cm) with a central image of a female figure on a stepped base resembling a pyramid. The massive figure is placed at the top of the pedestal, to which a spiral base connects it. The figure occupies the central space of the print but tends towards the upper right corner. The figure is three-quarters turned, facing forward. The head is hairless, and the left side of the skull is open. Stylised bones can be seen from there. The figure's left ear and the neck, which has been scratched out at the base, are visible below. The right side of the figure is not visible. The left hand, scratched at the elbow, rests on a stick with a rounded end. The abdomen has a dark, homogeneous space resembling a stomach. The legs of the figure end in cuts at the level of the thighs. A torn cloth falls from the highest step of the pedestal to its base. On the front of the highest step is a symbol – a cross described by a sinuous line. The print's background resembles a wall with stylised crosses and abstract figures on a dark grey background, inscribed in squares or rectangles. The floor of the makeshift space is covered with broken and cracked tiles.

"Igor Podolchak is a young Ukranian artist who has come into maturity as most of the political emblems of Soviet communism have been dismantled. To 'western' eyes adjusting in the light of Glasnost these grimly comic tableaux of Podolchak's appear to be macabre residues of an unconscious history. The artist recovers these repressed memories in a pictorial language that combines Surrealist effrontery with a neo-Gothic repertoire of demons, fools and hellish tormentors. In what could be private and dark corners of – equally – some torture chamber in a remote castle, some diabolical clinic operated by a vivisector, or some maniacally disciplinarian school room, these creatures perform obscure but intensely cruel rituals upon each other and upon themselves.

They are inextricably bound to a fantastic machinery that could be derived from Dr Frankenstein's laboratory, the Marquis de Sade's chateau or Franz Kafka's penal colony. Their limbs and organs fall away to reveal grotesquely implausible prosthetic devices that accentuate their mutilations. Their flesh is torn away in strips like bondage straps, or it drips off them, coagulates like glue on the walls and floors, or is petrified as stone or as an abominable excretion.

Alluding to the monstrosities of Hieronymus Bosch, Otto Dix, Max Ernst and Salvador Dali, Podolchak invokes a violently sensual and perverse force of metamorphosis. A kind of hysteria grips the imagery in this sarcastic fantasy: an ambiguous condition since it requires both intensity and also distraction. Because of this ambiguity we might confuse hysteria with ecstasy: psychoanalysts suggest that where hysteria is an illness, ecstasy is considered a state of grace. For an artist sensitive to this underlying similarity, hysteria can be regarded as the obscene side of ecstasy. These creatures are obscene not only because they strain or lurch comically and horrifically in spastic poses; in the perpetual torment of their inescapable hermetic society, they also cripple our own sense of moral distinction and judgement – conflating the worlds of the living and the dead, victim and master, the saved and the damned.

Their flesh convulses in the rigid grip of desire locked onto repression: whose erotic machines (manufactured from mysterious quasi-religious and political signs) weigh down, enclose, constrain, contort the lust of their supplicants.

In their Gothic guise these sorts of grotesqueries represented human depravities given their apocalyptic form, that is to say their true form behind appearance, the revelation of otherwise hidden human sin as it will appear on the Judgement Day. Are Podolchak's visions in this fantastic space of repression likewise apocalyptic, though perhaps signalling a political dread of Orwellian nightmares becoming ecstatic?" (Edward Colless, "Essay". To the exhibition catalogue "Igor Podolchak. Ukrainian Printmaker", 1991).

https://eprints.utas.edu.au/18624/1/Igor_Podolchak_Ukrainian_printmaker_1991.pdf
Inscriptions
Below the print is a pencil inscription: "'Monument III' 50/50+9/20 Podolchak 1987".
Legal regulation
Borys Voznytskyi Lviv National Art Gallery