Igor Mitoraj’s Sleeping Head

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Igor Mitoraj “Testa Addormentata” 1983, Bronze

It is evening. I am late for a meeting. I hurry down rue de la Corraterie in Geneva. I am stopped in my tracks by a new sculpture. This is Igor Mitoraj‘s “Sleeping Head.” What a find! I take time to wander around it and look inside. I tap it with my knucles and rest my palm on its cold smooth surfaces. It is at once beautiful and disturbing; imposing and peaceful.  Who installed it here… and why?

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The enormous bronze head is sculpted as if bound in swathes of thin linen. Despite this, there is a serenity; the eyes are definitely closed. The unbound lips pout sensuously. I am caught between images of awful arab spring-going-on-autumn youtubed atrocities and something else delicate and erotic. But then provocation of such dichotomy of emotion is the Mitoraj hallmark.

Igor Mitoraj was born in 1944 in Germany to a Polish mother and French father. He studied painting and graduated from the Krakow Academy of Art in 1967. The following year, he went on to work in Paris. He travelled extensively and was especially impressed by the massive statues he came across in Latin America. By 1974 he had converted to sculpture. His work took him frequently to Italy where ravaged, cracked, fragmented and crumbling classical statues became a major inspiration. In 1983 he set up a studio in Pietrasanta just north of Pisa for easier access to the pure white marble of the region. Whether in stone, terracotta or bronze, his work from then on played on classical beauty, our awe of antiquity and a fascination for contemporary suffering. He described this as “mesmerising perfection attached to corrupted imperfection.” He moved to Poland in 2003 and died in 2014.

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Mitoraj was a monumental sculptor in every sense. He won numerous prestigious awards and commissions. His work has been exhibited in capital cities all over the world. I ask myself if installation of “Sleeping Head” outside one of Switzerland’s major banks signals the hefty loan you would need to buy the work. But then I realise that the bank is right next to the exquisite Galerie Bel Air Fine Arts. I peer through the gallery’s darkened window and see a bissected classically beautiful bronze face staring back at me. Does all this promise more Mitoraj inside? I hope so!

Vesa Lehtimäki Star Wars photos

Today is Star Wars Day – May the 4th be with you! – and I thought it would be timely to share one of my favourite fan projects: Vesa Lehtimäki’s Star Wars photos.

The Moon and Jupiter Over Helsinki

The Millennium Falcon on sea ice next to Kruununhaka, Helsinki. March 2013. Source: Flickr

Looking at this photo makes my jaw drop. Is it the real deal – did the Millenium Falcon actually land in Helsinki? Would love to hop on for a space jump to Mos Eisley!

Casual Parking

The Y-wing pilots, where do they get their licences? Really! I mean just look at this, you can’t really get in or out of that parking lot in a car with those Y-wings parked like that. It’s been like this after the destruction of the second Death Star. Sunday drivers… Yeah, it’s a nuisance! Source: Flickr

Internet tells me that Lehtimäki, a Finnish illustrator and designer, borrowed his son’s toys, placed them in real-life situation and did some clever photoshopping. I can only imagine the time and effort that went into making these unbelievable scenes believable. Hats off!

Desert Blues

Sand, sand and more sand… Shazbot! A Tatooine assignment can be very tough. Source: Flickr

Snowtrooper's Delight

A snowtrooper isn’t happy without snow. A lot of snow! Source: Flickr

Don’t forget to check out Lehtimäki’s Flickr for some more fabulous shots, tell us what you think. May the force be with you on May the 4th!

Mahatma Gandhi in Geneva

Mahatma Gandhi

“Mahatma Ghandi: My life is my message” by Gautam Pal (2007)

We were surprised by the Ariana Museum not long ago. If you are strolling in the Ariana park, take a minute in the company of Gautam Pal‘s statue of Mahatma Gandhi that was unveiled in November 2007 to commemorate the 60th anniversary of Indo-Swiss friendship. This must be one of the most beautiful public sculptures in Geneva. Stand close and look up at the face; you cannot but help pick up on the vibes of peace and serenity. How can a man like this die a violent death?