










The work was created for the exhibition “Willa siostra BWA. 60 lat galerii BWA w Zielonej Górze”, BWA Zielona Góra, 2025
Phot. Karolina Spiak / BWA Zielona Góra























(niczym słowo, być może)
II
jesteś w moim
znikającym ruchu
(wśród wszystkich moich zmarłych przyjaciół)
Jon Fosse, Pies i Anioł, 2024. wyd. Biuro Literackie
Stukot krosna – miarowy, niespieszny rytm dłoni i stóp przesuwa nitki przędzy między nićmi osnowy, tworząc wątek.
Tkanina jest misterną strukturą. Zaprojektowana przez Alicję Bielawską, tkana zgodnie z najstarszą tradycją, ręcznie przez mistrzynię tkacką, Beatę Wietrzyńską. Lnianą przędzę Alicja barwiła szyszkami olszy czarnej. To pracochłonny proces, w którym natura i przypadek współtworzą nieprzewidywalne niuanse koloru. W początkowych szarościach, po chwili uważnego spojrzenia, w zależności od światła, można dostrzec odcienie fioletów, brązów i umbry. To barwienie jest aktem zaufania żywiołom, poddaniem się naturze i jej zmiennym nastrojom. Olsza czarna, drzewo o leczniczych właściwościach, jest zdolne do regeneracji: przywraca życie wyjałowionej ziemi. Natura wnika tu w samą tkankę dzieła, przynosząc ze sobą swoją historię – pamięć o trwałości, o zdolności do odradzania się w obliczu zniszczenia. Praca powstała specjalnie na wystawę “Nie koniec, nie początek. 1945” w Muzeum Polin.
Faktura tkaniny jest opowieścią, którą możnaby czytać dotykiem. Przędza typu bouclé tworzy subtelne wypukłości – jakby zapis w alfabecie Braille’a, który czeka na odczytanie. Czy splot niesie słowa?
Na powierzchni pojawiają się hafty – delikatne rysunki, niemal niewidoczne, wymagające skupienia, by je dostrzec. Są jak ciche wezwania do uważności. Przywołują przedmioty pokazywane na wystawie. To pamiątki-artefakty, ślady minionego życia osób, których losy tworzą jej narrację.
Anni Albers w książce „On Weaving”, opublikowanej w 1965 roku, napisała: „Bycie twórczym to nie tyle pragnienie zrobienia czegoś, ile wsłuchiwanie się w to, co chce być zrobione: dyktat materiałów” („Being creative is not so much the desire to do something as the listening to that which wants to be done: the dictation of the materials”). Tkanina Alicji Bielawskiej niesie treści, które wypowiada się szeptem. Jest zapisem, w którym splatają się przeszłość i teraźniejszość, miarowy ruch dłoni, pamięć, obecność.
Alicja Bielawska od lat bada relację między materią, pamięcią a codziennością, tworząc rzeźby, instalacje, rysunki, które operują subtelnością formy i znaczeń. Jej praktyka artystyczna opiera się na czułym geście – śladzie dotyku, wrażliwości na materiały, które noszą w sobie historię. W pracy Jesteś tam w tym artystka kontynuuje swoje poszukiwania, eksplorując związek między przemijaniem a trwaniem, między ulotnością a zapisem, oddając głos materii, która pamięta.
Natalia Andrzejewska





































“Trajectories”, choreography collaborated with and performed by Dana Chmielewska,
Gdańsk City Gallery, Gdańsk, 2025
Phot. Alina Żemojdzin / Gdańsk City Gallery

































In Bielawska and Widomska’s exhibition, entwinement is seen in positive terms, as a connection rather than a threatening entanglement. In Death of a Man, a small home-like Warsaw gallery significantly equipped with a big wooden closet (a typical piece of home furniture), the two artists present works that dialogue with each other in a friendly proximity. Although their works differ in terms of techniques–Widomska’s primary medium is the oil painting, whereas Bielawska decided to show her textiles and ceramics–displayed together, these works add several other contexts and hint at diverse types of connections we may make when we open up to a lived experience.
Both artists are particularly attuned to details. It seems counterintuitive at first. Małgorzata Widomska’s two abstract oil paintings, The Great Mirror and The Door to My Father’s, are quite big in size. One canvas is 200 cm and the other 220 cm tall, which may indicate the artist will be interested in synthesizing or summarizing her experience more than in recreating the particulars of it. Yet what these canvases actually depict are small, inconspicuous pieces of Widomska’s family home furnishings. The artist contemplates an uneven gouge in the door to her father’s study, or the corroding edges of a hall mirror. Such an attentive consideration, or gaze, seems related to the painter’s creative strategy. As she writes in her statement, for her, the canvas enables the artist to work on the source experience, give or uncover the meaning of it. Looking at her paintings, we get right into someone’s contemplative mind, where life is being studied and apprehended in its many manifestations. It is a world where everything has its own texture, smell and history, as well as its own future incarnation, for example, in someone’s memory.
Alicja Bielawska is attuned to the details of ordinary objects in a similar way. It may sound, again, a bit confounding as we would rather expect her to be focused on the composition, i.e. elaborate abstraction. And undoubtedly, Bielawska’s works are based on her deep understanding of composition. But as we read her poems accompanying the exhibition–the artist herself sees them as registers of her sensual encounters with textiles and ceramics–we realize Screens and Vessels may carry other meanings as well. Hand-dyeing and drying textiles, draping them on metal racks, admiring their softness or roughness, or–following the clay deformation and studying traditional ceramics firing and glazing techniques, the artist does not only recount her creative process, but also seamlessly redirects the viewers’ attention to what surrounds us. To what is most material and mundane, and very close to our bodies.
In Bielawska’s art, the realm of everyday life is in constant move. It is moving in both meanings of the word, moving us as well. It is a world in which a doorknob protrudes from a shape, colors can stroke human hands, wool has its own taste, and geometric figures, which in Euclidean geometry stubbornly remain two-dimensional, can materialize in the ordinary objects such as a table or bed. All these shapes, colors, smells and tastes also move through time by means of desire or memory.
I Intertwine Your Fingers with Mine is also very much an exhibition of what is not exhibited. Both on the level of the narrative–after all, we must recount how the father’s study might have been, what it might have meant for him, and what it might have been for a small child ourselves, based on Widomska’s fragmented recollections as an adult artist–and on the level of certain residuality, lingering and fleetingness inherent in a sensory experience, researched and present in Bielawska’s art.
Another connotation of intertwining, which only exists in Bielawska and Widomska’s native tongue, is obscure talk. In Polish, gibberish and plaiting are homonymous. Speaking incoherently, giving incomplete information and fantasizing, especially when we fill the gaps in what we know with imaginary stories, is called the same as interweaving. Historically, women’s voices were often silenced with this derogatory term. The feminist revisions of art techniques and somewhat arachnological reclaiming of applied arts–textiles, ceramics and crafts in their broadest sense–in this exhibition, therefore, include not only its formal level, but also the level of deepest narrative.
Natalia Malek
At this Time of the Day Even Shadows Have Colours (Pavilion), 2024, steel, textile, 400 x 350 x 275 cm
The work was supported by DEKOMA.
Bringing her works into the space of the gallery, the artist alters the perfect white cube, known from thousands of photographs documenting hundreds of exhibitions since 1966 at Foksal Gallery, to encourage pleasure and comfort in the body. The central object of the exhibition is a soft, household seat, upholstered with jacquard fabric stitched according the artist’s design. The seat is the furthest thing from the minimalist, angular stools associated with Foksal Gallery, which once served as pedestals for displaying archival materials, still serving in the gallery as guardians of the past.
Working with the space, Alicja Bielawska also works with memory. The first thirty years of the gallery’s operations were decidedly androcentric. It was almost exclusively men who exhibited here, and most of the few women artists who appeared were tied to men who were important to the Foksal Gallery scene. An anecdote confirmed in the archive says that Annette Messager only exhibited at Foksal Gallery in 1978 because her partner, Christian Boltanski, made the presentation of his partner’s work a condition for his exhibition. Though few women have exhibited at Foksal Gallery, they have played a fundamental role. It suffices to look at the photographs of the openings or the gallery’s everyday workings. Although women worked with the artists organizing the exhibitions, their names do not appear in the archive, nor in traces or anecdotes. Women’s work for the gallery might be called a “labour of love,” as Wiktoria Szczupacka analyzes in her essay, “Foksal Gallery, Women and Labour of Love in the 1960s and 1970s.”**
Alicja Bielawska’s view of history is a peripheral view. The artist saw people, motifs, stories, traces, and invisible work, without which the gallery could not have operated. Artists, curators, and viewers, male and female, have spent time here, talked, created, forged and maintained contacts, experienced and created places. The focused gaze does not perceive this, for the focused gaze it is merely a vague and uninteresting backdrop. Warping the sharp edges and blurring the white cube, the artist has created a place to be together, to feel pleasure and safety.
Maria Rubersz
* Juhani Pallasmaa, The Eyes of the Skin (Hoboken: John Wiley & Sons, 2024), 6.
** Wiktoria Szczupacka, “Foksal Gallery, Women and Labour of Love in the 1960s and 1970s” in Revisiting Heritage, ed. Marika Kuźmicz (Warsaw: Academy of Fine Arts in Warsaw, 2019), 92–99 https://issuu.com/…/arton_book_revisiting_heritage_-_pd
The exhibition is accompanied by a catalogue.
In spring, the Narew floodplains sparkle in the sun. The river, visible from the windows of Teresa Starzec and Alicja Bielawska’s house in Podlasie, seems to expand to the horizon. The vast landscape is not static even for a moment: its light changes with the time of day, and its shapes and colors change with the seasons.
Joint exhibition of women artists at Jan Tarasin Art Gallery in Kalisz transfers the dynamics of the Narew landscape to the exhibition space. Already in the vestibule of the exhibition we will come across golden, metallic ribbons – a fragment of Alicja Bielawska’s installation, which introduces almost dance-like movement into the gallery. The objects – screens – placed by the artist in the main hall co-create the choreography of the exhibition – their semicircular structures create circles in space. Fabrics flowing freely over them react to subtle air movements caused by the movement of viewers. The light entering through the windows is filtered by translucent, layered materials, which means that the perception of the installation changes during the day.
Teresa Starzec’s drawings and paintings are also full of movement. Their vibrant, energetic colors flow into each other, creating colorful bridges between compositions. The forms of the paintings arise from drawings in sketchbooks. The artist makes them not from nature, but, as she says, from memory. She draws them in the studio, sweepingly, using the energy of her whole body and pressing the accumulated emotions and impressions from observing selected motifs into the paper. She creates drawings in series, in one or several days, until they fill the entire sketchbook and become almost abstract – the final ones, the least representative, seem to touch the essence of reality. Some of them later become the seeds of paintings whose composition grows organically – in those presented in Kalisz, the flower petals smoothly turned into a landscape, and the color spots gained a cosmic element.
In the exhibition space filled with movement, the artists encourage us to stop and practice attentiveness. Seats designed by Alicja Bielawska allow viewers to change their body positions. Upholstered in soft jacquard fabrics, the patterns of which were also inspired by the Narew floodplains, they allow one to immerse oneself in the moment and actively, carefully observe one’s surroundings. They make it easier to focus and notice details. To identify differences in the intensity of colors and light in Teresa Starzec’s paintings, which result from observing the same motifs in the changing light of the day and seasons. To appreciate the colors of fabrics hand-dyed by Alicja Bielawska using madder, onion peels, and spruce cones, which introduce color directly distilled from nature into the gallery space. A slower observation will also allow one to notice the light scattered in the gallery. This, penetrating through the abstract holes of Cutouts by Bielawska – a screen inspired by the paper works of her grandmother, Halina Bielawska – at certain times of the day creates a mosaic of sunbeams in the gallery space, similar to the sparkling glints from the Narew pools.
Attentiveness is studying, discovering, experiencing the world in a multi-sensory manner, collecting and cultivating impressions, and memory work. It is easy to forget about it in the everyday rush. By introducing dynamics into the gallery space inspired by the experience of the natural landscape, the artists encourage us to immerse ourselves in the variability of nature and show that both in motion and in stillness we can be its active, conscious observers.
Aleksandra Kędziorek
The exhibition is accompanied by a catalogue.
https://tarasin.pl/katalog-wystawy-alicji-bielawskiej-i-teresy-starzec-cwiczenia-z-uwaznosci/












Concept and exhibition design: CENTRALA (Małgorzata Kuciewicz, Simone De Iacobis)
Artist: Alicja Bielawska
Curator: Aleksandra Kędziorek
Visual identity: Anna Kulachek
Graphic design: Piotr Chuchla
Organised by The Adam Mickiewicz Institute
Goyki 3 Art Inkubator, Sopot, 2022
Phot. Daria Szczygieł / Goyki 3 Art Inkubator
There are lines that lead us through the exhibition. The lines of steps, lines on paper, lines of encountered glances, lines outlining space, and finally—the lines covering the drawings, which number nearly fifty in this edition of “Prototypes.” However, drawing is not only an auxiliary medium here or a sketch for further work. It is also a full-fledged work of art, set in dialogue with the sculptures of Keith Sonnier, Thei Djordjadze, Katarzyna Kobro, and Alicja Bielawska herself. Abstraction is the dominant form in the works presented. However, the abstraction here is poetic and open to a multitude of interpretations. Its language is universal, it gives every viewer the opportunity to interpret the work intuitively and filter it through their own experiences. It engages with the memory of the recipient and their personal connotations, allowing the construction of new networks of associations around the recognized shapes, textures, and colours. The objects and materials from which the sculptures were made were taken from the real world that surrounds us and act as links between the abstract work and the recipient. Bielawska’s exhibition is a space separate from everyday life, but at the same time related to it. It is a microcosm where we can experience the ideas, thoughts, and feelings of the artists in conditions conducive to contemplation.
Alicja Bielawska has established an artistic dialogue with artists who have been active over the last hundred years, showing the flow of concepts and themes that keep coming back in the works of artists regardless of what period of time they represented, what place and what conditions they created in. The concept of openness in these works means that the authors of the exhibition are not only the artists whose works we can see here. The exhibition invites the viewer to cocreate it with their presence. Our own bodies that move between these works of art are not only the receptors of the art, but they also interact with the art. Each visitor brings their own rhythm. The choreographic theme is strongly marked by Johanna Billing’s film “I’m Lost without Your Rhythm.” In this screening — as in the whole exhibition space — simple, everyday movements create dialogues both between people and with their surroundings. The spatiality of the sculptures creates a situation in which our gaze does not stop at the sculptures themselves, but penetrates them and reaches beyond them. The shapes are not defined forever; each step we make generates a new view and thus a new creation. There is not one preferred and final image — Bielawska offers us a multitude of equally important perspectives.
Artists: Alicja Bielawska, Johanna Billing, Thea Djordjadze, Emilia Małgorzata Dłużniewska, Simone Forti, Maria Jarema, Koji Kamoji, Katarzyna Kobro, Keith Sonnier, Kajetan Sosnowski, Henryk Stażewski, Franciszka Themerson, Stefan Themerson, Teresa Tyszkiewicz


Polish Pavilion, London Design Biennale , 2021
Concept and exhibition design: CENTRALA (Małgorzata Kuciewicz, Simone De Iacobis)
Curator: Aleksandra Kędziorek
Artworks: Alicja Bielawska
Visual identity: Anna Kulachek
Graphic design: Piotr Chuchla
Click here for the full exhibition catalogue.
Concept and exhibition design: CENTRALA (Małgorzata Kuciewicz, Simone De Iacobis)
Curator: Aleksandra Kędziorek
Artworks: Alicja Bielawska
Visual identity: Anna Kulachek
Graphic design: Piotr Chuchla
Photos: Michał Matejko
Click here for the full exhibition catalogue.
(Phot. Barbara Kubska. Photos courtesy BWA Contemporary Art Gallery in Katowice)
BWA Contemporary Art Gallery, 2020, Katowice
Curator Marta Lisok
Exhibited works by Alicja Bielawska:
Vessels, 2020, glazed earthenware, storage rack, 176,5 x 120 x 40,5 cm
Fragments, 2018, glazed earthenware, wood, plywood
Outlines, 2020, coloured pencil on paper, tracing paper, 42 x 29,7 cm
Balancing shapes, 2016, pencil, coloured pencil on paper, 29,5 x 42 cm
The joint exhibition of Teresa Starzec and Alicja Bielawska (privately, mother and daughter) is arranged into repeating motifs, whose exploration derives from an urge to describe the experience of the world. Each of the two artists works with her own techniques and a different visual vocabulary. However, what their works share is a remarkably sensual and sensitive way of using colours and constructing shapes—tools employed by both artists to direct our attention towards perceiving the world.
In the works of Starzec, recurring motifs reconstruct the outcomes of
a continued observation of landscape. In her recent series of large format oil paintings dating from 2019/2020, displayed in the exhibition,
the observation of nature turns into meditation. Mandorla shapes drawn from the landscape and from flora are superimposed, multiplied, and stretched out, leading the paintings to vibrate through their repeat arrangements. They become dynamic documentation of the energy fields permeating the world. On a visual level, these vibrations also derive from the changing colours, which introduce air, light, and depth into the pictures. These nearly three metre tall paintings were created in the artist’s studio by the Narew river, in the direct vicinity of nature, with a view of the meandering river’s valley on one side and sunsets peeking through tree trunks on another, and on yet another, a wild meadow covered in flowers: mulleins, blueweeds, evening primroses, yarrows, and St John’s wort. This proximity to nature has left its mark on the paintings, which convey a vibrating substantiality through the decisions drawn in broad lines, sharp like leaves of grass. Meanwhile, the layers of intertwining colours evoke air as well as a double image of the water’s depth and its reflection. Nature is celebrated through the multiplication of motifs and intensification of colours, all taken together.
A celebration of reality is also at the core of the works of Bielawska, whose sculptures and drawings form subtle relationships between objects, viewers, and space. The artist draws her inspiration from the everyday sphere, which she references through the use of textiles and ceramic shapes, set on steel or aluminium structures. In the new series of works, the artist’s attention oscillates around the form of a vessel. The ceramic vessels: tall, short, shallow, and deep, with uneven sides, are an attempt at capturing the essence of the object, which has remained unchanged in its simplicity for millennia. In her drawings and pottery pieces, the artist searches for lines that can encompass a small section of space. The lines wave, stretch, bend, and overlap. Colour is an inseparable element of her works, whether it contributes the solidity of primary colours or a richness of shades, with alluring nuance. In her drawings, colour either appears as a decisive line describing a shape, or, replicated through multiple strokes, becomes vibrating matter which tries to grasp onto a shape. In the ceramic objects, colour not only coats the outside surface, but also becomes the mass of the material. The artist doesn’t reproduce any specific objects; her search for the shapes of vessels is more of a process of discovering their remembered outlines. Some stages of creation also lead to moments when the vessels are split up into pieces. Fragmentation is etched into her process of searching for shapes.
Alicja Bielawska
(Phot. Alicja Bielawska)
Installation view, group exhibition Touch the Art, Center of Contemporary Art Ujazdowski Castle, Warsaw
Exhibited work:
The Wind Was Blowing and the Sea Breeze Brought Dreams Pouring In, 2019, steel, polyester ribbons, plywood, carpet, electric fan, tv screen
One can imagine that this is a pavilion standing on a red mountain with a yellow cloud waving above it. From the blue, turquoise, and green lines surrounding the pavilion, droplets of water run off and gather in a red ravine to form a small stream. Heat radiates from the yellow lines of the clouds moved by the wind. Each color has its own temperature.
This space is built by colors and shapes that are abstract in themselves, but together form a whole in the actual space and in our experience of space. Our memories and imagination create the site only for the brief moment when we visit it. It does not belong to the sphere of our physical everyday life, but is a place that can help us feel colors, space, and our own body.Through the texture and color of materials, we can enter new sensations or feel old ones. Materials and colors allow us to experience the scale and volume of both shapes and the air, and through them also our own presence. It is a sculpture/site where the physicality of materials and colors, thoughts and emotions, impressions and memories, movement, and the sense of our own physicality meet.
Alicja Bielawska