top of page

The Gift / Das Gift

Julia Bachur, Kama Kicińska, Zuzanna Mazurek,

Julia Szczerbowska, Amelia Woroszył

April 12 – June 6, 2026

In Old Germanic, the root *geban / *giftiz meant "what was given," "gift," or "something given." However, over the centuries, due to semantic drift and the language's evolution toward euphemism, the word "Gift" underwent a transformation. The common root retains a positive connotation in English to this day. In German, meanwhile, after years of use as a euphemism for lethal potions, it narrowed its scope to "lethal dose" and now refers to poison.

 

A gift can be both a source of joy and a mechanism of dependence. A "pure" gift seems difficult to imagine in a world where every such gesture carries with it the expectation of reciprocity, gratitude, or symbolic return. Gratitude automatically creates obligation and immediately entangles one in the economy of exchange. Perhaps the most radical gift, understood as self-giving, can be governed by the same principles, creating a responsibility bearing the hallmarks of sacrifice. Desire and the sacrifice that follows it can hardly be considered a selfless gesture.

 

Desire can confront us with both fantasy and lack; it need not be directed at another person, but at an object, an idea, or an absolute. It even leads toward truth and goodness, provided it is properly transformed and purified. This belief is based on the belief that relinquishing the ego can open the possibility of happiness in surrendering to that which transcends the individual, in an act of love without appropriation.

 

The work of the artists presented in the exhibition does not form a uniform narrative; rather, it intertwines, revealing successive aspects of desire and sacrifice. Their works guide the viewer through successive tensions, from the primal impulse, through the gesture of giving to others and its ambivalence, to the moment of purification, sublimation, and deconstruction of the idea itself.

 

Kama Kicińska examines the structure of desire as a multi-layered phenomenon, rooted in the body, history, and power relations. She seeks to capture its tension, its fragmentation, and its temporality. This drive appears here as a primal, wild, and even deceptive force that can simultaneously build bonds and lead to a loss of subjectivity.

 

Similarly, balancing on the edge of care and sacrifice, of dedication to others, becomes risky, a key motif in Zuzanna Mazurek's oil paintings. The painter emphasizes the entanglements that flow from giving to others and points out that the most important difference between these two approaches is choice, not dictated by an oppressive sense of duty or the perception of women as the titular "gift" always available.

 

Julia Szczerbowska and Julia Bachur look from the perspective of "after," sublimation, and purification. Bachur's practice, rooted in the theory of the abject, visualizes the trace that desire leaves on matter without erotic literalism.

The transference, surrender, loss, and dissolution of the self are processed here. Her delicate, soft objects reveal that what is repulsive can simultaneously be attractive, and beauty can arise from discomfort.

 

Szczerbowska conceptualizes purification as a silent, almost imperceptible experience, unfolding through traces of the fire's disruption of matter. A bright palette, light, and repetitive motifs create an atmosphere of apparent calm, in which tension is shifted inward. Her works are closer to a gesture of withdrawal than transcendence, proposing a form of transformation achieved through attention and silence.

 

Amelia Woroszył ultimately reverses the logic of desire and gaze toward the image itself, proposing enigmatic representations that are the opposite of "obscenity," understood as an absolute lack of mystery. The titular "poison" lies in what the image offers the viewer: an impulse for interpretation that proves uncertain.

 

The Gift / Das Gift is an exhibition about the impulse and tension inherent in human relationships; about how what is given always resonates beyond. It asks whether a gift can ever exist outside the structures that inevitably return it to us.

 

 

Curator: Marianna Łomża

 

 

 

Julia Bachur (born 2003) creates works on canvas and spatial forms. In her artistic practice, she experiments with matter, employing a variety of materials and unique techniques in the creative process. She graduated with a BA in Photography from the Magdalena Abakanowicz University of Arts in Poznań and is currently pursuing a MA.

 

Kama Kicińska (born 1975) creates sculptural objects and photography. Her practice explores unconscious social, cultural, and material relationships, drawing on psychoanalytic theories. She is interested in the phenomenon of emotional "occupation" of matter and the experience of lack of control and helplessness. She works with, among other things, broken glass from the waste products of jewelry production, treating it as a symbol of excess and luxury. Her photographs oscillate between dreamlike and realist, and in her most recent projects, she examines the process of identity formation.

 

Zuzanna Mazurek (born 2001) works in painting, drawing, and embroidery. In her artistic practice, she constructs her own world from shimmering, flesh-colored matter that imitates organic forms. She focuses on the fluid nature of existence and the relationship between humans and nature, emphasizing their complexity and duality. She is currently a fourth-year student at the Academy of Fine Arts in Warsaw.

 

Julia Szczerbowska (born 1999) creates paintings and objects. Through her work, she constructs a personal narrative about the condition of contemporary humanity in the face of climate catastrophe. She also frequently draws on personal themes and employs extensive symbolism. She graduated from the Academy of Fine Arts in Krakow, where she earned her Master's degree in 2023. She is currently studying painting at the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna. From 2020 to 2022, she co-founded and co-ran the Facjata gallery in Krakow.

 

Amelia Woroszył (born 2001) creates paintings and spatial objects. In her artistic practice, she focuses on the poetics of dream and memory, interested in states in which contexts and places intertwine and blur, preventing a clear understanding of reality. Her works feature scenes employing everyday objects and materials, which she develops through repetition and personal symbolism. She graduated from the Academy of Fine Arts in Warsaw and is currently pursuing her master's degree at Konstfack in Stockholm.

bottom of page