Roman Cieślewicz  

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Roman Cieślewicz (born 1930 13 January in Lwów Poland now Lviv Ukraine as Roman Cieślewicz - died 1996 21 January in Paris, France) was a Polish (naturalized French) graphic artist and photographer.

He studied at Cracow Academy of Fine Arts from 1949 to 1954. He was artistic editor of "Ty i Ja" monthly (Warsaw) 1959-1962 . In 1963 he moved to France and naturalized in 1971. He worked as art director of Vogue, Elle (1965-1969) and Mafia - advertising agency (1969-1972) and was artistic creator of Opus International (1967-1969). Kitsch (1970-1971) and Cnac-archives (1971-11974). Taught at the Ecole Superieure d'Arts Graphiques (ESAG) in Paris. In 1976 he produced his "reviev of panic information" - "Kamikaze"/No. 1/ published by Christian Bourgois. In 1991 he produced "Kamikaze 2" with Agnes B. He took part in numerous group exhibitions of graphic, poster and photographic art and was a member of AGI International Graphic Association.

Contents

Timeline

Major awards

  • 1964 - Grand Prix, International Exhibition of Film Posters in Karlove Vary (Czech Republic)
  • 1964 - Gold Medal, 1st Biennial of Industrial Forms in Ljubljana (Yugoslavia)
  • 1972 - Gold Medal, 4th International Biennial of Posters in Warsaw (Poland)
  • 1979 - Grand Prix for posters in Paris (France)
  • 1984 - Bronze Medal, International Biennial of Posters
  • 1990 - Grand Prix of "Art Graphique" (France)
  • 1991 - Excellence Prize at Biennial of Graphic in Zagreb (Yugoslavia)
  • 1992 - President Price, Biennial of Applied Graphic in Brno (Slovakia)
  • 1993 – Second price, Poster Biennale Lahti (Finland)

Exhibitions

  • 1972 - Musee des Arts Decoratifs, Paris France
  • 1973 - Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam Holland
  • 1974 - Muzeum Plakatu, Warsaw Poland
  • 1978 - Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam Holland
  • 1981 - Muzeum Narodowe, Poznan Poland
  • 1984 - Kunsthalle, Darmstadt Germany
  • 1986 - Galeria BWA, Łódź Poland
  • 1987 - Galerie de Pret, Angres France
  • 1993 - The Polish Museum of America, Chicago USA
  • 1993 - Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris France
  • 1994 - Narodowa Galeria Sztuki Wspolczesnej Zacheta, Warsaw Poland
  • 1998 - Muzeum Plakatu, Warsaw Poland


See also




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Roman Cieślewicz" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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