Apostasia: Rituals of Letting Go

The group exhibition presents works in different media by emerging artists from Czech Republic, Poland and Germany that refer to folk and indigenous traditions, beliefs and crafts, magical thinking and animism, using the language of poetry, speculative theories and storytelling. Using these various approaches and narratives the artists explore topics related to letting go, unlearning, loss or mourning in the context of the individual and collective traumas. The artists presented at the exhibition look for ways out and a sense of relief by reclaiming agency through everyday, imagined and forgotten rituals and exploring the visuality, symbolism and cultural codes of various ceremonies. Thus, the exhibition space evokes a place of an abandoned ritual or a cult’s temple to unidentified goddesses, giving strength and awareness in dealing with reality.


The title Apostasia is a genus of orchid species and could also be associated with apostasy - an act of leaving the Catholic Church. This bureaucratic process has a political and symbolic dimension, especially in the Polish context, where this institution has exceptional strength and power. Apostasy is one of the examples of a resignation strategy, an exit, where a personal decision is a liberating act of resistance against institutional violence. The exhibition also evokes other areas and contexts within which the artists undertake letting go, or the stories related to experiencing loss.

One of the ways to deal with oppressive structures and look for alternatives is to turn towards unorthodox knowledge systems, such as astrology, conspiracy theories, or folk beliefs. For centuries people without any power seeking for agency have been using these tools for translating reality and enchanting it. Another way to deal with oppression is the need to connect with nature, which is a response to technological exhaustion, exploitation and multidimensional crisis. These trends became more visible by the pandemic, which has accelerated already existing inequalities and populism, leaving masses of people with an even more acute sense of helplessness and hopelessness. In this context, reaching for rituals and magical thinking can be a recipe for uncertain times.

The exhibition is a result of curatorial residency undertaken by Tomek Pawłowski-Jarmołąjew hosted by two months in summer 2021 in Garage Gallery residential program.

související s
Apostasia: Rituals of Letting Go

0:05:24

Prey Spray Scene Mean

Nejen, že jsme s těly (sloupy, figurami, černými tvory) konfrontování jako s vnějškem, který se nabízí naší smyslové zkušenosti. Jak u Kryštofa, tak u Anetty a Aleksandry je zároveň v jejich objektech přítomný nárok na to, abychom se s „jejich“ těly seznámili zevnitř. To je už trochu komplikovanější představa a je to zároveň moment, v němž se jejich práce snad nejlépe potkávají a zároveň docela zásadně rozchází.
0:06:00

Ex Urbi

Nejznámější je Benešův dlouhodobý cyklus fotografií z pražského metra, kde jsou námětem především architektonické detaily podzemky a kompozice světla, jeho průniky a „animace“ ve vyprázdněném prostoru.

To please, to curse, to foretell: A fire crawling out from the windows of a tower

As we find ourselves in times that have extensive socio-political implications, the exhibition thematizes the insecurity, the suspicion and post-factuality gradually digging into our lives more and more. The many ambivalent mechanisms trough which we cope with this uncertainty and multiplicity of artistic processes (either politically-critical, or completely non-factual and sensual, scientific or even speculative) of the abandonment of what is considered “real” or “rational” take their forms in the interconnected realms of the technological, the natural, the mystical, the symbolical.

The wolf, the princess and the little soldier