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MUZEUM SUSCH

Sur Punt 78, Susch 7542 Switzerland

Tapta: Flexible Forms

Tentoonstelling

Tapta: Flexible Forms is the first large-scale retrospective dedicated to the Polish-Belgian artist Tapta (1926–1997) outside of Belgium, the country to which she fled in 1945 and where she developed her artistic career from the 1960s onwards. Exhibition curated by Liesbeth Decan.

About the exhibition

The title of the exhibition, Flexible Forms, refers to the central concept of her oeuvre: the creation of sculptures that through their flexible forms interact with the exhibition space and with the viewer. The exhibition’s ambition reflects Muzeum Susch’s founding mission to promote the work of international avant-garde women artists who have been overlooked or misread and have thus not been equally aligned and lauded with their male counterparts across art institutions all over the world.

Tapta (the pseudonym of Maria Wierusz-Kowalska, born Maria Irena Boyé) was born in Poland in 1926 and came to Belgium as a political refugee with her husband, Krzysztof, after taking part in the Warsaw Uprising of 1944. She studied weaving at the La Cambre National School of Visual Arts, Brussels, from where she graduated in 1949. Shortly afterwards, the couple moved to the Belgian Congo (now Democratic Republic of the Congo), where they lived from 1950 to 1960. On their return to Belgium in 1960, until her sudden death in 1997, she worked in Brussels as an artist and – from 1976 until 1990 – as a professor at La Cambre.

Installed in a loosely chronological order, the exhibition will give an overview of Tapta’s oeuvre, which is mainly divided into two ‘periods’: the textile works made in the 1960s until the early 1980s and the works in neoprene from the 1980s to 1990s.

The exhibition first focuses on Tapta’s textile works, in which she steadily distanced herself from traditional weaving by applying experimental techniques such as twisting her woven pieces and, in particular, through the use of ropes, which she knotted and joined together into organic volumes. Her work protruded outwards from the wall, became more three-dimensional and increasingly interacted with the space and the viewer, who was invited to experience the works not only visually but also in a tactile and physical manner, stepping around and even inside them.

Next to a wide selection of art works, two rooms of the exhibition will be dedicated to scale models, by means of which Tapta invented both her textile and her neoprene sculptures. These models, which are miniature versions of the final monumental works or trial versions of sculptures that were never executed, reflect Tapta’s way of working: totally lead by the material – its texture, weight, flexibility, and touch – she sculpted the pieces of textile or neoprene into shapes that foreshadow how, in the eventual installations, she would lead, or weave, the visitors through the space, in and around her works, allowing them to experience the environment differently.

Some of the archival documents that will be shown next to the scale models, feature Tapta as a professor at the La Cambre National School of Visual Arts in Brussels. From 1976 to 1990, she led the textile workshop there, renaming it Flexible Sculpture. This commitment as a teacher was as important to her as her artistic practice. Rather than instructing her students in a particular technique, she prioritised the development of an open and critical mind. Her students included Ann Veronica Janssens, Monica Droste and Marie-Jo Lafontaine.

About Tapta

Tapta (pseudonym of Maria Wierusz-Kowalska, born Maria Irena Boyé) was born in Poland in 1926 and came to Belgium as a political refugee with her husband, Krzysztof Wierusz-Kowalski, after taking part in the Warsaw Uprising of 1944. She studied weaving at the La Cambre National School of Visual Arts, Brussels, from where she graduated in 1949. Shortly afterwards, the couple moved to the Belgian Congo (now the Democratic Republic of Congo), where they lived from 1950 to 1960. After returning to Belgium, Tapta swiftly established herself as an important member of a new generation of artists who sought to redefine sculpture by using textiles and other flexible materials as sculptural elements. In doing so, she simultaneously took textile art beyond the categories of the decorative arts and crafts. She had her first solo exhibition in 1966 at the Galerie Les Métiers in Brussels, after which her work was shown in major exhibitions in Belgium and abroad, including at the 4th International Biennale of Tapestry in 1969 in Lausanne. This exhibition, in which her work was displayed alongside those of Magdalena Abakanowicz, Jagoda Buić, Elsi Giauque and Sheila Hicks, encouraged her to continue along the path of unconventional experimentation with textiles.In the 1980s she quite radically changed her materials from woven textiles and cords to neoprene. With this industrially produced rubber she created large black installations that, however, still represent her idea of ‘flexible sculpture’. Tapta died unexpectedly in 1997, just as her native Poland was discovering her work at a major solo exhibition at the Zachęta National Gallery of Art in Warsaw, and her monumental sculpture Esprit Ouvert near Brussels North Station had just been inaugurated.

Curator Liesbeth Decan

The exhibition is curated by Liesbeth Decan, who is a lecturer at LUCA School of Arts Brussels. Her research is focused on the work of Belgian avant-garde artists from the 1960s till the 1990s. In 2023, she organised the exhibition Tapta: Espaces souples – With Greet Billet, Hana Miletić and Richard Venlet at WIELS, Brussels, where Tapta’s sculptures were placed in dialogue with works from three contemporary artists specifically made for the exhibition. 

Liesbeth Decan teaches history of photography and art at LUCA School of Arts Brussels. She holds a PhD in art history from Leuven University. Her research concentrates on the work of Belgian avant-garde artists from the 1960s to the 1990s, with a special focus on their photographic work. Her most comprehensive publication on that topic is “Conceptual, Surrealist, Pictorial: Photo-based Art in Belgium (1960s–early 1990s),” which was published within the Lieven Gevaert Series of Leuven University Press (2016). On the same topic, she curated the exhibition “From Broodthaers to Braeckman: Photography in the Visual Arts in Belgium” at M HKA, Antwerp (2017). With Mieke Bleyen she co-edited the book “Photography Performing Humor (Leuven University Press, 2019). In 2023, she was the curator of the exhibition "Tapta: Espaces Souples – With Greet Billet, Hana Miletić and Richard Venlet” at WIELS, Brussels, and was the editor of the book with the same title (Mousse Publishing, 2024). She is a senior staff member of the Lieven Gevaert Research Centre for Photography, Art and Visual Culture (KU Leuven/UCLouvain) and a member of the Committee of AICA Belgium.

See also

Dit project werd gerealiseerd met breakout.steun van LUCA School of Arts. LUCA steunt studenten, onderzoekers, docenten en medewerkers die LUCA School of Arts via allerlei initiatieven zichtbaar willen maken in de buitenwereld en bundelt daarvoor middelen. Een centraal budget verleent op laagdrempelige wijze ondersteuning aan welomschreven initiatieven.