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World of Bricks. Subjective Realism of Ryszard Czernow

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Author: Piotr Zawojski CyberEmpathy ISSUE 9 Cyber Art
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CyberEmpathy - Visual and Media Studies Academic Journal ISSUE 9 2014/2015 Cyber Art ISSN 2299-906X Source of Image: http://news.o.pl/2013/03/14/ryszard-czernow-swiat-z-cegiel-rondo-sztuki-katowice/ryszard-czernow-2013-03-12/ Piotr Zawojski World of Bricks. Subjective Realism of Ryszard Czernow
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Page 1: World of Bricks. Subjective Realism of Ryszard Czernow

CyberEmpathy - Visual and Media Studies Academic Journal ISSUE 9 2014/2015 Cyber Art ISSN 2299-906X

Source of Image: http://news.o.pl/2013/03/14/ryszard-czernow-swiat-z-cegiel-rondo-sztuki-katowice/ryszard-czernow-2013-03-12/

Piotr Zawojski

World of Bricks. Subjective Realism of Ryszard Czernow

Page 2: World of Bricks. Subjective Realism of Ryszard Czernow

CyberEmpathy - Visual and Media Studies Academic Journal ISSUE 9 2014/2015 Cyber Art ISSN 2299-906X

Piotr Zawojski

World of Bricks. Subjective Realism of Ryszard Czernow

Abstract:

In this essay I present a remarkable series of works entitled World of Bricks by Ryszard

Czernow. But it is also a reflection on the strategies of creative artist who expresses himself

through the new medium of digital photography. This work should be treated as summa of

previous artistic accomplishments of Ryszard Czernow.

Assistant Professor at Department of Film & Media

Studies, The University of Silesia, Katowice. He also

work at Academy of Fine Arts in Cracow. His research

interest focus on the theory of photography, film and

cinema, new media, digital arts and cyberculture. He

is a chief of Film and Media section at polish cultural

quarterly Opcje. He is also an essayist, reviewer, film

and art critic. He is a member of International

Association for Aesthetics and International

Association of Art Critics (AICA).

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CyberEmpathy - Visual and Media Studies Academic Journal ISSUE 9 2014/2015 Cyber Art ISSN 2299-906X

It is an evidence of a mastery in digital techniques and at the same time the fullest

expression of a distinctive aesthetic that springs from the conscious use of new media

instruments. What is so difficult in art, especially in the art of new media – creating your own

recognizable style – here was certainly successful. Brick must arise associations with an

imaginary pixel. Photographic compositions that make up the World of bricks cycle are

beings formed from pixels. Picture of reality recorded with a digital camera is nothing but a

mosaic of pixels. This mosaic for this cycle is governed by the principle of reduction.

Working on digital images is also a moment of reflection on what digital images are in

general. Each "brick" is looking for its location in the "wall"; as a single copy it means a lot,

but only when tuned with other ones it starts to (multi)mean. I perceive Ryszard Czernow’s

works in this way: on the first level they are a poetic, well-conceived and consistently

elaborated story. Second level of artistic creation of the World of bricks seems to me to be

particularly attractive. It’s an artist's reflection on the possibilities of creation of the world by

the means of digital technology.

The issue of dating may seem to be a secondary element in an artistic activity, but it gives

food for thought. Portfolio, posted on official website1 of Ryszard Czernow, presents

subsequent photographic series, you can obviously realize the chronology, but intentional (?)

lack of dating makes you think. At the same time another parts naturally become fragments of

a larger whole – the whole that exists, as it were, beyond time and beyond chronology. It is,

moreover, an essential feature of each photograph – existence beyond time, even though each

image is a record of a particular moment ("time"). At least that was the case for the ontology

of traditional analogue photography. It is different, however, with digital one.

1http://www.cybergrafia.com.pl

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CyberEmpathy - Visual and Media Studies Academic Journal ISSUE 9 2014/2015 Cyber Art ISSN 2299-906X

What happens when a fixed fleeting moment (even if, when it comes to exposure, it was

not an instant as the twinkling of an eye) is converted in a long process of post-production

work? You would like to say: in a "photographic darkroom", except the fact that here we are

rather dealing with a photographic "lightroom", using an imperfect neologism. Strong light

from a monitor as a transitive space, in which a digital image is made present in the phase of

its processing, is just waiting for the finishing, and actually lives in a transitional phase, so to

speak, in the larval stage, from which it will transform into a butterfly. We touch here upon

important issues from the theory of digital photography. The question of the ontology of a

medium is one of the key issues relating to the essence of digital photography. Is the proper

domain of its becoming present (as a digital image) some form of a display monitor – then we

would have to deal only with the soft copy, the virtual image of immaterial nature that does

not exist as a spatial unity, because a pixel nature of such an image does not guarantee the

unity – or do we talk about digital photography also when, after digital treatment, an image

takes a form of hard copy: printout of an excellent quality, as is the case of Czernow’s artistic

practice?

Perhaps these questions should be here to stay, although from the point of view of

constitutive theory of digital photography they seem to be extremely interesting. For they

touch fundamental matters, subsequent to other problems concerning, for example, whether

this kind of media kit, which is the integral connection of a digital camera, a computer and

printer, is a new type of camera and, in the literal sense, a new medium of artistic creation.

Digital photography is different from traditional photography which is recording time, as it

makes use of time, similarly to what film medium does, which, using a metaphor of Andrey

Tarkowski, is “sculpting in time” or “creating time”2. In this purport, stopped time in

analogue photography is only the starting point for the process of creating photographic work

in digital one. Digital photography – to be more precise one should say: a digital photographer

2 See: Andrey Tarkovsky, Sculpting in Time. Reflection on the Cinema. University of the Texas Press. Austin

1986.

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CyberEmpathy - Visual and Media Studies Academic Journal ISSUE 9 2014/2015 Cyber Art ISSN 2299-906X

– therefore does to time what film did. In this sense Ryszard Czernow, after all a former

filmmaker, is doing today the same thing he did as a cinematographer and film director. The

artist, therefore, consistently uses various (audio)visual media in order to, by saving the

visible world, bring out what is apparent only at the moment (this is just a shorthand, because

in fact it is a long process) of artistic creation. This in turn may seem almost "invisible". And

that's exactly the point. This work is to be invisible, because it is not about the visualization of

technical and technological process after all, but its final effect in the form of the finished

piece.

However, speaking about the effect does not sound good, as usual, when using language to

describe the phenomenon of the image it seems to be vague, wavering, ambiguous, or vice

versa – too explicit. Images constantly elude language, defending their autonomy, not being

subject to a discursive processing. It isn’t about the effect here, let’s repeat that, but rather

about the total lack of effect, clarity of particular artist's works involves the arduous cleaning

them of any "frills", which does not mean that we will not find Barthes’s "punctum" in them. I

take this term in quotes, because I do not think about a classic punctum, positioned in some

portion of the composition (although such situations also occur in Czernow’s works), but

above all the punctum of the whole World of bricks cycle. After all it’s "a brick". The whole

world is built like an architectural construction – from bricks. All the more the world of

photographic, especially the universe which is arranged in cycle. Further elements of each

cycle are bricks underpinning the whole.

Each consecutive photograph reveals something that precedes and follows it. It's kind of

linear, however, also vertical film editing. Each brick is an autonomous being, even though it

forces you to think about what will happen next at the same time. You would like to say –

“Another Brick in the Wall”. Moreover, an association with a musical form of composition

seems quite in place here. Let’s recall also the practice of Ryszard Czernow as a pioneer of a

video clip in Poland or unforgettable portraits of Ryszard Riedel and Dżem from the cycle I

Page 6: World of Bricks. Subjective Realism of Ryszard Czernow

CyberEmpathy - Visual and Media Studies Academic Journal ISSUE 9 2014/2015 Cyber Art ISSN 2299-906X

met Him, which became timeless images of not only individuals, but also emblematic

representations of an era.

The concept of showing plain Polish People’s Republic reality actually had little to do with

the documentary function of photography. Indeed, this is a feature of the artist's entire oeuvre

– reproduction and documenting role of photography is not his domain. Creation of his own

world – or a strong need for a manifestation of an individual way of seeing – this is the

attitude characterizing Czernow’s aesthetic predilections. And at the same time, during the

period of exclusive use of digital instruments, the quest to (as he says) overthrow the myth

that "digital photography has to be a heavily processed image". Discrete interventions in the

material from the composition stage, so characteristic for an analog phase of his work, are

consistently implemented also at present, when the artist uses only digital equipment. Another

thing is that some of his early pieces approach in their poetics and stylistics the digital

composition, which only confirms the fact of the artist, as if were, waiting for "his" medium.

A stylistic homogeneity that expresses itself in something I will call the reduction principle,

is an excellent artistic signature of a conscious creator of both his workshop and what he

wants to convey (and show).

I’m looking at the Riedl’s portraits, but I see an era which I know from autopsy; I’m

looking at Jofa and Jan "Janou" Janowski’s portrait, and in front of my eyes I have that time –

dark and hopeless, and yet for me very important, formative. Except that they are not

documents in the strict sense, but rather a vision of the world in a subjective artist’s point of

view. I will only add that it is very close to me, which is probably influenced by the

generational connection.

Does sensitivity to music and a special kind of a photographic eye – which produces

world images that are precisely composed – have something in common? Probably yes,

although it is difficult to clarify. Music (taking place at the time) and photography (stopping

time) are kind of opposite worlds, but this "kind of" makes the difference. Time is a too

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CyberEmpathy - Visual and Media Studies Academic Journal ISSUE 9 2014/2015 Cyber Art ISSN 2299-906X

inscrutable phenomenon to be able to bring it down only to the formula: course versus stasis,

movement versus stoppage, dynamics versus statics. It seems that this particular proximity

may result from the creation, which is based on composing of space (in photography) and

time (in music).

Brick must arise associations with an imaginary pixel. Photographic compositions (perhaps

I intuitively follow here the Ryszard Horowitz’s definition which names an approach of an

artist who uses digital photographic medium as "photocomposer"3) that make up the World of

bricks cycle are beings formed from pixels. Picture of reality recorded with a digital camera is

nothing but a mosaic of pixels. This mosaic – metaphorically, but also literally understood as

a whole made up of tiny multicolored elements – is processed, its constituent elements (pixels

– bricks) are sometimes subjects to some far-reaching modifications. We are in a world

composed of pixels, but also in the world built of bricks. Silesian buildings photographed by

Ryszard Czernow are just a perfect starting material for further processing. Resulting in it

image may seem to only be a well- gripped and composed "photo" of a really existing space –

building made of bricks.

However, this is a place-no place, because in such form as pictured it is non-existent.

Sometimes interference with the saved (photo-graphed, let us remember the etymological root

of "writing with light") fragment of reality is greater, sometimes extremely discreet, though

the contribution of a photo-grapher (the one who "writes with light") does not always end up

on some, today already completely problematic, "decisive moment". Because that moment is

multiplied in post-production in a number of important choices related to aesthetic gestures:

saturation, color, tonality, cropping, contrast, color desaturation, perspective interferences,

dispatching colors, aspect ratio, noise reduction, etc. All these treatments are, however,

subordinated to something that I called the principle of reduction. It’s carving on an image

3 I wrote about the work of Ryszard Horowitz in another place. See: Piotr Zawojski, Barthes, Horowitz, aparat,

fotografia. In: Franciszek Chmielowski (ed.), Estetyka sensu largo. Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Jagiellońskiego. Kraków 1998.

Page 8: World of Bricks. Subjective Realism of Ryszard Czernow

CyberEmpathy - Visual and Media Studies Academic Journal ISSUE 9 2014/2015 Cyber Art ISSN 2299-906X

based on the philosophy of less is more. Isn’t it puzzling that this particular phrase (and

attitude) was close to Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, eulogist of the architectural and designer

minimalism? Van der Rohe also claimed that the devil is in the detail (although the English

version of this saying is "God is in the Detail"). A brick is a detail, not spontaneous of course,

but if not it’s reproducible and perfect form – cuboid ( this makes it different from a pixel as a

square, though approaching a voxel, i.e. spatial element), most commonly in an aspect ratio

1:2:4 (thickness-width-length) – building, by the means of it, an orderly world of architecture

would be impossible.

What is essentially a digital photo? Maybe it just does not exist? Digitally recorded image

(via phone, camcorder, camera, tablet) is an image of digital resource. A digital image (not

identical with a digital photo) is a dominant concept in a discourse about digital imaging, but

still vague, not clearly defined. Each digital photography is a digital image, but not every

digital image is a digital photography. When in the past4 I was looking for answers to the

question of what constitutes the essence of digital photography as a new medium, I looked for

its distinctiveness in the fact that a place where it is made present is a monitor/display.

Immaterial, in the ontological sense, pixel being seemed to me a natural place to make digital

images present, including digital photography.

Works of Ryszard Czernow make me modify (at least partially) those ideas. It also results

from the changes in the area of possible artistic applications of this medium. Image piece of

art can make itself present in various ways: on a monitor, display, but perhaps the most

appropriate form of its perception is a premium quality print, for example, on paper.

Paradoxically, it is only its "analog copy" which is the original. Analog output of an excellent

4 For example in the following essays: Piotr Zawojski, Cyfrowe obrazy fotograficzne – pomiędzy bytem

wirtualnym a rzeczywistym. In: Andrzej Gwóźdź, Sław Krzemień-Ojak (eds.), Intermedialność w kulturze końca XX wieku. Trans Humana. Białystok 1998; Piotr Zawojski, Fotografia cyfrowa. In: Maryla Hopfinger (ed.), Nowe media w komunikacji społecznej w XX wieku. Antologia. Oficyna Naukowa. Warszawa 2002; Piotr Zawojski, Daniel Lee, czyli hybrydyczność fotografii cyfrowej. Teoria i praktyka. “Rocznik Historii Sztuki” 2006, vol. XXXI; Piotr Zawojski, Paradoxes of Image in Digital Era. In: 12

th International Digital Competition. Częstochowa 2009.

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CyberEmpathy - Visual and Media Studies Academic Journal ISSUE 9 2014/2015 Cyber Art ISSN 2299-906X

quality reveals the full complexity of digital (post)production of the image. Once again, this

proves the inherent synergies of the analog and digital world.

Working on digital images is also a moment of reflection on what digital images are in

general. Each "brick" is looking for its location in the "wall"; as a single copy it means a lot,

but only when tuned with other ones it starts to (multi)mean5. I perceive Ryszard Czernow’s

works in this way: on the first level they are a poetic, well-conceived and consistently

elaborated story – narrative, but anti-plot, with an architecture made of bricks, typical for the

buildings in Silesia, post-industrial remains of Katowice’s mines, in which the artist began his

series, and other unusual places found through the course of wandering around Silesia and the

province of Opole. While fleeing from image calques and stereotypical Silesian landscape –

even as the notorious Nikiszowiec, visually exploited by dozens of photographers and

filmmakers.

This second level of artistic creation of the World of bricks seems to me to be particularly

attractive. It’s an artist's reflection on the possibilities of creation of the world by the means of

digital technology. For Czernow creates a new reality, but also cultivates a kind of "direct

theory". He is not only the creator of the digital images generated in the difficult process of

digital post-production, but an artist who is constantly looking for justification for his practice

in his reflection, even if these thoughts are not crowning touch to texts, manifestos or

discursive statements. It may sound quite risky, but in his works I see something like

inscriptions which is a question about the nature of the photographic – or rather post-

photographic – medium.

These questions of the nature of meta-reflection, are the easiest to express in the texts

accompanying your own artistic practice, but you can also, and this is definitely more

interesting, make it a component of your work. With Ryszard Czernow a metareflexive motif

5 In Polish term „ambiguity” is composed of words „multi” and „to mean”. Translation does not reflect perfectly

the pun on words used by the author.

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CyberEmpathy - Visual and Media Studies Academic Journal ISSUE 9 2014/2015 Cyber Art ISSN 2299-906X

appeared in 2001, when he proposed a new concept to determine his own works –

cybergraphy. The artist defines this term (in terms of cybernetics and Greek grapho,

meaning to write, draw) as a form of drawing with light. We have here a reference to both

the photo-graphy, or writing with light and cinemato-graphy, which is writing with

movement. I am skipping for the moment the subtle differences between writing and drawing

– let’s treat them synonymously. So, I think, this original term does not define the essence of

the artist's work very fortuantely, because today the prefix "cyber" refers primarily to the

place where images become present, which is cyberspace (virtual network of space, and there

the picture is only in a soft copy). Czernow, taking care of printing material with such

attention (after all "saving" work on an analog medium), goes from something that is "cyber"

(to simplify, living only in the virtual space of the computer), to something that has a value of

an old "analogue" – traditional image. These complicated relationships between the

generation of images and their final form seem to me to be particularly interesting. Because

sharp, oppositional setting of the analog world to the digital world has always seemed to me a

mistake, not only with respect to traditional and digital photography.

World of bricks finds the right expositional place not on a monitor/display or in network,

but in exquisitely printed, polished in every aspect, physical prints. Because they are simply

images. It is also a clear breakout of artificially created duality: analogue-digital. These are

digital images from the spirit (and matter) – demanding analogue presence. In addition to the

transition from analogue to digital (let’s remember about all forms of digitizing analogue

materials of the past) – we are witnessing today a more frequent move in the opposite

direction. From the "digit" we return to analogue order. Perhaps soon both of these orders will

go under such a radical convergence that we will not even bother with this anymore.

In the context of Gates to..., Light and stones and Di Tojern, Czernow’s previous cycles

and artistic projects seem to be "the gates into the" World of bricks. Gates as the mysterious

passages to another reality, in which we cease to apply well-known laws of physics (and

chemistry) of the image. These gates lead us to places unseen, invisible, dark, those that

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CyberEmpathy - Visual and Media Studies Academic Journal ISSUE 9 2014/2015 Cyber Art ISSN 2299-906X

trigger our imagination. Where, then, are these border places? Maybe in our imagination, in

the world of creation, and maybe where we want to get. I go into these spaces, walk inside,

and these pictures (cybergraphs) lead me there. It's the power of photographic gesture,

because I still think of these images as of photographs, but those that represent not what is,

but what can happen in our imagination, if only it is properly put in motion.

Gates hide secrets, even when they are open; by contrast when they are closed, they are

calling for opening, crossing to the other side and seeing what is behind them, where they

lead. Transgression theme is important, but perhaps more important is the moment of

remaining "in front of a gate" as in front of an image. Gates open to infinity, as those

compositions which in artist’s photomontage invention were found in the sea or on a snow-

covered field. This is a situation like from The Castle by Franz Kafka: we desire as the

protagonist K., to get inside (the Castle), but our efforts are doomed to failure. Although it

might sound trite, it is true that the way counts above all, though the point of arrival is also

important.

World of bricks should be treated as summa of previous artistic accomplishments of

Ryszard Czernow. It is an evidence of a mastery in digital techniques and at the same time the

fullest expression of a distinctive aesthetic that springs from the conscious use of new media

instruments. What is so difficult in art, especially in the art of new media – creating your own

recognizable style – here was certainly successful. Images from the discussed cycle are an

excellent proof that cybergraphic compositions growing out of the traditional approach to the

photographic medium, in fact exceed it, setting out the original world, which can also be

listed in the conventionally called postphotography context. The artist, using seemingly

simple means, reaches a very sophisticated aesthetic result. Here we encounter the absence of

digital photomontage or composite effects or informational and visual redundancy so

characteristic for many projects. Cybergraphies are black and white or almost black and

white, because in some cases, whilst increasing the saturation and desaturation of dark tones,

the artist leaves highly saturated dark brown colors. Digital retouching, as one of the basic

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CyberEmpathy - Visual and Media Studies Academic Journal ISSUE 9 2014/2015 Cyber Art ISSN 2299-906X

technical means, however, leads to the creation of monochrome images. All the signs of

present, such as satellite dishes, billboards, advertising, cars, neon signs or people, disappear.

"Cleaning" of the image is radical, this monochrome and clarity of the frame are used for a

specific, paradox purpose: on the one hand, the image retains a reference to the natural color

of photographed subjects, on the other hand, it makes us see these buildings differently, as if

they had been taken out of the order of reality – as almost surreal, even though they still

belong to the order of a specific, Silesian reality.

And so we come to the conclusion that as any original work of art, a series of World of

bricks is an autonomous universe, rooted in reality, but drawing on its essential elements to

create a parallel universe. The longer I look at the images of the brick architecture, the more I

pull away from a concrete presentation, and I think somehow "above" or "outside" these

images. I know that this is not just my subjective accidental impression. The artist consciously

strives for such situation using all available means of artistic creation. Creation that is

understood ambiguously – as the process of creating the piece of art, but also as creating a

unique and hitherto unseen world. Unseen in the manner presented in these works. It is not a

world created ex nihilo, as a material source of reference is a brick as a building material and

a pixel as its immaterial representation. The artist himself gives it the aptly point: "Digital

images have become (...) a visual representation of a new, non-existent world"6.

Let’s add only that this physically non-existent world was constituted in the creator’s

imaginary, and he has shared it with us – the recipients of his works. It has therefore become

real as anything else that the artists create by the power of their imagination.

6 This quote comes from an unpublished habilitation thesis of Ryszard Czernow: Cybergrafia – rygor

warsztatowy, kryterium twórcze. Aneks do projektu artystycznego “Świat z cegieł”. Text in the author’s possession.

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CyberEmpathy - Visual and Media Studies Academic Journal ISSUE 9 2014/2015 Cyber Art ISSN 2299-906X

World of Bricks. Subjective Realism of Ryszard Czernow/ P. Zawojski. CyberEmpathy: Visual

Communication and New Media in Art, Science, Humanities, Design and Technology. ISSUE

9 2014/2015. Cyber Art.

ISSN 2299-906X. Kokazone Marika Wato.

Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web: www.cyberempathy.com


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