Maciej Cieśla | |
Birth Place: | Szczecin, Poland |
Alma Mater: | Wrocław Academy of Fine Arts |
Occupation: | Painter |
Maciej Cieśla (born 1988) is a Polish contemporary painter working under nickname "Mecesla".[1]
Graduate of the Academy of Art in Wrocław with MA degree in painting and sculpture, under the supervision of Piotr Błażejewski. Earlier he attended classes given by Piotr Skłodowski, who is a watercolor painter and architect from Szczecin. Between 2013 and 2016 Maciej worked out his characteristic style, which comprises modern expressionism, neo-fauvism, symbolism and abstraction. His eyesight is impaired due to the Stargardt’s disease (inherited macular degeneration).[2]
His work oscillates between modern expressionism, abstraction, as well as inspirations taken from nature, folklore and social subjects.[3] In his paintings, a woman appears very often as a symbol-form, he refers to archetypes and symbolism in general.[4] The world created in his works contains characters borrowed from Polish folklore and fantasy, such as fauns, water nymphs or devilss of the forest. He often touches upon the subject of the form of nature itself, especially in more abstract works, for instance in the series "Mountain Creek". He also refers to city life, as illustrated by the series of paintings "After alcohol", where he depicts night lifewith a grain of irony. The artist’s first major opening was the vernissage entitled "Satan, woman and apocalypse" in Edyta Stein’s House in Wrocław in 2015.[5] Since 2017 more than a dozen of his paintings can be found in Dresden, in the Abstrakte Momente gallery.[6] He also cooperates with the French gallery Singulart.[7]