Showing 1 - 8 results of 8 for search '(marta OR maria) (ever* OR every*)', query time: 0.08s Refine Results
  1. 1

    Marta Czok URBE by Scarso, Jacek Ludwig, Ionescu, Georgiana, Czok, Marta

    Published 2024
    “…Alongside this polyptych, four works from 2011-2012 (Life of An Average Caesar, Once Upon a Time, What For and C'era una Volta) offer food for thought on Rome's imperial past, with a subtle ironic vein, for which the historical treasures of the past become the dust on which we walk now. In Marta Czok's vision, history is made up of continuous change, concealed by a collective imagination that sees a dimension of eternity in what is, however, ephemeral: like a Julius Caesar who symbolically appears and disappears from the scene, so the riches of the Roman Empire become ruins in a city in constant motion: a deliberately ambiguous comment on how every empire rises and crumbles, and with it its own ideological values.…”
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  2. 2

    Marta Czok ARCHĪVUM by Scarso, Jacek Ludwig, Czok, Marta

    Published 2024
    “…Marta Czok ARCHĪVUM, exhibition curated by Jacek Ludwig Scarso at Palazzo Mathis in Bra, Piedmont The works of Marta Czok have always intrigued the public in their ability to portray social scenes ranging from simple everyday life to the most complex global problems: migration, war and class struggles. …”
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  3. 3

    Marta Czok PERMANENT COLLECTION by Scarso, Jacek Ludwig

    Published 2021
    “…, and finally to the room titled People, which in fact could represent all the work of Marta Czok, since the artist, in her paintings, analyses the human dimension in all its facets, from everyday life to the key moments in history. …”
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    ‘Des nouvelles de mon infortunée sœur’: Marie-Antoinette dans les lettres de l’archiduchesse Marie-Christine à l’empereur François by Seth, C

    Published 2024
    “…Her letters, written with ever greater frequency at particularly critical moments, betray, alongside rare moments of optimism, a profound feeling of impotence, which was echoed by a kind of resignation from the Holy Roman emperor. …”
    Journal article