Hubert Czerepok, Abraham Ostrzega
Hubert Czerepok, Abraham Ostrzega, 2016
installation, neon, aluminium, 105 × 965 × 40 cm
Collection II of the Arsenal Gallery in Białystok. Work donated to the Arsenal Gallery by the artist in 2019
In pre-war Warsaw, Ostrzega ran the Atelier of Decorative Art. He expressed himself mainly in funereal sculpture, producing tombstones commissioned by the Jewish community. He had received a traditional education, but did not shy away from modernist elements. Contrary to the principles of Hebrew orthodoxy, he introduced figural motifs, such as angels of death or women mourners, into his tombstones. He concealed faces at the back of matzevah tombstones and explored the issue of figural expression. The Jews’ reaction to his tombstones was iconoclastic: they were destroyed or it was demanded that he re-sculpt their parts. Ostrzega, who belonged to the Jewish Society for the Promotion of Fine Arts, was in dispute with the qahal.
Hubert Czerepok’s work is characterised by a simple composition: it is the sculptor’s name and surname in capital letters inscribed into a spindle-like shape of the eye, which has been fitted into the tympanum crowning the façade of the Zachęta building. In this manner, Czerepok refers to Abraham Ostrzega personally, since the Jewish sculptor had been a member of the Society for the Encouragement of Fine Arts (i.e. Zachęta) from 1925 and had exhibited his works in its salons from as early as 1910. Yet at the same time Czerepok plays on the ambiguity of the sculptor’s name. In Polish, the word ostrzega is the third person singular form of the infinitive ostrzegać, meaning “to warn”; thus, ABRAHAM OSTRZEGA means, literally, “Abraham issues a warning”. Also, it is impossible not to associate the artist’s first name with the biblical patriarch Abraham, who is considered a prophet in Islam; and the shape of Czerepok’s neon evokes the “eye of the Prophet”, a popular apotropaic amulet. The Jewish sculptor’s biography indicates what exactly “Abraham issues a warning” against: the resultant associations inevitably lead us towards racial, national and religious hatred.