DENVER, CO.- The Denver Art Museum invites visitors to explore how Polish poster artists captured the essence of the American West through their conceptual works of art in Rebranded: Polish Film Posters for the American Western. On view February 16 through June 1, 2014, Rebranded presents movie posters created during Polands communist-era that remain virtually unknown to the American public.
Drawn entirely from the Autry National Center of the American West, Rebranded features 28 original posters by some of the most recognizable Polish artists, including Jerzy Filsak, Wiktor Górka and Waldemar Świerzy that reflect the experimental spirit of the famed Polish Poster School.
For more than three decades, the Polish graphic film poster was one of the country's highest art forms, said Darrin Alfred, associate curator of architecture, design and graphics at the DAM. The poster became a source of great national pride in Poland and its role in the cultural life of the nation is unique. These works were one of the few forms of individual artistic expression in the nation under Communism.
In Rebranded, Polish artists interpret such Hollywood classics as El Dorado, The Missouri Breaks, Shane, The Misfits, Tom Horn and Oklahoma! In the United States, the marketing of these films was studio-driven, often overtly glamorous and centered on images of the movies stars. Polish artists unveiled a new arsenal of interpretations, from coded political meaning through visual metaphor to the subversion of iconic Western imagery.
A notable example is Jerzy Jaworowskis poster Skłoceni z życiem for the 1961 film The Misfits, starring Clark Gable and Marilyn Monroe. Jaworowski produced an unsettling and expressive image of a horsean animal of extraordinary importance in Western legends and a beloved symbol of freedom. With this lone creature Jaworowski depicts a memorable scene from the film in which a round up for wild mustangs takes place.
Universally recognized symbols of the Westernhorse, six-shooter, the cowboy, Stetson, saddlewere used to convey violence as a negative force, Alfred said. Unlike many other art forms, Polish film posters did not fall within the censor's domain because they were not expected to pose a threat. Polish graphic artists had greater opportunity for self-expression, created more personal images and pioneered individual styles and techniques.
With expressive impact these posters would catch the eye, offering a concise and often ingenious summary of each film. Witold Janowskis poster for the musical Oklahoma! depicts a faceless cowboy wearing a large hat and holding a guitar. The initial O in the title Oklahoma forms a singing mouth and lips. The films credits act as guitar strings. The image is an excellent graphic representation of the nature of the film. Like paintings, these works served as outlets for individual artistic expression.
Throughout Rebranded, visitors will recognize the names of some of Hollywoods legendary heroes, such as John Wayne, Henry Fonda, Clint Eastwood and Kirk Douglas. In the poster for the film El Dorado, Jerzy Filsak graphically portrays Sheriff J. P. Harrah, a once respected but now drunken lawman played by Robert Mitchum, as an oversized cowboy wearing a hat that is crowned with a bottle of whiskey and cradling a crutch as it were a rifle.
Rebranded is located in the Gates Family Gallery of Western Art and included in general museum admission.