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Warsaw’s fast-growing art scene has exploded in recent years with various independent galleries and art spaces opening, dedicated to promoting Polish artists on the global art scene. A must-see event is the annual Warsaw Gallery Weekend. It offers a rich program of exhibitions and cultural encounters. Read on to discover the top 10 contemporary art galleries in Warsaw.

Galeria Grafiki i Plakatu / Graphic Art and Poster Gallery

School, Museum

800px-POL_Warsaw_Muzeum_Plakatu
© Hubert Śmietanka / WikiCommons
Founded in 1976, Galeria Grafiki i Plakatu was created with the objective of promoting the creative pursuits of Poland’s most talented graphic artists. Since then, it has become one of Poland’s best-stocked galleries showcasing the heritage of the Polish Poster School. Over the years, and through tumultuous political change, it has exhibited a wide range of work, from politically charged posters to more conceptual, abstract graphic work. Some of the most prominent artists featured have included Franciszek Starowieyski, Jan Tarasin, Rosław Szaybo and Jan Lenica. In addition to showcasing individual artists, the gallery also organizes thematic, collective exhibitions.

Galeria Program

Art Gallery

Galeria Program was founded in collaboration with the Foundation for Promoting Contemporary Art and serves as its exhibition space. With goals like supporting culturally relevant projects and initiatives, promoting young artists and new artistic developments as well as widening access to contemporary art, Galeria Program has had its hands full with over 80 exhibitions. It welcomes all forms of artistic dialogue, including fine art, film, performance and encourages social impact projects. In addition to organizing collective and individual exhibitions, Galeria Program also takes part in international art fairs, such as Preview Berlin and Volta. As of now, it represents ten intriguing young artists, including Dorota Kozieradzka, Michał Szuszkiewicz and Monika Misztal.

lokal_30

Art Gallery

Before moving to a large exhibition space in central Warsaw in 2013, lokal_30 was based in a small Warsaw apartment (number 30) for seven years and so gained its name. Although most kinds of artistic projects are welcome here, including but not limited to performances, discussions and social actions, lokal_30 is particularly interested in promoting contemporary video art and installations. Innovative and eclectic, lokal_30 has exhibited works by Zuzanna Janin, Ewa Juszkiewicz, Maciej Kurak and many others. Between 2009 and 2011, the gallery also opened a temporary space in London as part of the lokal_30_warszawa_london project to acquaint the British public with artists from Poland and Central Europe. A similar project is planned to open soon in a different location.

Galeria aTAK

Art Gallery

Electrifying, stimulating, compelling. Galeria aTak picks its artists well. The works hung on the pristine white walls often provide a stark contrast to the gallery’s modest décor. Some of the most recent exhibitions have questioned the status of painting in the modern world, analysed the aesthetics of war and examined the relation between centre and periphery. Owned by the Polish Modern Art Foundation, it was launched in 2007 with a view to showcasing contemporary Polish talent. English-speaking visitors might be interested in the gallery’s publications and catalogues, many of which are available in English.

Galeria m2

Art Gallery

Young artists take center stage at the m2 (m squared) gallery, home to both talented students and established young professionals. This ethos translates onto m2’s other activities. It seeks to represent emerging Polish art not only nationally, but also on an international level by cooperating with galleries abroad. Some of Poland’s most promising young artists such as Róża Litwa or Michał Frydrych made their debut there. With an intense and varied schedule, Galeria m2 exhibits exciting new work every couple of months.

Galeria Foksal

Art Gallery

Foksal’s location, tucked away in an annexe to the Zamoyski Castle, is the only thing about the gallery that blends into the background. Since its launch in 1966, it has been the place to see and exhibit contemporary art in Warsaw. The child of art critics and artists alike, Foksal encourages radical modernity in art and pure creative freedom. As such, it has represented a number of revolutionary Polish artists, including Henryk Stażewski, Stanisław Dróżdż and Edward Krasiński. Importantly, artists, not managers, have always run the gallery. Their philosophy, embodied by Foksal’s exhibitions, is to offer artists a space to exercise their creativity free from the bounds of the art market’s commercial demands. Perhaps that’s what has made Foksal so important to Poland’s art scene.

Królikarnia

Museum, Park

Królikarnia Palace
© Marcin Białek/WikiCommons
Królikarnia’s beautiful setting is worth visiting for its own sake. The ‘Rabbit House’, built in the 18th century, is a neoclassical villa, which endured an all-consuming fire in 1879 and was largely bombarded during the Second World War. Nowadays, it acts as a space for cultural exchange and is home to numerous sculptures by Xawery Dunikowski. Królikarnia also hosts high-calibre exhibitions by world-class sculptors. Film screenings, workshops and lectures are all part of the gallery’s cultural offerings. While you’re there, take a stroll around the park that surrounds the gallery. In between the trees and shrubs, you’ll find a selection of wonderful sculptures from the National Museum in Warsaw.

Galeria Raster

Art Gallery

Founded by two art critics as a common project over 10 years ago, Raster has evolved into the place to be for young talent. Nowadays, it is one of the most renowned private galleries in Poland. It has achieved global recognition by participating in art fairs, partnering with artistic organisations abroad and displaying exceptional artists, both Polish and international. Raster is constantly on the lookout for creative solutions to the institutionalized art market and hopes to achieve just that through international exchange, experiment and social impact projects.Importantly, Raster is not afraid of controversy: among others, it represents Zbigniew Libera, creator of the much-contested Lego. Concentration Camp installation.

Ujazdowski Castle Centre for Contemporary Art

Art Gallery

Building of Center for Contemporary Art in Warsaw city.
© Fotokon/Shutterstock
Located in a 16th-century Baroque castle in the centre of Warsaw, CSW (Center for Contemporary Art) has a clear mission, to explore interdisciplinary approaches in art and push the definition of what it is to be a cultural institution. Their aim is to become a place where research, experiment, discussion and learning are made possible alongside current exhibitions. CSW’s diverse program and compelling space also mean that installations, concerts, video art shows and performances complement visual arts projects. Dedicated to free, radical talent, the gallery hosts a permanent collection as well as temporary exhibitions by Polish and international artists.

Galeria Le Guern

Art Gallery

A relative newcomer to Warsaw’s contemporary art scene, Le Guern was founded in 2004. Since then, it has focused on following artistic trends and working with them, as opposed to imposing its own interpretations. Dynamic and genuine, the gallery prides itself on its appreciation of Poland’s current artistic landscape and eagerly explores all experimental and traditional forms of artistic expression. Having displayed both established and young creative minds, it is home to several talented artists, such as Zofia Kulik, Tadeusz Rolke and Jarosław Modzelewski, Le Guern regularly organises external projects and publishes exhibition catalogues to accompany its activities

About the author

Ewa [ey-va] was born into a newly democratic Poland, but raised in England, where she studied French and German at the University of Oxford. An insatiable explorer, she’s lived in Florence, Berlin, Brussels, London, Warsaw and Singapore, worked at diplomatic institutions and has written for international publications, including The Huffington Post. A regular contributor to Culture Trip since its very beginning, Ewa quickly fell in love with the pace and creativity of the start-up world and, soon after, became the company’s first Managing Editor and then Director of Operations. Now, as the platform’s Social Media Director, Ewa oversees social strategy across the hubs and the rest of the world. Outside of The Culture Trip, you can find her writing (unabashedly), reading (critically) or country-hopping (methodically).

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