Biographical Note

In one of his poems Salvatore Quasimodo called the night I was born – the eighteenth of January 1944 – the darkest night of the war. The little town where I was born was in the Nazis bloody hands, then the Russians’. The homicidal scowl of Stalin declared that our town was never to be part of Poland again. Providence agreed with Stalin, and we had to move to settle in Upper Silesia, an agglomerate of coalmines, steel works and other heavy industries that produced unrestricted clouds of acrid, fetid smoke. Greasy soot covered every blade of grass. My father was a watchmaker and a jeweler. My mother took care of three children.

I escaped trice from two kindergartens and solidified an indestructible sense of being special. I painted and drew from the time I was a small child. In 1963 I went to study painting at the Academy of Fine Arts in Krakow, Poland. Unfortunately for me, any sort of verisimilitude in painting was believed gone, due to invention of photography (as if the invention of television could have killed literature), so the only available instruction was in paint dripping, happy smearing, and closing the ranks of obligatory modernism. At that time, I had just arrived at the conviction, central to my art, that modern art is a worthless, dead-end barbarism invented by dilettantes bent on obtaining the cheapest uniqueness. Horrified by the size and stature of my opponent,  I was allowed to work alone in my room at the dorm for the remaining five ... view more »

PHOTOS

  • Gallery 1 - Henryk Fantazos
  • Gallery 2 - Henryk Fantazos
  • Gallery 3 - Henryk Fantazos
  • Gallery 4 - Henryk Fantazos
  • Gallery 5 - Henryk Fantazos
  • Catfish Tableau

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COMMENTS

2 comments Add yours

  1. In 1997 I purchased your painting ( Blessing of the Garden)
    At the same time I loved the painting of flamingos being riiden by railroad workers next to a train. I also dearly loved the painting of tango dancers , dancing in a field.
    I so wished at the time I could have purchased them.

    Reply

  2. Strange coincidence, because I just returned to another composition of that cycle of inspiration:”Blessing Cotton”.Many changes there and more to come due to my solemn commitment to Quatrocento precision.
    I still have “Tango in Winter” and “Rockhounding in Miami”, my favorite.
    Glad that you appreciate my attempts,
    Henryk Fantazos

    Reply

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