• Michal Czinege: The Loneliness of the Traveller
  • Michal Czinege: The Loneliness of the Traveller
  • Michal Czinege: The Loneliness of the Traveller
  • Michal Czinege: The Loneliness of the Traveller
  • Head 11, acrylic on canvas, 180x160 cm, 2015
  • Head 9, acrylic on canvas, 180x160 cm, 2014
  • Head 8, acrylic on canvas, 180x160 cm, 2014
  • Last Tree of Mr L, acrylic on canvas, 180x160 cm, 2015
  • Gold Ingot, acrylic on canvas, 180x160 cm, 2015
  • Earth Above Head, acrylic on canvas, 180x160 cm, 2015
  • The End, acrylic on canvas, 180x160 cm, 2015
  • Untouched Place, acrylic on aluminium, 115x160 cm  variable dimensions, 2015

Michal Czinege

The Loneliness of the Traveller

Jätkä 1 9.5.-24.5.2015

Michal Czinege
The Loneliness of the Traveller
Galleria Huuto Jätkäsaari, Jätkä 1
9 – 24 May 2015

The Loneliness of the Traveller is about solitude and travelling, but most of all about discovering. The subjects of Michal Czinege’s examination are typically photographs of various origins or anything else convertible into a digital image, such as a drawing or text. Travel journals from the 1950s and 60s that Czinege was given by his parents and family friends when he was small are crucial in his work, and he keeps collecting them until now. He was always fascinated by their all but perfect illustrations, in which one could see all and nothing at the same time. The magazines were saturated by socialist propaganda common in Czechoslovakia at the time, the texts filled with fantastic absurdity. An article from the 1960s about a German explorer who went missing with his troupe in the 19th century became an important impulse for The Loneliness of the Traveller. There have been several attempts to trace the expedition’s final whereabouts, but the mystery remains unsolved.

Solitude has many faces. For Michal Czinege seeing is the most significant form of loneliness, as well as a recurring subject matter in his paintings. Perception is at the heart of the series of “Heads”, larger than life-size portraits sprayed on canvases. The anonymous, ‘blown-up’ portraits raise a paradox: approaching the painting takes the viewer only further from decoding it. The figures are of people in the background of a photograph, usually no bigger than the head of a pin, and the computer becomes a sort of a microscope to explore and analyse the scanned images. Only by painting the figures do they turn into a recognizable form to Czinege himself.

Czinege compares the loneliness a traveller often experiences with the solitude of painting, the hours spent in front of a canvas and the painter’s gaze wandering on its surface. The presence of the studio, most perceptible as fragments in Czinege’s artists books, gains importance within the lonesome journey.

Efficiency is essential for the survival of an expedition. Just as an explorer has a function for every item he chooses to take with him, so does the artist choose every object he exhibits with careful deliberation. Bearing this in mind, even the transport box of The Loneliness of the Traveller has its own purpose at Galleria Huuto.

Michal Czinege (1980, Bratislava, Slovakia) is a Slovak painter, who currently teaches painting at the Academy of Fine Arts and Design in Bratislava. The Loneliness of the Traveller is his first exhibition in Helsinki.

Exhibition is supported by Ministry of Culture of the Slovak Republic and Embassy of Slovakia in Finland.
Slovakian-kulttuuriministerion-logo