Mikołaj Sobczak
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Biography
Born 1989 in Poznań, Poland
Lives and works in Düsseldorf, Germany
Mikołaj Sobczak works in the fields of video and painting; collaborative performative forms of expression are also an essential element of his artistic practice. Sobczak's work depicts everyday scenes as well as alternative historical images; in his surreal, collaged pictorial narratives he inserts protagonists from queer and transgender activism and countercultural emancipatory movements.Sobczak studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in Warsaw in Miroslaw Balka's Studio for Spatial Activities, was a scholarship holder at the Berlin University of the Arts, and graduated as a Masters student in 2019 at the Kunstakademie Münster.Mikołaj Sobczak’s recent exhibitions include Salzburger Kunstverein; Kunstmuseum Moritzburg, Halle; Jester - Flanders Arts Institute, Genk, Belgium; Ludwig Forum, Aachen; Kunsthalle Münster; Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Berlin; MUDAM, Luxembourg and Museum of Modern Art, Warsaw.
Sobczak’s works are held in the collections of Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA); Moderna Museet, Stockholm; Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-West- falen, Düsseldorf; Ludwig Forum, Aachen; The Perimeter, London; Museum of Modern Art, Warsaw and The National Museum, Gdańsk, among others.
In 2021, Sobczak was awarded Poland’s most prestigious art prize, the Paszport Polityk. He was an artist-in- residence at the Rijksakadmie van beeldende kunsten in Amsterdam and took part in the biannual residency program with Art Explora - Cité internationale des arts in Paris. As one of four selected artists, he was recently awarded the prestigious Villa Romana Prize for the year 2026.
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In times of political radicalization, Sobczak's art invites us to engage with the construction of history.
– Merle Radtke, Kunsthalle Münster
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News
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Works
Mikołaj Sobczak
There was no homophobia in Paris. As there was no antisemitism, 2023Oil on canvas in artist’s frameSigned, dated and titled verso60 x 49.5 cm
23.6 x 19.5 inches
Sammlung Philara, DüsseldorfB-MSOBCZAK-.24-0004The title of the work references a remark made by Russian historian Andrei Korliakov to Mikołaj Sobczak when questioned about the relationship between Parisians, homosexuals, and Jews in the 20th...The title of the work references a remark made by Russian historian Andrei Korliakov to Mikołaj Sobczak when questioned about the relationship between Parisians, homosexuals, and Jews in the 20th Century. Rendered in a style notably reminiscent of Modernist painting in general and New Objectivity specifically, the work juxtaposes a solitary male figure against a background populated by individuals publicly engaging in acts of intimacy.ExhibitionsExternal ExhibitionsPressVideoRequest more information




