Personaje
Portrait

Kazimiera Zimblyte (Zimblytė)

(Kazė)

Briedziunai, Ukmerge county, Lithuania, 04-04-1933 — Vilnius (Lithuania), 17-06-1999  

Periodo de actividad: 1960 — 1999

Clasificación geográfica: Europa > Lituania

Movimientos socio-culturales

Grupos por ámbito de dedicación

Artistas plásticas, visuales y escénicas > Pintoras

Artistas plásticas, visuales y escénicas > Artistas textiles

Contexto de creación femenina

After World War I, abstract painting, which was initiated in the late 19th century by Swedish painter Hilma af Klint, gradually gained a dominant position and became a universal artistic ideology in Europe. It is a powerful artistic movement that goes far beyond visual or plastic imagery and demonstrates the ability to create aesthetic and philosophical systems and solve social problems. The early 1930s saw the emergence of several groups of abstract art, mainly in France, such as Concrete Art (1930), Circle and Square (1930), Abstraction and Creativity (1931), which united artists of different nationalities and backgrounds. During World War II (1939-1945), a school of so-called abstract expressionism emerged in the United States, represented by Jackson Pollock (1912-1956), Mark Tobey (1890–1976), and others. Later in the 1950s, the movement was joined by women artists Elaine de Kooning (1918-1989), Grace Hartigan (1922-2008), Joan Mitchell (1925-1992), and Helen Frankenthaler (1928-2011). In Lithuania, abstract art found it difficult to make its way because during the Soviet regime such art was considered ideologically inappropriate. Even so, this is the direction artist Kazimiera Zimblytė chose for herself.

Zimblytė made a mark in Lithuanian art not only as a creator who developed one of the most radical branches of abstract material painting in the 1970s, but also as a case study of an artist of the Soviet occupation era whose work had no place in the regime and earned Zimblytė the label of a “sad and misunderstood artist”. 

Reseña

Kazimiera Zimblytė (Kazė) is a Lithuanian artist, painter, creator of collages and art instalations, abstractionist. She is also credited with the development of one of the most radical branches of abstract material painting in Lithuania during the Soviet occupation.  This brave choice of a new direction in art during the times of extreme censorship and creative restraint put Kazimiera Zimblytė on the outside of an “official” life as an artist. Her abstract material paintings were labelled too “radical” by the powers in charge and earned her a label of a “sad and misunderstood artist”. This legend of her being shunned by the system and her shutting herself off from the surrounding world continues to prevail even among fellow artists. However, her creative ideas and the courage of her art were ahead of time and made her one of the most innovative artists of the era. 

Actividades

Justificaciones

  • Kazimiera Zimblytė is a pioneer of Lithuanian minimalism and abstractionism.
  • She is a major developer of one of the most radical branches of abstract material painting in Lithuania despite extreme censorship and creative restraint that existed under the Soviet occupation.
  • Since 2000, more than 50 of Zimblytė’s most influential works have been preserved and displayed at the MO Museum in Vilnius and presented as travelling exhibits to an international audience.

Biografía

Kazimiera Zimblytė (1933-1999) was born in the village of Briedžiūnai, Lithuania. In 1959 she graduated from the National Institute of Art with a degree in textile. From 1960 she began displaying her works in private expositions and only in 1988 did she have a chance to showcase her work in a public exhibition at the Art Exhibit House in Vilnius. From 1992 she became a member of an artist group named “1”. She spent the last days of her life in poverty and loneliness and died in Vilnius in 1999. Zimblytė was buried in the cemetery of Siesikai in the Ukmergė county. 

https://www.ukzinios.lt/gyvenimas/zmones/23054-kazimiera-zimblyte-menininke-pralenkusi-laika 

https://www.vle.lt/straipsnis/kaze-zimblyte/

MO muziejus (mmcentras.lt)

 

Obras


Ship (application sketch), 1972

Unnamed. From the binder of the members of the group “1”, 1979

Paintings:

Celebration, 1966

King, 1966-1968

Series “In memoriam”, 1980-1988

Collages:

Figure, 1965

Figure. Heart. 1968

Composition, 1968

Unnamed, 1970

Space, 1991

Composition in white, 1978

Relief in black, 1979, 

Moods, 1983-1985 

Unnamed (Collage, 1977), MO museum in Vilnius © LATGA, 2020) © Kęstutis Stoškus

[https://www.vle.lt/straipsnis/kaze-zimblyte/] 

Architectural motif (wool, application, 1972, Lithuanian National Museum of Art; © LATGA,2020) Antanas Lukšėnas

[https://www.vle.lt/straipsnis/kaze-zimblyte/#gallery1-3] 

 

Bibliografía

  • Girdzijauskaitė A. (2010) Kazė: viena savo abejonėse// Šiaurės atėnai, No 23, Vilnius, 2013. 
    http://www.satenai.lt/2010/10/08/kaze-viena-savo-abejonese/ 
  • Jurėnaitė R. Kazimiera Zimblytė [accessed on 09-08-2021] MO muziejus (mmcentras.lt)
  • Krištopaitytė M. (2011) Susirašinėjimas šešėliais// 7 meno dienos, No 12 (934), 2011. http://archyvas.7md.lt//lt/2011-03-25/daile_2/susirasinejimas_seseliais.html 
  • Lietuvos visuotinė enciklopedija,  https://www.vle.lt/straipsnis/kaze-zimblyte/
  • Pavlovskaitė I. (2010) Kazė Zimblytė. Juodas reljefas. 1979// Šiaurės atėnai, No 22, Vilnius, 2013. [accessed on 30/11/2021]
    http://www.satenai.lt/2010/05/21/kaze-zimblyte-juodas-reljefas-1979/ 

Enfoque Didáctico

Art, Abstract Art, History of Lithuanian Art.

Documentos