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{{Short description|Russian-Polish sculptor (1902–1997)}}
{{AfC submission|t||ts=20210505171209|u=Wikibenchris|ns=118|demo=}}<!-- Important, do not remove this line before article has been created. -->
{{Short description|sculptor, Poland, 20th century}}
{{Infobox artist
{{Infobox artist
| honorific_prefix =
| honorific_prefix =
| name = Stanisław Horno-Popławski
| name = Stanisław Horno-Popławski
| honorific_suffix =
| honorific_suffix =
| image = Bdg parkKochanowskiego posag 10 10-2013.jpg
| image = <!-- use the image's pagename; do not include the "File:" or "Image:" prefix, and do not use brackets-->
| image_size =
| image_size = 200px
| alt =
| alt = Monument to Henryk Sienkiewicz, Bydgoszcz (1968)
| caption =
| caption = Monument to Henryk Sienkiewicz, Bydgoszcz (1968)
| native_name =
| native_name =
| native_name_lang = pl
| native_name_lang = pl
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| resting_place = [[Gdańsk]], [[Poland]]
| resting_place = [[Gdańsk]], [[Poland]]
| resting_place_coordinates = <!-- {{Coord|LAT|LONG|type:landmark|display=inline}} -->
| resting_place_coordinates = <!-- {{Coord|LAT|LONG|type:landmark|display=inline}} -->
| nationality = [[Russia|Russian]], {{flag|Russian Empire}} [[Poland|Polish]], {{flag|Poland}}
| nationality = [[Russia]]n, {{flag|Russian Empire}} [[Poland|Polish]], {{flag|Poland}}
| education =
| education =
| alma_mater =
| alma_mater =
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| relatives =
| relatives =
| family =
| family =
| awards = [[File:POL Złoty Krzyż Zasługi BAR.svg|70px|Golden Cross of Merit]] - State Award Badge, 2nd echelon (1953)
| awards = [[File:POL Złoty Krzyż Zasługi BAR.svg|70px|Golden Cross of Merit]]
| elected =
| elected =
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| patrons =
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==Life==
==Life==
Stanisław's mother was Maria-Natalie-Agripina Popłavskaya ({{lang-ru|Мария-Натали-Агрипина Поплавская}}), née Czeczott (1869-1935).
Stanisław's mother was Maria-Natalie-Agripina Popłavskaya ({{lang-ru|Мария-Натали-Агрипина Поплавская}}), née Czeczott (1869-1935).


In March 1891, she married Bartłomiej Józef Popławski (1861-1931) a Russian-Polish [[Railway engineering|railway engineer]] (1861-1931) who later became president of the Warsaw Shipping and Trade Society. Bartłomiej had just been transfered the same year to Crimea (then part of the [[History_of_Crimea#Russian_Empire_(1783–1917)|Russian Empire]]), due to poor health and was involved in the construction of the [[Dzhankoi railway station|Feodosia-Dzhankoy]] railway line (1891-1895). A year later in [[Feodosia]], they had a daughter Maria Yadviga (1892-1930s). Stanisław was born on July, 14, 1902 in [[Kutaisi]], Georgia, then part of the [[Russian Empire]].<ref name="sopot"/>
In March 1891, she married Bartłomiej Józef Popławski (1861-1931) a Russian-Polish [[Railway engineering|railway engineer]] (1861-1931) who later became president of the Warsaw Shipping and Trade Society. Bartłomiej had just been transferred the same year to Crimea (then part of the [[History of Crimea#Russian Empire (1783–1917)|Russian Empire]]), due to poor health and was involved in the construction of the [[Dzhankoi railway station|Feodosia-Dzhankoy]] railway line (1891-1895). A year later in [[Feodosia]], they had a daughter Maria Yadviga (1892-1930s). Stanisław was born on July 14, 1902, in [[Kutaisi]], Georgia, then part of the [[Russian Empire]].<ref name="sopot"/>

In 1908, the family left Georgia for [[Moscow]] where the young Stanisław began his art studies in the late 1910s. While visiting museums and galleries in the Russian capital, he was fascinated by painting. In 1921, Stanisław lived briefly in Vilnius, but soon they transfered from [[Soviet Union]] to motherland [[Poland]] in 1922.<ref name="sopot"/>


In 1908, the family left Georgia for [[Moscow]] where the young Stanisław began his art studies in the late 1910s. While visiting museums and galleries in the Russian capital, he was fascinated by painting. In 1921, Stanisław lived briefly in Vilnius, but soon they transferred from [[Soviet Union]] to motherland [[Poland]] in 1922.<ref name="sopot"/>
[[File:Прушковский, Тадеуш.jpg|thumb|Tadeusz Pruszkowski ca 1930s]]
In Warsaw, he resumed his education from 1923 to 1931, at the [[Academy of Fine Arts in Warsaw|Warsaw School of Fine Arts]] under the [[tutoring]] of [[Tadeusz Pruszkowski]] and [[Tadeusz Breyer]]. After graduation, he traveled to [[France]] and [[Italy]].<ref name="plus">{{cite web |url=https://plus.pomorska.pl/stanislaw-hornopoplawski-kim-byl/ar/11891740 |title=Stanisław Horno-Popławski. Kim był?|last=Sowińska |first=Hanka |date=17 March 2017 |website=plus.pomorska.pl |publisher=Polska Press Sp zoo |access-date=7 May 2021}}</ref>
In Warsaw, he resumed his education from 1923 to 1931, at the [[Academy of Fine Arts in Warsaw|Warsaw School of Fine Arts]] under the [[tutoring]] of [[Tadeusz Pruszkowski]] and [[Tadeusz Breyer]]. After graduation, he traveled to [[France]] and [[Italy]].<ref name="plus">{{cite web |url=https://plus.pomorska.pl/stanislaw-hornopoplawski-kim-byl/ar/11891740 |title=Stanisław Horno-Popławski. Kim był?|last=Sowińska |first=Hanka |date=17 March 2017 |website=plus.pomorska.pl |publisher=Polska Press Sp zoo |access-date=7 May 2021}}</ref>


In 1931, Horno-Popławski began his teaching career at the Faculty of Fine Arts of the [[Stephen Báthory]] University in [[Vilnius]], today's part of the Vilnius University. He was a member of several associations:
In 1931, Horno-Popławski began his teaching career at the Faculty of Fine Arts of the [[Stephen Báthory]] University in [[Vilnius]],<ref name="KB1994">{{cite book |last=Nowicka |first=Zofia |author-link= |date=1994 |title=Bydgoski epizod Stanisława Horno-Popławskiego. Kalendarz Bydgoski |url= |location=Bydgoszcz |publisher=Towarzystwo Miłośników Miasta Bydgoszczy |pages=105–108 |isbn=}}</ref> today's part of the Vilnius University. He was a member of several associations:
* the Association of Polish Visual Artists with its periodical official publication "Forma", led by [[Władysław Strzemiński]];<ref>{{cite web |url=https://culture.pl/en/artist/wladyslaw-strzeminski |title=Władysław Strzemiński |last=Kossowska |first=Irena |date=December 2001 |website=culture.pl |publisher=culture pl |access-date=6 May 2021}}</ref>
* the Association of Polish Visual Artists with its periodical official publication "Forma", led by [[Władysław Strzemiński]];<ref>{{cite web |url=https://culture.pl/en/artist/wladyslaw-strzeminski |title=Władysław Strzemiński |last=Kossowska |first=Irena |date=December 2001 |website=culture.pl |publisher=culture pl |access-date=6 May 2021}}</ref>
* the Vilnius Society of [[Plastic arts|Plastic Artists]]
* the Vilnius Society of [[Plastic arts|Plastic Artists]]
* the Warsaw Trade Union of Artists and Sculptors.
* the Warsaw Trade Union of Artists and Sculptors.


In 1935, her mother Maria died in Italy. She was buried in the family vault in the [[Powązki Cemetery]] in Warsaw, together with his husband who passed away four years earlier.<ref name="Warszawskie Zabytkowe">{{cite web |url=https://cmentarze.um.warszawa.pl/pomnik.aspx?pom_id=28513 |title=Warszawskie Zabytkowe Pomniki Nagrobne |last=|first=|date=2009|website=cmentarze.um.warszawa.pl |publisher=Urząd m.st. Warszawy |access-date=6 May 2021}}</ref>
In 1935, her mother Maria died in Italy. She was buried in the family vault in the [[Powązki Cemetery]] in Warsaw, together with her husband, who died four years earlier.<ref name="Warszawskie Zabytkowe">{{cite web |url=https://cmentarze.um.warszawa.pl/pomnik.aspx?pom_id=28513 |title=Warszawskie Zabytkowe Pomniki Nagrobne |last=|first=|date=2009|website=cmentarze.um.warszawa.pl |publisher=Urząd m.st. Warszawy |access-date=6 May 2021}}</ref>


Stanisław took part to the [[Second World War]] from its beginning in[[Invasion of Poland| September 1939]] and got captured. He spent the rest of the conflict in the [[prisoner of war|POW]] camp for Polish officers "Oflag II-C" located in Woldenberg (today [[Dobiegniew]], [[Lubusz Voivodeship]]). During his detention, he realized several [[Religious art|religious]] statues placed in the camp chapel.
Stanisław took part to the [[Second World War]] from its beginning in [[Invasion of Poland|September 1939]] and got captured. He spent the rest of the conflict in the [[prisoner of war|POW]] camp for Polish officers "Oflag II-C" located in Woldenberg (today [[Dobiegniew]], [[Lubusz Voivodeship]]). During his detention, he realized several [[Religious art|religious]] statues placed in the camp chapel.<ref name="KB1994"/>


A the end of the war, once released from the POW camp, he worked for a year as a professor at the School of Fine Arts of [[Białystok]]. It is in the city that he found back his wife and his children he was separated from since 1939.<ref name="GDK">{{cite web |url=https://www.gedanopedia.pl/gdansk/?title=HORNO-POP%C5%81AWSKI_STANIS%C5%81AW |title=Horno-Popławski Stanisław |last=|first=|date=16 December 2019 |website=gedanopedia.pl |publisher=Fundacja Gdańska|access-date=8 May 2021}}</ref>
A the end of the war, once released from the POW camp, he worked for a year as a professor at the School of Fine Arts of [[Białystok]]. It is in the city that he found back his wife and his children he was separated from since 1939.<ref name="GDK">{{cite web |url=https://www.gedanopedia.pl/gdansk/?title=HORNO-POP%C5%81AWSKI_STANIS%C5%81AW |title=Horno-Popławski Stanisław |last=|first=|date=16 December 2019 |website=gedanopedia.pl |publisher=Fundacja Gdańska|access-date=8 May 2021}}</ref>


From 1946 to 1949, he was a teacher at the Faculty of Fine Arts of the [[Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń]]. In 1948, he received the second prize in a competition for the design of a monument to [[Adam Mickiewicz]] in [[Poznań]].<ref name="plus"/>
From 1946 to 1949, he was a teacher at the Faculty of Fine Arts of the [[Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń]]. In 1948, he received the second prize in a competition for the design of a monument to [[Adam Mickiewicz]] in [[Poznań]].<ref name="plus"/>
[[File:Gdansk Dom Ferberow.jpg|thumb|Ferber house, Gdańsk]]

In 1949, he moved to [[Tricity, Poland|Sopot then Gdańsk]] at the Academy of Fine Arts, where he even served in the position of the [[Dean (education)|Dean]] of the Faculty of Sculpture in 1949-1950 and in 1956-1960. Between 1951 and 1954, Stanisław was the main expert in the reconstruction project of the Old Town of Gdańsk, designing houses and sculptural decorations.
In 1949, he moved to [[Tricity, Poland|Sopot then Gdańsk]] at the Academy of Fine Arts, where he even served in the position of the [[Dean (education)|Dean]] of the Faculty of Sculpture in 1949-1950 and in 1956–1960. Between 1951 and 1954, Stanisław was the main expert in the reconstruction project of the Old Town of Gdańsk, designing houses and sculptural decorations.
He worked more particularly on:<ref name="GDK"/>
He worked more particularly on:<ref name="GDK"/>
* the ''Ferber House'' at 28 Długa street;
* the ''Ferber House'' at 28 Długa street;
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The artist's face can be found on the keystone of the vaulted afacade at 1 Pończoszników street.<ref name="GDK"/>
The artist's face can be found on the keystone of the vaulted afacade at 1 Pończoszników street.<ref name="GDK"/>


He took part in exhibitions of National Fine Arts in Warsaw and received a number of high awards in the field of sculpture. In 1952, he took part in the soviet sponsored exhibition "100 Years of Realism in Poland" ({{lang-ru|100 лет "реализма" в Польше}}) in [[Moscow]].
He took part in exhibitions of National Fine Arts in Warsaw and received a number of high awards in the field of sculpture. In 1952, he took part in the soviet sponsored exhibition "100 Years of Realism in Poland" ({{lang-ru|100 лет "реализма" в Польше}}) in [[Moscow]].


As an outcome of a 1954 competition, he was granted the realization of a monument to Adam Mickiewicz placed in 1955 in the front yard of the "Palace of Culture and Science" in [[Warsaw]].<ref>{{cite web |url=https://bcs.bydgoszcz.pl/oferta/patron |title=PATRON |last=|first=|date=2017 |website=bcs.bydgoszcz.pl |publisher=Bydgoskie Centrum Sztuki |access-date=8 May 2021}}</ref>
As an outcome of a 1954 competition, he was granted the realization of a monument to Adam Mickiewicz placed in 1955 in the front yard of the "Palace of Culture and Science" in [[Warsaw]].<ref>{{cite web |url=https://bcs.bydgoszcz.pl/oferta/patron |title=PATRON |last=|first=|date=2017 |website=bcs.bydgoszcz.pl |publisher=Bydgoskie Centrum Sztuki |access-date=8 May 2021}}</ref>
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Stanisław's works, during the post-war years, were exhibited in Poland, in Europe ([[Paris]] (1961), [[Berlin]] (1971), [[Bucharest]] (1972), [[Oslo]] and [[Essen]] (1974)), as well as in Asia ([[New Delhi]], [[Kolkata]], [[Bombay]], [[Beijing]]).<ref name="plus"/> He won recognition for his merits in favour of the Polish Culture (1962, 1965, 1995) and was even awarded a gold medal at the "Contemporary Art Biennale" in [[Florence]] in 1969.<ref name="sopot">{{cite web |url=https://artinfo.pl/pl/blog/relacje/wpisy/stanislaw-horno-poplawski-droga-sztuki-sztuka-drogi2/ |title=Stanisław Horno-Popławski Droga sztuki -sztuka drogi |last=Grubba |first=Dorota |date=22 August 2014 |website=artinfo.pl |publisher=Artinfo |access-date=8 May 2021}}</ref> He made two trips to his Georgian roots (1967, 1978), where two of his works are displayed ([[Kutaisi State Historical Museum]] and Niko Pirosmani Museum in [[Tbilisi]]).<ref name="GDK"/>
Stanisław's works, during the post-war years, were exhibited in Poland, in Europe ([[Paris]] (1961), [[Berlin]] (1971), [[Bucharest]] (1972), [[Oslo]] and [[Essen]] (1974)), as well as in Asia ([[New Delhi]], [[Kolkata]], [[Bombay]], [[Beijing]]).<ref name="plus"/> He won recognition for his merits in favour of the Polish Culture (1962, 1965, 1995) and was even awarded a gold medal at the "Contemporary Art Biennale" in [[Florence]] in 1969.<ref name="sopot">{{cite web |url=https://artinfo.pl/pl/blog/relacje/wpisy/stanislaw-horno-poplawski-droga-sztuki-sztuka-drogi2/ |title=Stanisław Horno-Popławski Droga sztuki -sztuka drogi |last=Grubba |first=Dorota |date=22 August 2014 |website=artinfo.pl |publisher=Artinfo |access-date=8 May 2021}}</ref> He made two trips to his Georgian roots (1967, 1978), where two of his works are displayed ([[Kutaisi State Historical Museum]] and Niko Pirosmani Museum in [[Tbilisi]]).<ref name="GDK"/>


From 1979 to 1983, the sculptor moved to a small house in the [[Botanic Garden of Casimir the Great University, Bydgoszcz|botanical garden]] of Bydgoszcz, looking for a city "whose character guarantees the possibility of quiet creative work, and whose atmosphere is devoid of nervous hustle and bustle, which absorbs and disturbs focused actions".<ref>{{cite web |url=https://bydgoszcz.wyborcza.pl/bydgoszcz/7,48722,22209002,horno-powraca-powinienes-poznac-jego-dziela.html |title=Horno powraca. Powinieneś poznać jego dzieła |last=Marta Leszczyńska |first=Aleksandra Lewińska|date=8 August 2017|website=bydgoszcz.wyborcza.pl |publisher=Agora SA |access-date=8 May 2021}}</ref> On July 22 of this year, then the official holiday in the [[Polish People's Republic]], Horno-Popławski opened in the city garden an open-air gallery of his compositions, which he donated. The collection included the following works: "Partisan", "Memories of Bagrati", "Morena", "Copernicus", "Tadeusz Breyer", "Tehura", "Gruzinka", "Waiting", "Szota Rustawelli", "Colchida", "Żal", "Pogodna", "Beethoven" and "Hair".<ref name="plus"/> Unfortunately, most of these works have been stolen.<ref name="RPIK">{{cite web |url=https://www.radiopik.pl/6,84185,stanislaw-horno-poplawski-zyciorys-i-charakter-w |title=Stanisław Horno - Popławski: życiorys - i charakter - w kamieniu wykuty |last=Dąbska |first=Ewa |date=28 February 2020|website=radiopik.pl |publisher=Radio PIK SA |access-date=8 May 2021}}</ref>
From 1979 to 1983, thanks to [[Marian Turwid]]'s suggestion,<ref name="KB1994"/> the sculptor moved to a small house in the [[Botanic Garden of Casimir the Great University, Bydgoszcz|botanical garden]] of Bydgoszcz, looking for a city "whose character guarantees the possibility of quiet creative work, and whose atmosphere is devoid of nervous hustle and bustle, which absorbs and disturbs focused actions".<ref>{{cite web |url=https://bydgoszcz.wyborcza.pl/bydgoszcz/7,48722,22209002,horno-powraca-powinienes-poznac-jego-dziela.html |title=Horno powraca. Powinieneś poznać jego dzieła |last=Marta Leszczyńska |first=Aleksandra Lewińska|date=8 August 2017|website=bydgoszcz.wyborcza.pl |publisher=Agora SA |access-date=8 May 2021}}</ref> On July 22 of this year, then the official holiday in the [[Polish People's Republic]], Horno-Popławski opened in the city garden an open-air gallery of his compositions, which he donated. The collection included the following works: "Partisan", "Memories of Bagrati", "Morena", "Copernicus", "Tadeusz Breyer", "Tehura", "Gruzinka", "Waiting", "Szota Rustawelli", "Colchida", "Żal", "Pogodna", "Beethoven" and "Hair".<ref name="plus"/> Unfortunately, most of these works have been stolen.<ref name="RPIK">{{cite web |url=https://www.radiopik.pl/6,84185,stanislaw-horno-poplawski-zyciorys-i-charakter-w |title=Stanisław Horno - Popławski: życiorys - i charakter - w kamieniu wykuty |last=Dąbska |first=Ewa |date=28 February 2020|website=radiopik.pl |publisher=Radio PIK SA |access-date=8 May 2021}}</ref>


After this spell in Bydgoszcz, Stanisław moved back to Sopot where he had his studio set up near the [[Grand Hotel, Sopot|Grand Hotel]].<ref name="RPIK"/>
After this spell in Bydgoszcz, Stanisław moved back to Sopot where he had his [[atelier]] set up near the [[Grand Hotel, Sopot|Grand Hotel]].<ref name="RPIK"/>


His was married to P. Inga Stanisława. They had several children, among whom a daughter, P. Jolanta Ronczewska.<ref name="DGT"/>
Hi was married to P. Inga Stanisława, a sculptor as well.<ref name="DGT"/> They had several children, among whom a daughter, P. Jolanta Ronczewska who married in 1960 Polish actor [[Ryszard Ronczewski]].<ref>{{cite web |url=https://dziennikbaltycki.pl/benefis-ryszarda-ronczewskiego-w-sopocie/ar/310531 |title=Benefis Ryszarda Ronczewskiego w Sopocie |last=Skutnik |first=Tadeusz |date=21 September 2010 |website=dziennikbaltycki.pl |publisher=Polska Press Sp. z o. o. |access-date=8 May 2021}}</ref>


Stanisław Horno-Popławski passed away on June 6, 1997, in [[Sopot]].
Stanisław Horno-Popławski died on June 6, 1997, in [[Sopot]].


==Family==
==Family==
===Popławski branch===
===Popławski branch===
* Bartłomiej Józef Popławski ({{lang-ru|Варфоломей-Иосиф Иванович Поплавский }}), Stanisław's father, was born in 1861 in [[Chita, Zabaykalsky Krai|Chita]],: his grandfather, a Polish noble, had been exiled to a hard labor settlement in [[Siberia]] for having participated in [[January Uprising]].<ref name="RP">{{cite web |url=https://niezlasztuka.net/o-sztuce/jak-zamknac-uczucie-w-kamieniu-stanislaw-horno-poplawski/ |title=Jak zamknąć uczucie w kamieniu. O twórczości Stanisława Horno-Popławskiego |last=Rzekanowski|first=Paweł |date=17 September 2016 |website=niezlasztuka.net |publisher=Niezła Sztuka z miasta Łodzi pochodzi |access-date=7 May 2021}}</ref> Graduated in 1887 as an engineer from the [[St. Petersburg State Transport University]], he worked for ten years on the construction of many railway lines in Russian Siberia ([[Trans-Siberian Railway]], Chinese-Eastern Railway).<ref>{{cite book |last= |first= |author-link= |date=1896 |title=Адрес-календарь. Ч. 1-2 : Общая роспись начальствующих и прочих должностных лиц по всем управлениям в Российской империи на 1896 год |url=https://vivaldi.nlr.ru/bv000020130/details |location=Санкт-Петербу́рг |publisher=Российская Национальная Библиотека |page=784 |isbn=}}</ref> He was then posted until 1914 as the manager of the "Society of Warsaw Access Railways" and "Director of the Warsaw Society of Shipping and Trade";<ref>{{cite book |last=Боханов |first=Александр Николаевич |date=1914 |title=Деловая элита России |url=http://genobooks.narod.ru/Ros_burzhuazia_1914/Ros_burzh_1914-21p.htm |location=Москва |publisher=Российская Академия Наук Институт российской истории |page=205 |isbn=5201005934}}</ref> as such, he directed the construction of the [[narrow-gauge railway]] from "Warszawa Most" to [[Jabłonna, Legionowo County|Jabłonna II]] (1898).<ref>{{cite web |url=https://warszawa.wyborcza.pl/warszawa/1,34860,1557212.html |title=Kolejka jabłonowska |last=Majewski |first=Jerzy |date=3 June 2003 |website=warszawa.wyborcza.pl |publisher=Agora SA |access-date=7 May 2021}}</ref> At the end of [[WWI]], he returned to Warsaw with his family. He died there on July 4, 1931.
* Bartłomiej Józef Popławski ({{lang-ru|Варфоломей-Иосиф Иванович Поплавский }}), Stanisław's father, was born in 1861 in [[Chita, Zabaykalsky Krai|Chita]],: his grandfather, a Polish noble, had been exiled to a hard labor settlement in [[Siberia]] for having participated in [[January Uprising]].<ref name="RP">{{cite web |url=https://niezlasztuka.net/o-sztuce/jak-zamknac-uczucie-w-kamieniu-stanislaw-horno-poplawski/ |title=Jak zamknąć uczucie w kamieniu. O twórczości Stanisława Horno-Popławskiego |last=Rzekanowski|first=Paweł |date=17 September 2016 |website=niezlasztuka.net |publisher=Niezła Sztuka z miasta Łodzi pochodzi |access-date=7 May 2021}}</ref> Graduated in 1887 as an engineer from the [[St. Petersburg State Transport University]], he worked for ten years on the construction of many railway lines in Russian Siberia ([[Trans-Siberian Railway]], Chinese-Eastern Railway).<ref>{{cite book |last= |first= |author-link= |date=1896 |title=Адрес-календарь. Ч. 1-2 : Общая роспись начальствующих и прочих должностных лиц по всем управлениям в Российской империи на 1896 год |url=https://vivaldi.nlr.ru/bv000020130/details |location=Санкт-Петербу́рг |publisher=Российская Национальная Библиотека |page=784 |isbn=}}</ref> He was then posted until 1914 as the manager of the "Society of Warsaw Access Railways" and "Director of the Warsaw Society of Shipping and Trade";<ref>{{cite book |last=Боханов |first=Александр Николаевич |date=1914 |title=Деловая элита России |url=http://genobooks.narod.ru/Ros_burzhuazia_1914/Ros_burzh_1914-21p.htm |location=Москва |publisher=Российская Академия Наук Институт российской истории |page=205 |isbn=5201005934}}</ref> as such, he directed the construction of the [[narrow-gauge railway]] from "Warszawa Most" to [[Jabłonna, Legionowo County|Jabłonna II]] (1898).<ref>{{cite web |url=https://warszawa.wyborcza.pl/warszawa/1,34860,1557212.html |title=Kolejka jabłonowska |last=Majewski |first=Jerzy |date=3 June 2003 |website=warszawa.wyborcza.pl |publisher=Agora SA |access-date=7 May 2021}}</ref> At the end of [[WWI]], he returned to Warsaw with his family. He died there on July 4, 1931.
* Stanisław's grandfather, Ivan Varfolomeevich Popławski (1822-1893) ({{lang-ru|Иван Варфоломеевич Поплавский}}), was the vice-governor of the [[Transbaikal|Transbaikal]] region, a member of the Irkutsk City [[Duma]].<ref name="AB">{{cite book |last=А. В. Петров |first=М. М. Плотникова |date=2011 |title=Городские головы, гласные и депутаты Иркутской думы 1872—2011: Биографический справочник |url= |location=Иркутск |publisher=Оттиск |page=254 |isbn=9785932192894}}</ref> He died on October 31, 1893 in St. Petersburg.<ref>{{cite book |last=Саитов |first=В. И. |date=1912 |title=Петербургский некрополь |url= |location=Санкт-Петербу́рг |publisher=Российская государственная библиотека (РГБ) |page=468 |isbn=}}</ref>
* Stanisław's grandfather, Ivan Varfolomeevich Popławski (1822-1893) ({{lang-ru|Иван Варфоломеевич Поплавский}}), was the vice-governor of the [[Transbaikal]] region, a member of the Irkutsk City [[Duma]].<ref name="AB">{{cite book |last=А. В. Петров |first=М. М. Плотникова |date=2011 |title=Городские головы, гласные и депутаты Иркутской думы 1872—2011: Биографический справочник |url= |location=Иркутск |publisher=Оттиск |page=254 |isbn=9785932192894}}</ref> He died on October 31, 1893, in St. Petersburg.<ref>{{cite book |last=Саитов |first=В. И. |date=1912 |title=Петербургский некрополь |url= |location=Санкт-Петербу́рг |publisher=Российская государственная библиотека (РГБ) |page=468 |isbn=}}</ref>
* Stanisław's grandmother, Yadviga Iosifovna Poplavskaya ({{lang-ru|Ядвига Иосифовна Поплавская}}), née Ventskovskaya ({{lang-ru|Венцковская}}) (1837-1924), was a Polish noblewoman, owner of a tea plantation in [[Gudauta]], Georgia, and of a match factory, "Sun" ("Солнце") in [[Chudovo, Chudovsky District, Novgorod Oblast|Chudovo]], Novgorod province. Together with Ivan, they had 7 children.<ref name="AB"/>
* Stanisław's grandmother, Yadviga Iosifovna Poplavskaya ({{lang-ru|Ядвига Иосифовна Поплавская}}), née Ventskovskaya ({{lang-ru|Венцковская}}) (1837-1924), was a Polish noblewoman, owner of a tea plantation in [[Gudauta]], Georgia, and of a match factory, "Sun" ("Солнце") in [[Chudovo, Chudovsky District, Novgorod Oblast|Chudovo]], Novgorod province. Together with Ivan, they had 7 children.<ref name="AB"/>
Stanisław's uncles were:
Stanisław's uncles were:
[[File:Jozef Pilsudski in 1899.jpg|thumb|Piłsudski c. 1899]]
* Jan Popławski ({{lang-ru|Иван Иванович Поплавский}}) (1859-1935), a doctor of medical sciences in internal and nervous diseases. In 1900, he was the head of the medical unit for the mentally ill at the "[[Saint Nicholas]] hospital" together with the chief physician Otton Czeczott. During 5 months they hid [[Józef Piłsudski]] (1867-1935) feigning mental illness, who has been sent for a medical examination after his arrest in [[Łódź]]. Using their official positions, Jan, together with other physicians ([[Władysław Mazurkiewicz (physician)|Władysław Mazurkiewicz]], [[Aleksander Sulkiewicz]] and others) helped Piłsudski to escape to [[Galicia (Eastern Europe)|Galicia]]. After this action, Popławski had to leave his post: he then took up a private practice as a physician. Jan enlarged successfully the art collection started by his father. His gathering was focused on [[Dutch]] and [[Flemish]] painting and the Italian [[Quattrocento]]. In 1924, at the personal invitation of Józef Piłsudski, Jan left Leningrad at the age of 65 for Warsaw to attend his seriously ill brother Bartholomew-Joseph, and stayed there. Popławski's collection is today the pride of the [[National Museum, Warsaw|National Museum in Warsaw]], including, among others, works from [[Peter Paul Rubens|Rubens]], [[Anthony van Dyck|Van Dyck]], [[Rembrandt]], [[Tintoretto]], [[Jacob Jordaens|Jordaens]] or [[Jan Steen]].<ref>{{cite book |last=Kudelski |first=J. Robert |date=2006 |title= Zaginiony szkic Rubensa |url=http://cennebezcenne.pl/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/CBU_2006_2-s-05-07-kudelski.pdf |location=Warsaw |publisher=Narodowy Instytut Muzealnictwa i Ochrony Zbiorów |pages=5-7 |isbn=}}</ref> Widowed in 1933, Jan moved to a rented apartment at 16 Chłodna street in Warsaw, where his private medical practice received a large high-ranking clientele, in particular Józef Piłsudski. He passed away in his flat in 1935.
* Jan Popławski ({{lang-ru|Иван Иванович Поплавский}}) (1859–1935), a doctor of medical sciences in internal and nervous diseases. In 1900, he was the head of the medical unit for the mentally ill at the "[[Saint Nicholas]] hospital" together with the chief physician Otton Czeczott.
* Iosif Ivanovich Popławski (1865-1943), a lawyer, legal representative of the Board of the Joint Stock Company of the [[Chinese Eastern Railway]] and director of the family match factory "Солнце" in Chudovo. He died in 1943 in [[Soviet Union|USSR]].
During 5 months they hid [[Józef Piłsudski]] (1867–1935) feigning mental illness, who has been sent for a medical examination after his arrest in [[Łódź]]. Using their official positions, Jan, together with other physicians ([[Władysław Mazurkiewicz (physician)|Władysław Mazurkiewicz]], [[Aleksander Sulkiewicz]] and others) helped Piłsudski to escape to [[Galicia (Eastern Europe)|Galicia]]. After this action, Popławski had to leave his post: he then took up a private practice as a physician. Jan enlarged successfully the art collection started by his father. His gathering was focused on [[Netherlands|Dutch]] and [[Flanders|Flemish]] painting and the Italian [[Quattrocento]]. In 1924, at the personal invitation of Józef Piłsudski, Jan left Leningrad at the age of 65 for Warsaw to attend his seriously ill brother Bartholomew-Joseph, and stayed there. Popławski's collection is today the pride of the [[National Museum, Warsaw|National Museum in Warsaw]], including, among others, works from [[Peter Paul Rubens|Rubens]], [[Anthony van Dyck|Van Dyck]], [[Rembrandt]], [[Tintoretto]], [[Jacob Jordaens|Jordaens]] or [[Jan Steen]].<ref>{{cite book |last=Kudelski |first=J. Robert |date=2006 |title= Zaginiony szkic Rubensa |url=http://cennebezcenne.pl/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/CBU_2006_2-s-05-07-kudelski.pdf |location=Warsaw |publisher=Narodowy Instytut Muzealnictwa i Ochrony Zbiorów |pages=5–7 |isbn=}}</ref> Widowed in 1933, Jan moved to a rented apartment at 16 Chłodna street in Warsaw, where his private medical practice received a large high-ranking clientele, in particular Józef Piłsudski. He died in his flat in 1935.
* Iosif Ivanovich Popławski (1865–1943), a lawyer, legal representative of the Board of the Joint Stock Company of the [[Chinese Eastern Railway]] and director of the family match factory "Солнце" in Chudovo. He died in 1943 in [[Soviet Union|USSR]].


===Czeczott branch===
===Czeczott branch===
* Stanisław's mother, Maria-Natalie-Agripina Popłavskaya ({{lang-ru|Мария-Натали-Агрипина Поплавская}}), was the daughter of Otton Czeczott ({{lang-ru|Оттон Чечотт}}), a famous Russian-Polish [[psychiatrist]], professor at [[Saint Petersburg]]'s [[Bekhterev Psychoneurological Institute|Psychoneurological Institute]]. Maria was an artist and a sculptor. In her youth, she took painting lessons from [[Ivan Aivazovsky]] one of the greatest master painters of [[marine art]].
* Stanisław's mother, Maria-Natalie-Agripina Popłavskaya ({{lang-ru|Мария-Натали-Агрипина Поплавская}}), was the daughter of Otton Czeczott ({{lang-ru|Оттон Чечотт}}), a famous Russian-Polish [[psychiatrist]], professor at [[Saint Petersburg]]'s [[Bekhterev Psychoneurological Institute|Psychoneurological Institute]]. Maria was an artist and a sculptor. In her youth, she took painting lessons from [[Ivan Aivazovsky]] one of the greatest master painters of [[marine art]].
[[File:Чечотт11.jpg|thumb|Otton Czeczott in 1906]]
* Stanisław's grandfather was the [[psychiatrist]] Otton Dionizy Antoni Czeczott ({{lang-ru|Оттон Антонович Чечотт}} (1842-1924). Coming from a noble family of [[Mogilev]], [[Russian Empire]] (today's [[Belarus]]), he graduated from the "Imperial Medical-Surgical Academy" of Saint-Petersburg in 1866. From 1881 to 1901, he was a senior and then chief doctor of the "[[Saint Nicholas]] hospital". He left his position after Józef Piłsudski's escaping from his institution. In 1922, adopting Polish citizenship, he emigrated with his family to Poland. He died on October 8, 1924, and was buried in the [[Powązki Cemetery]] in Warsaw.<ref name="Warszawskie Zabytkowe"/>
* Stanisław's grandfather was the [[psychiatrist]] Otton Dionizy Antoni Czeczott ({{lang-ru|Оттон Антонович Чечотт}} (1842-1924). Coming from a noble family of [[Mogilev]], [[Russian Empire]] (today's [[Belarus]]), he graduated from the "Imperial Medical-Surgical Academy" of Saint-Petersburg in 1866. From 1881 to 1901, he was a senior and then chief doctor of the "[[Saint Nicholas]] hospital". He left his position after Józef Piłsudski's escaping from his institution. In 1922, adopting Polish citizenship, he emigrated with his family to Poland. He died on October 8, 1924, and was buried in the [[Powązki Cemetery]] in Warsaw.<ref name="Warszawskie Zabytkowe"/>
Stanisław's uncles were:
Stanisław's uncles were:
* Henryk Czeczott ({{lang-ru|Генрих Оттонович Чечотт}}) (1875–1928), an engineer graduated from the [[Saint Petersburg Mining University]] in 1900. In 1914, he was sent to the USA to study the senior course of the enrichment department of the [[Massachusetts Institute of Technology]] under the lead of [[Robert Hallowell Richards]]. He set up a gold mine in the [[Altai Mountains]] and managed it until the nationalization in 1918.<ref>
* Henryk Czeczott ({{lang-ru|Генрих Оттонович Чечотт}}) (1875–1928), an engineer graduated from the [[Saint Petersburg Mining University]] in 1900. In 1914, he was sent to the US to study the senior course of the enrichment department of the [[Massachusetts Institute of Technology]] under the lead of [[Robert Hallowell Richards]]. He set up a gold mine in the [[Altai Mountains]] and managed it until the nationalization in 1918.<ref>
{{cite book |last=Orłowski |first=Bolesław |date=1984 |title=Słownik polskich pionierów techniki |location=Katowice |publisher=Wydawnictwo "Śląsk"|page=47 |isbn=8321603394}}</ref> On his initiative, Russia's first department of mineral processing was established at the Mining Institute, which after [[October Revolution]], was transformed into the "Institute of Mechanical Processing of Mineral Resources" ({{lang-ru|Механобр}}) under his direction. In 1922, he moved to Poland, where he became a professor at the [[AGH University of Science and Technology|Krakow Mining Academy]]. In 1928, during a scientific trip to [[Germany]] and [[Spain]], he died on June 6, 1928, in [[Freiberg]] from blood poisoning. His body was transported back to Poland and buried at the [[Protestant Reformed Cemetery, Warsaw|Evangelical Cemetery]] in Warsaw.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://encyklopedia.pwn.pl/haslo/;3889399 |title=Czeczott Albert |last=Encyklopedia PWN |first= |date=2001 |website=encyklopedia.pwn.pl |publisher=Encyklopedia PWN |access-date=7 May 2021}}</ref>
{{cite book |last=Orłowski |first=Bolesław |date=1984 |title=Słownik polskich pionierów techniki |location=Katowice |publisher=Wydawnictwo "Śląsk"|page=47 |isbn=8321603394}}</ref> On his initiative, Russia's first department of mineral processing was established at the Mining Institute, which after [[October Revolution]], was transformed into the "Institute of Mechanical Processing of Mineral Resources" ({{lang-ru|Механобр}}) under his direction. In 1922, he moved to Poland, where he became a professor at the [[AGH University of Science and Technology|Krakow Mining Academy]]. In 1928, during a scientific trip to [[Germany]] and [[Spain]], he died on June 6, 1928, in [[Freiberg]] from blood poisoning. His body was transported back to Poland and buried at the [[Protestant Reformed Cemetery, Warsaw|Evangelical Cemetery]] in Warsaw.<ref name="Encyklopedia PWN 2001">{{cite web |url=https://encyklopedia.pwn.pl/haslo/;3889399 |title=Czeczott Albert |last=Encyklopedia PWN |date=2001 |website=encyklopedia.pwn.pl |publisher=Encyklopedia PWN |access-date=7 May 2021}}</ref>
* Albert Czeczott ({{lang-ru|Альберт Оттонович Чечотт}}) (1873–1955), graduated in 1897, from the "Saint Petersburg Institute of Railway Engineers", where in 1914, he became a professor. After the October Revolution and the following Civil War, he emigrated in 1922, to live in Poland. From 1927 onwards, he taught at the [[Warsaw University of Technology|Warsaw Polytechnic Institute]] and in 1928 he worked also at the Polish Ministry of Railways. In 1933, he supervised the construction of a measuring laboratory in [[Romania]] for the study of locomotives. From 1934 to 1937, he worked in [[Tehran]] at the construction of the [[Trans-Iranian Railway]]. During the [[Occupation of Poland (1939–1945)|German occupation]], he was engaged in theoretical work at home. Soon after the liberation of Warsaw by Soviet troops, on February 6, 1945, he resumed his work at the Ministry. In 1951, he moved to the newly created [[Railway Institute]], where he organized a laboratory on [[flue gas]] and steam traction. He died on November 3, 1955, in Warsaw.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://encyklopedia.pwn.pl/haslo/;3889399 |title=Czeczott Albert |last=Encyklopedia PWN |first= |date=2001 |website=encyklopedia.pwn.pl |publisher=Encyklopedia PWN |access-date=7 May 2021}}</ref>
* Albert Czeczott ({{lang-ru|Альберт Оттонович Чечотт}}) (1873–1955), graduated in 1897, from the "Saint Petersburg Institute of Railway Engineers", where in 1914, he became a professor. After the October Revolution and the following Civil War, he emigrated in 1922, to live in Poland. From 1927 onwards, he taught at the [[Warsaw University of Technology|Warsaw Polytechnic Institute]] and in 1928 he worked also at the Polish Ministry of Railways. In 1933, he supervised the construction of a measuring laboratory in [[Romania]] for the study of locomotives. From 1934 to 1937, he worked in [[Tehran]] at the construction of the [[Trans-Iranian Railway]]. During the [[Occupation of Poland (1939–1945)|German occupation]], he was engaged in theoretical work at home. Soon after the liberation of Warsaw by Soviet troops, on February 6, 1945, he resumed his work at the Ministry. In 1951, he moved to the newly created [[Railway Institute]], where he organized a laboratory on [[flue gas]] and steam traction. He died on November 3, 1955, in Warsaw.<ref name="Encyklopedia PWN 2001"/>


==Recognition==
==Recognition==
Initially, Horno-Popławski's works were following realistic convention. In the last years of his life, he progressively drifted away from the classical line towards compositions realized from slightly worked rough stones. He was going to his studio every day, it was like his factory work. In this way, he did not have to wait for a sudden surge of creative energy.<ref name="RP"/> His works are now scattered in may Polish cities.
Initially, Horno-Popławski's works were following realistic convention. In the last years of his life, he progressively drifted away from the classical line towards compositions realized from slightly worked rough stones. He was going to his studio every day, it was like his factory work. In this way, he did not have to wait for a sudden surge of creative energy.<ref name="RP"/> His works are now scattered in many Polish cities.


Popławski's works keep to draw attention. In April 2005, an exhibition was held in the "Exhibition Hall" of Moscow titled "Stanislav Horno-Popławski. The road of art - the art of the road." The display inculded more than 50 sculptures of the artist loaned from Polish museums, among which the National Museums of [[Warsaw]], [[National Museum, Kraków|Kraków]], [[National Museum, Poznań|Poznań]], [[National Museum, Szczecin|Szczecin]] or [[National Museum, Gdańsk|Gdańsk]]. The exhibit covered works from the 1950s to the 1970s, up to the last ones created in the 1980s-1990s, in particular pieces from his cycle "The Dream of a Stone" ({{lang-pl|Sen Kamienia}}).
Popławski's works keep to draw attention. In April 2005, an exhibition was held in the "Exhibition Hall" of Moscow titled "Stanislav Horno-Popławski. The road of art - the art of the road." The display included more than 50 sculptures of the artist loaned from Polish museums, among which the National Museums of [[Warsaw]], [[National Museum, Kraków|Kraków]], [[National Museum, Poznań|Poznań]], [[National Museum, Szczecin|Szczecin]] or [[National Museum, Gdańsk|Gdańsk]]. The exhibit covered works from the 1950s to the 1970s, up to the last ones created in the 1980s-1990s, in particular pieces from his cycle "The Dream of a Stone" ({{lang-pl|Sen Kamienia}}).


This cycle is rated as "oneiric, intuitively archetypal, symbolic" representing "metacultural female heads, which he developed until the last days of his life.", as expressed by dr. Dorota Grubba-Thiede, from the Academy of Fine Art Gdańsk, during a lecture performed for the Art Centre of Bydgoszcz ({{lang-pl|Bydgoskie Centrum Sztuki}}) on June 6, 2020.<ref name="DGT">{{cite web |url=https://visitbydgoszcz.pl/pl/dzieje-sie/wszystkie-wydarzenia/szczegolywydarzenia/11880351/-/stanislaw-horno-poplawski-od-poezji-w-kamieniu-do-feminizmu-kontekst-sztuki-ziemi |title=STANISŁAW HORNO-POPŁAWSKI. OD POEZJI W KAMIENIU DO FEMINIZMU. KONTEKST SZTUKI ZIEMI |last=Bydgoskie Centrum Informacji |first= |date=2020 |website=visitbydgoszcz.pl |publisher=Bydgoskie Centrum Informacji |access-date=7 May 2021}}</ref>
This cycle is rated as "oneiric, intuitively archetypal, symbolic" representing "metacultural female heads, which he developed until the last days of his life.", as expressed by dr. Dorota Grubba-Thiede, from the Academy of Fine Art Gdańsk, during a lecture performed for the Art Centre of Bydgoszcz ({{lang-pl|Bydgoskie Centrum Sztuki}}) on June 6, 2020.<ref name="DGT">{{cite web |url=https://visitbydgoszcz.pl/pl/dzieje-sie/wszystkie-wydarzenia/szczegolywydarzenia/11880351/-/stanislaw-horno-poplawski-od-poezji-w-kamieniu-do-feminizmu-kontekst-sztuki-ziemi |title=STANISŁAW HORNO-POPŁAWSKI. OD POEZJI W KAMIENIU DO FEMINIZMU. KONTEKST SZTUKI ZIEMI |last=Bydgoskie Centrum Informacji |date=2020 |website=visitbydgoszcz.pl |publisher=Bydgoskie Centrum Informacji |access-date=7 May 2021}}</ref>


Dr. Dorota Grubba-Thiede had the honor to meet the artist in Sopot in 1997. From this conversation stemmed an album-[[monograph]] edited by prof. Jerzy Malinowski with the cooperation of the sculptor's family, entitled ''Stanisław Horno-Popławski (1902-1997) - The Way of Art - The Art of the Way'', published in 2002 by the State Art Gallery of Sopot.<ref name="DGT"/>
Dr. Dorota Grubba-Thiede had the honor to meet the artist in Sopot in 1997. From this conversation stemmed an album-[[monograph]] edited by prof. Jerzy Malinowski with the cooperation of the sculptor's family, entitled ''Stanisław Horno-Popławski (1902-1997) - The Way of Art - The Art of the Way'', published in 2002 by the State Art Gallery of Sopot.<ref name="DGT"/>
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On July 22, 1952, by decision of the [[President of Poland|President of the Republic of Poland]], the artist was awarded was awarded the Golden [[Cross of Merit (Poland)|Cross of Merit]] ({{lang-pl|Złoty Krzyż Zasługi}}) for his works in the field of culture and art.<ref>{{cite book |last= |first= |date=22 July 1952 |title=M.P. 1952 nr 70 poz. 1078. Zarządzenie o nadaniu Złotego Krzyża Zasługi |url=http://isap.sejm.gov.pl/isap.nsf/download.xsp/WMP19520701078/O/M19521078.pdf |location=Warsaw |publisher=PREZYDENT RZECZYPOSPOLITEJ}}</ref>
On July 22, 1952, by decision of the [[President of Poland|President of the Republic of Poland]], the artist was awarded was awarded the Golden [[Cross of Merit (Poland)|Cross of Merit]] ({{lang-pl|Złoty Krzyż Zasługi}}) for his works in the field of culture and art.<ref>{{cite book |last= |first= |date=22 July 1952 |title=M.P. 1952 nr 70 poz. 1078. Zarządzenie o nadaniu Złotego Krzyża Zasługi |url=http://isap.sejm.gov.pl/isap.nsf/download.xsp/WMP19520701078/O/M19521078.pdf |location=Warsaw |publisher=PREZYDENT RZECZYPOSPOLITEJ}}</ref>


In 1953 he was awarded the State Award Badge, 2nd echelon.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://mbc.malopolska.pl/dlibra/doccontent?id=14200 |title=Dziennik Polski. 1953, nr 173 (22 VII) =nr 2948 |last=Dziennik Polski |first= |date=1953 |website=mbc.malopolska.pl |publisher=Wojewódzka Biblioteka Publiczna w Krakowie |access-date=7 May 2021}}</ref>
In 1953 he was awarded the State Award Badge, 2nd echelon.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://mbc.malopolska.pl/dlibra/doccontent?id=14200 |title=Dziennik Polski. 1953, nr 173 (22 VII) =nr 2948 |last=Dziennik Polski |date=1953 |website=mbc.malopolska.pl |publisher=Wojewódzka Biblioteka Publiczna w Krakowie |access-date=7 May 2021}}</ref>


In 1996, Horno-Popławski was promoted ''doctor [[Honorary degree|honoris causa]]'' of the [[Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń|University in Toruń, UMK]] of Toruń.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.umk.pl/uczelnia/dhc/ |title=Doktorzy Honoris Causa |last=Uniwersytet Mikołaja Kopernika |first= |date=2021 |website=umk.pl |publisher=Uniwersytet Mikołaja Kopernika|access-date=7 May 2021}}</ref>
In 1996, Horno-Popławski was promoted ''doctor [[Honorary degree|honoris causa]]'' of the [[Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń|University in Toruń, UMK]] of Toruń.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.umk.pl/uczelnia/dhc/ |title=Doktorzy Honoris Causa |last=Uniwersytet Mikołaja Kopernika |date=2021 |website=umk.pl |publisher=Uniwersytet Mikołaja Kopernika|access-date=7 May 2021}}</ref>


On April, 25 1997, Horno-Popławski was awarded the title of ''doctor [[Honorary degree|honoris causa]]'' from the Academy of Fine Arts in [[Gdańsk]].<ref>{{cite book |last=Dorota Grubba-Thiede |first=Jerzy Malinowski |date=2002 |title=Stanisław Horno-Popławski. Droga sztuki – sztuka drogi. |url= |location=Sopot |publisher=Państwowa Galeria Sztuki |page=21 |isbn=}}</ref>
On April 25, 1997, Horno-Popławski was awarded the title of ''doctor [[Honorary degree|honoris causa]]'' from the [[Academy of Fine Arts in Gdańsk]].<ref>{{cite book |last=Dorota Grubba-Thiede |first=Jerzy Malinowski |date=2002 |title=Stanisław Horno-Popławski. Droga sztuki – sztuka drogi. |url= |location=Sopot |publisher=Państwowa Galeria Sztuki |page=21 |isbn=}}</ref>


In 2004, the Sopot exhibition „Stanisław Horno-Popławski. Droga sztuki- sztuka drogi” traveled to [[Lviv]] and [[Odessa]].<ref name="sopot"/>
In 2004, the Sopot exhibition „Stanisław Horno-Popławski. Droga sztuki- sztuka drogi” traveled to [[Lviv]] and [[Odessa]].<ref name="sopot"/>


[[Commemorative plaque]]s to his memory have been unveiled in 2005 ([Gdańsk]]) and 2011 ([[Sopot]]).<ref name="GDK"/>
[[Commemorative plaque]]s to his memory have been unveiled in 2005 ([[Gdańsk]]) and 2011 ([[Sopot]]).<ref name="GDK"/>


In 2017, the newly open Bydgoszcz Art Centre ({{lang-pl|Bydgoskie Centrum Sztuki}}) has taken as [[patron]] name "Horno-Popławski". The gallery has organized an exhibition on the artist in February-March 2020.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://bcs.bydgoszcz.pl/aktualnosci/stanislaw-horno-poplawski |title=Stanisław Horno-Popławski |last=BCS |first= |date=2020 |website=bcs.bydgoszcz.pl |publisher=BCS|access-date=8 May 2021}}</ref>
In 2017, the newly open Bydgoszcz Art Centre ({{lang-pl|Bydgoskie Centrum Sztuki}}) has taken as [[patron]] name "Horno-Popławski". The gallery at 47 [[Jagiellońska street in Bydgoszcz|Jagiellońska street]] has organized an exhibition on the artist in February–March 2020.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://bcs.bydgoszcz.pl/aktualnosci/stanislaw-horno-poplawski |title=Stanisław Horno-Popławski |last=BCS |date=2020 |website=bcs.bydgoszcz.pl |publisher=BCS|access-date=8 May 2021}}</ref>


==Notable works==
==Notable works==
His works can be seen in many museums in Poland and around the world (e.g. [[Kraków]], [[Poznań]], [[Bydgoszcz]], [[Berlin]], [[Moscow]], [[Tbilisi]]).<ref name="plus"/>
His works can be seen in many museums in Poland and around the world (e.g. [[Kraków]], [[Poznań]], [[Bydgoszcz]], [[Berlin]], [[Moscow]], [[Tbilisi]]).<ref name="plus"/> Furthermore, many other works are in the hands of private collectors in [[Norway]], [[Canada]], [[Israel]] or [[Japan]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://wspominajbydgoszcz.blogspot.com/2017/04/horno-specjalista-od-kamienia.html |title=Horno - specjalista od kamienia |last=Konik|first=Roman |date=8 April 2017 |website=wspominajbydgoszcz.blogspot.com |publisher=wspominaj.bydgoszcz|access-date=8 May 2021}}</ref>


* Portrait of Antosię from Kalin (1928)
* Portrait of Antosię from Kalin (1928)
One of the first piece of art realized by Horno-Popławski. It was last seen in an exhibition at the [[Branicki Palace, Białystok|Branicki Palace of Białystok]] after [[WWII]].<ref>{{cite web |url=https://polskatimes.pl/wtorkowy-poranny-zachodza-w-glowe-gdzie-podziala-sie-slynna-glowa/ar/7299483 |title=Wtorkowy Poranny: Zachodzą w głowę, gdzie podziała się słynna głowa |last=Mikulicz |first=Tomasz |date=7 September 2015 |website=polskatimes.pl |publisher=Polska Press Sp. z o. o.|access-date=8 May 2021}}</ref>
One of the first piece of art realized by Horno-Popławski. It was last seen in an exhibition at the [[Branicki Palace, Białystok|Branicki Palace of Białystok]] after [[WWII]].<ref>{{cite web |url=https://polskatimes.pl/wtorkowy-poranny-zachodza-w-glowe-gdzie-podziala-sie-slynna-glowa/ar/7299483 |title=Wtorkowy Poranny: Zachodzą w głowę, gdzie podziała się słynna głowa |last=Mikulicz |first=Tomasz |date=7 September 2015 |website=polskatimes.pl |publisher=Polska Press Sp. z o. o.|access-date=8 May 2021}}</ref>
* Hadasa, Tehura (1930s, 1960s)
* Hadasa, Tehura (1930s, 1960s)
[[File:Praczki Bialystok.jpg|thumb|Washerwomen, Bialystok]]
* Biała głowa ("White head") (1980)
* Biała głowa ("White head") (1980)
* Monument to [[bishop]] Władysław Bandurski in the [[Vilnius Cathedral|cathedral]] crypt of [[Vilnius]] (1938)<ref name="GDK"/>
* Monument to [[bishop]] Władysław Bandurski in the [[Vilnius Cathedral|cathedral]] crypt of [[Vilnius]] (1938)<ref name="GDK"/>
* Altar statues at the [[Church of Jesus the Redeemer, Vilnius|Church of Jesus the Redeemer, Vilnius]] in [[Antakalnis]], near Vilnius (1933-1934)<ref>{{cite book |last=Giniūnienė |first=Asta |date=2019|url=https://etalpykla.lituanistikadb.lt/object/LT-LDB-0001:J.04~2019~1594801651402/J.04~2019~1594801651402.pdf |title=Excellentia virtutum: šventieji. Lietuvos kultūroje |location=Vilnius |publisher=Kultūros paveldo departamentas prie Kultūros ministerijos |pages=166|isbn=9786098231137}}</ref>
* Altar statues at the [[Church of Jesus the Redeemer, Vilnius]] in [[Antakalnis]], near Vilnius (1933-1934)<ref>{{cite book |last=Giniūnienė |first=Asta |date=2019|url=https://etalpykla.lituanistikadb.lt/object/LT-LDB-0001:J.04~2019~1594801651402/J.04~2019~1594801651402.pdf |title=Excellentia virtutum: šventieji. Lietuvos kultūroje |location=Vilnius |publisher=Kultūros paveldo departamentas prie Kultūros ministerijos |pages=166|isbn=9786098231137}}</ref>

* Sculpture ensemble ''Praczki'' ("[[Washerwoman|Washerwomen]]") in [[Białystok]] (1938)
* Sculpture ensemble ''Praczki'' ("[[Washerwoman|Washerwomen]]") in [[Białystok]] (1938)
The work was created in [[Toruń]] in 1938, commissioned by the then [[Białystok Voivodeship (1945–1975)|Białystok Voivodeship]]:<ref>{{cite web |url=https://bialystok.naszemiasto.pl/praczki-z-plant/ar/c2-2528746 |title=Praczki z Plant |last=Ewika |first= |date=26 November 2014 |website=bialystok.naszemiasto.pl |publisher=Polska Press Sp. z o. o. |access-date=7 May 2021}}</ref> it is the only profane work of Stanisław Horno-Popławski in the city.<ref name="poranny"/>
The work was created in [[Toruń]] in 1938, commissioned by the then [[Białystok Voivodeship (1945–1975)|Białystok Voivodeship]]:<ref>{{cite web |url=https://bialystok.naszemiasto.pl/praczki-z-plant/ar/c2-2528746 |title=Praczki z Plant |last=Ewika |date=26 November 2014 |website=bialystok.naszemiasto.pl |publisher=Polska Press Sp. z o. o. |access-date=7 May 2021}}</ref> it is the only profane work of Stanisław Horno-Popławski in the city.<ref name="poranny"/>
In 1945, it was placed over one of the ponds of the "Planty Park".<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.info.bialystok.pl/parki/planty/obiekt.php |title=Park Planty |last=|first= |date=2021 |website=info.bialystok.pl |publisher=info.bialystok |access-date=7 May 2021}}</ref>
In 1945, it was placed over one of the ponds of the "Planty Park".<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.info.bialystok.pl/parki/planty/obiekt.php |title=Park Planty |last=|first= |date=2021 |website=info.bialystok.pl |publisher=info.bialystok |access-date=7 May 2021}}</ref>

In 1978, the monument was restored, cleaned and patched with cement. In 1992, the sculpture was placed in the "Voivodeship Heritage list of Monuments".<ref name="poranny">{{cite web |url=https://poranny.pl/praczki-beda-podgladane/ar/5018276 |title=Praczki będą podglądane |last=tz |first= |date=24 June 2003 |website=poranny.pl |publisher=Polska Press Sp. z o. o. |access-date=7 May 2021}}</ref> In 2000, the head of one of the statue was broken and quickly repaired. In March 2003, the monument was devastated again: one of the three figures was halved. In July 2003, the sculpture was restored anew. A scale reproduction of "Praczki" is present in one of Gdańsk museums.<ref name="poranny"/>


In 1978, the monument was restored, cleaned and patched with cement. In 1992, the sculpture was placed in the "Voivodeship Heritage list of Monuments".<ref name="poranny">{{cite web |url=https://poranny.pl/praczki-beda-podgladane/ar/5018276 |title=Praczki będą podglądane |last=tz |date=24 June 2003 |website=poranny.pl |publisher=Polska Press Sp. z o. o. |access-date=7 May 2021}}</ref> In 2000, the head of one of the statue was broken and quickly repaired. In March 2003, the monument was devastated again: one of the three figures was halved. In July 2003, the sculpture was restored anew. A scale reproduction of "Praczki" is present in one of Gdańsk museums.<ref name="poranny"/>
[[File:Stanisław Horno-Popławski pomnik Adama Mickiewicza Pałac Kultury i Nauki.JPG|thumb|Monument to [[Adam Mickiewicz]] in front of the Palace of Culture and Science in Warsaw]]
* Statues at [[St. Roch's Church, Białystok|St. Roch's Church]] in [[Białystok]] (late 1940s)
* Statues at [[St. Roch's Church, Białystok|St. Roch's Church]] in [[Białystok]] (late 1940s)
[[Christ]] at the main altar, [[Madonna_(art)#Statues|Mother of God with Child]] at the side altar and [[Good Shepherd|Christ the Good Shepherd]] outside the church.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://bialystok.naszemiasto.pl/praczki-z-plant/ar/c2-2528746 |title=Praczki z Plant |last=Ewika |first= |date=26 November 2014 |website=bialystok.naszemiasto.pl |publisher=Polska Press Sp. z o. o. |access-date=8 May 2021}}</ref>
[[Christ]] at the main altar, [[Madonna (art)#Statues|Mother of God with Child]] at the side altar and [[Good Shepherd|Christ the Good Shepherd]] outside the church.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://bialystok.naszemiasto.pl/praczki-z-plant/ar/c2-2528746 |title=Praczki z Plant |last=Ewika |date=26 November 2014 |website=bialystok.naszemiasto.pl |publisher=Polska Press Sp. z o. o. |access-date=8 May 2021}}</ref>


* Monument to [[Adam Mickiewicz]] in front of the Palace of Culture and Science in Warsaw (1955)<ref>{{cite book |last=Grzesiuk-Olszewska |first=Irena |date=2003 |title=Warszawska rzeźba pomnikowa. |location=Warszawa|publisher=Wydawnictwo Neriton |page=112 |isbn=8388973592}}</ref>
* Monument to [[Adam Mickiewicz]] in front of the Palace of Culture and Science in Warsaw (1955)<ref>{{cite book |last=Grzesiuk-Olszewska |first=Irena |date=2003 |title=Warszawska rzeźba pomnikowa. |location=Warszawa|publisher=Wydawnictwo Neriton |page=112 |isbn=8388973592}}</ref>
* "Kutno" (1967)<ref name="isuu">{{cite book |last= |first= |date=23 October 2018 |title=Rzeźba i Formy Przestrzenne |location=Warszawa |publisher=Desa Unicum |pages=74-75, 78-79|isbn=838811574X}}</ref>
* "Kutno" (1967)<ref name="isuu">{{cite book |last= |first= |date=23 October 2018 |title=Rzeźba i Formy Przestrzenne |location=Warszawa |publisher=Desa Unicum |pages=74–75, 78–79|isbn=978-8388115745}}</ref>
* "Maria Konopnicka na ławce" (1968)<ref name="isuu"/>
* "Maria Konopnicka na ławce" (1968)<ref name="isuu"/>

* Monument to [[Henryk Sienkiewicz]] in [[Bydgoszcz]] (1968)
* Monument to [[Henryk Sienkiewicz]] in [[Bydgoszcz]] (1968)
The original monument dates back to 1927, the first elevated to Sienkiewicz in [[Poland]]. It was funded via a Committee composed of teachers and cultural activists of Bydgoszcz, led by [[Witold Bełza]].<ref>{{cite book |last=Perlińska |first=Anna |date=1997 |title=Zbliża się jeszcze jeden jubileusz... Kalendarz Bydgoski |location=Bydgoszcz |publisher=Towarzystwo Miłośników Miasta Bydgoszczy |pages=232-235 |isbn=}}</ref> The initial statue was made out of bronze by the artist [[Konstanty Laszczka]].<ref name="GE">{{cite book |last=Gliwiński |first=Eugeniusz|date=1998 |title=Bydgoskie pomniki naszych czasów cz. 2. Kalendarz Bydgoski |location=Bydgoszcz |publisher=Towarzystwo Miłośników Miasta Bydgoszczy |pages=12, 95-99 |isbn=}}</ref> The official unveiling happened on July 31, 1927, by the President of Poland, [[Ignacy Mościcki]].<ref>{{cite book |last=Podgóreczny |first=Józef|date=1968|title=Pomnik Henryka Sienkiewicza z przygodami. Kalendarz Bydgoski |location=Bydgoszcz |publisher=Towarzystwo Miłośników Miasta Bydgoszczy |pages=86-89|isbn=}}</ref> The statue was destroyed by the Nazis in the first days of the occupation, in September 1939.<ref name="GE"/>
The original monument dates back to 1927, the first elevated to Sienkiewicz in [[Poland]]. It was funded via a Committee composed of teachers and cultural activists of Bydgoszcz, led by [[Witold Bełza]].<ref>{{cite book |last=Perlińska |first=Anna |date=1997 |title=Zbliża się jeszcze jeden jubileusz... Kalendarz Bydgoski |location=Bydgoszcz |publisher=Towarzystwo Miłośników Miasta Bydgoszczy |pages=232–235 |isbn=}}</ref> The initial statue was made out of bronze by the artist [[Konstanty Laszczka]].<ref name="GE">{{cite book |last=Gliwiński |first=Eugeniusz|date=1998 |title=Bydgoskie pomniki naszych czasów cz. 2. Kalendarz Bydgoski |location=Bydgoszcz |publisher=Towarzystwo Miłośników Miasta Bydgoszczy |pages=12, 95–99 |isbn=}}</ref> The official unveiling happened on July 31, 1927, by the President of Poland, [[Ignacy Mościcki]].<ref>{{cite book |last=Podgóreczny |first=Józef|date=1968|title=Pomnik Henryka Sienkiewicza z przygodami. Kalendarz Bydgoski |location=Bydgoszcz |publisher=Towarzystwo Miłośników Miasta Bydgoszczy |pages=86–89|isbn=}}</ref> The statue was destroyed by the Nazis in the first days of the occupation, in September 1939.<ref name="GE"/>


The new monument, made of [[granite]] by Horno-Popławski is located on the very site of its predecessor. The unveiling ceremony took place on May 18, 1968.<ref name="GE"/>
The new monument, made of [[granite]] by Horno-Popławski is located on the very site of its predecessor, in today's [[Jan Kochanowski Park in Bydgoszcz|Jan Kochanowski Park]]. The unveiling ceremony took place on May 18, 1968.<ref name="GE"/>


* Monument to [[Maria Konopnicka]] in [[Kalisz]] (1969)
* Monument to [[Maria Konopnicka]] in [[Kalisz]] (1969)
* Monument to [[Karol Szymanowski]] in [[Słupsk]] (1972)
* Monument to [[Karol Szymanowski]] in [[Słupsk]] (1972)

* Monument to [[Jan Kiliński]] in Słupsk (1973)
* Monument to [[Jan Kiliński]] in Słupsk (1973)
The statue of Jan Kiliński was funded by the "Słupsk [[craft|Craftsmanship]] association". The monument is made of stone and represents one of the leaders of the [[Kościuszko Uprising]] on a pedestal, by the riverside boulevard over the [[Słupia]] River, in the vicinity of the local seat of the Craft [[Guild]].
The statue of Jan Kiliński was funded by the "Słupsk [[Craft]]smanship association". The monument is made of stone and represents one of the leaders of the [[Kościuszko Uprising]] on a pedestal, by the riverside boulevard over the [[Słupia]] River, in the vicinity of the local seat of the Craft [[Guild]].
[[File:Bdg Pomnik Nieznanego Powstańca Wlkp - lato.jpg|thumb|Monument to the Unknown Polish Insurgent]]

* Monument to [[Julian Marchlewski]] in [[Włocławek]] 1964)
* Monument to [[Julian Marchlewski]] in [[Włocławek]] 1964)
Julian Marchlewski was born in Włocławek in 1866. The unveiling of Horno-Popławski's monument occured on May 1, 1964, with the participation of Zofia, Marchlewski's daughter.<ref>{{cite book |last=Richard B. Day |first=Daniel Gaido |date=2011|title=Discovering Imperialism: Social Democracy to World War I |location=Bydgoszcz |publisher=BRILL |page=301|isbn=9789004201569}}</ref> Built of granite, the five-meter-high monument was in the [[Socialist realism|socialist realist style]]. On the pedestal was an inscription "To Julian Marchlewski, the Great Internationale Patriot, Society of Włocławek and Bydgoszcz. May 1, 1964".<ref name="AKOKH">{{cite book |last=Agnieszka Kowalewska |first=Olga Krut-Horonziak |date=2004 |title=Ulice i Pomniki Starego Włocławka |location=Włocławek |publisher=Oficyna Wydawnicza Włocławskiego Towarzystwa Naukowego |pages=23-25|isbn=838811574X}}</ref>
Julian Marchlewski was born in Włocławek in 1866. The unveiling of Horno-Popławski's monument occurred on May 1, 1964, with the participation of Zofia, Marchlewski's daughter.<ref>{{cite book |last=Richard B. Day |first=Daniel Gaido |date=2011|title=Discovering Imperialism: Social Democracy to World War I |location=Bydgoszcz |publisher=BRILL |page=301|isbn=9789004201569}}</ref> Built of granite, the five-meter-high monument was in the [[Socialist realism|socialist realist style]]. On the pedestal was an inscription "To Julian Marchlewski, the Great Internationale Patriot, Society of Włocławek and Bydgoszcz. May 1, 1964".<ref name="AKOKH">{{cite book |last=Agnieszka Kowalewska |first=Olga Krut-Horonziak |date=2004 |title=Ulice i Pomniki Starego Włocławka |location=Włocławek |publisher=Oficyna Wydawnicza Włocławskiego Towarzystwa Naukowego |pages=23–25|isbn=838811574X}}</ref>


On January 26, 1990, as part of the [[decommunization]], the statue was dismantled and moved to the nearby [[Jerzy Bojańczyk's Brewery in Włocławek|Bojańczyk brewery]].<ref name="AKOKH"/> On June 9, 1999, the figure without its pedestal was transfered to the [[Kozłówka Palace|Zamoyski Palace]] in [[Kozłówka, Lublin Voivodeship|Kozłówka]] and joined the Art Gallery of Socialism. The inscription plaque is still in the storage of the Włocławek Museum of the Kujawy and Dobrzyń lands ({{lang-pl|Muzeum Ziemi Kujawskiej i Dobrzyńskiej we Włocławku}}).
On January 26, 1990, as part of the [[decommunization]], the statue was dismantled and moved to the nearby [[Jerzy Bojańczyk's Brewery in Włocławek|Bojańczyk brewery]].<ref name="AKOKH"/> On June 9, 1999, the figure without its pedestal was transferred to the [[Kozłówka Palace|Zamoyski Palace]] in [[Kozłówka, Lublin Voivodeship|Kozłówka]] and joined the Art Gallery of Socialism. The inscription plaque is still in the storage of the Włocławek Museum of the Kujawy and Dobrzyń lands ({{lang-pl|Muzeum Ziemi Kujawskiej i Dobrzyńskiej we Włocławku}}).


* Design of the monument to the Unknown [[Greater Poland uprising (1918–1919)|Greater Poland Insurgent]] in Bydgoszcz (1986)
* Design of the monument to the Unknown [[Greater Poland uprising (1918–1919)|Greater Poland Insurgent]] in Bydgoszcz (1986)
Line 172: Line 172:
==Gallery==
==Gallery==
<gallery mode="packed-hover" heights="200">
<gallery mode="packed-hover" heights="200">
File:Palaimintųjų relikvijų koplyčia 6.jpg|Monument to bishop Władysław Bandurski in the [[Vilnius Cathedral]] crypt (1938)
File:Maksymilian Ational Museum-Kraków
File:Kosciol Sw Rocha Bialystok Christ main altar.jpg|Christ, main altar, [[St. Roch's Church, Białystok]] (late 1940s)
File:Białystok kościół św. Rocha 05.jpg|Mother of God with Child, side altar, St. Roch's Church, Białystok (late 1940s)
File:Białystok, zespół kościoła św. Rocha, 1927-1946 42.jpg|Christ the Good Shepherd, St. Roch's Church, Białystok (late 1940s)
File:Bdg pomnikSienkiewicza 07-2013.jpg|Monument to Henryk Sienkiewicz, Bydgoszcz (1968)
File:Konopnicka Kalisz Horno-Popławski.jpg|Monument to Maria Konopnicka, Kalisz (1969)
File:Szymanowski slupsk.JPG|Monument to Karol Szymanowski, Słupsk (1972)
File:Pomnik Jana Kilińskiego w Słupsku.jpg|Monument to Jan Kiliński, Słupsk (1972)
File:Julian MaechlewskizWloclawka.jpg|Monument to Julian Marchlewski, Zamoyski Palace in Kozłówka (1964)
File:Horno poplawski sculpt.jpg|Sculpture in the Botanic Garden of Bydgoszcz (early 1980s)
File:Park Oliwski – rzeźba Tors.JPG|Torso, [[Oliwa|Park Oliwski]]
</gallery>
</gallery>


== See also ==
== See also ==
{{portal bar|Biography|Poland}}
{{Commons category|Stanisław Horno-Popławski}}
{{Commons category|Stanisław Horno-Popławski}}
* [[Palace of Culture and Science]]
* [[Palace of Culture and Science]]
* [[Gdańsk]]
* [[Botanic Garden of Casimir the Great University, Bydgoszcz]]
* [[Botanic Garden of Casimir the Great University, Bydgoszcz]]
* [[Vilnius University]]
* [[Vilnius University]]
Line 184: Line 194:


== References ==
== References ==
{{Reflist}}
{{reflist|30em}}


== External links ==
== External links ==
* {{inlang|pl}} [https://culture.pl/pl/tworca/stanislaw-horno-poplawski Horno-Popławski on the Polish site culture.pl]
* {{inlang|pl}} [https://culture.pl/pl/tworca/stanislaw-horno-poplawski Horno-Popławski on the Polish site culture.pl]
* {{inlang|pl}} [https://bcs.bydgoszcz.pl/ Bydgoszcz Art Centre]
* {{inlang|pl}} [https://bcs.bydgoszcz.pl/ Bydgoszcz Art Centre]


== Bibliography ==
== Bibliography ==
Line 196: Line 206:
* {{inlang|pl}} Ewa Toniak, Olbrzymki. Kobiety i socrealizm, wyd. Korporacja Ha!art, Kraków 2008
* {{inlang|pl}} Ewa Toniak, Olbrzymki. Kobiety i socrealizm, wyd. Korporacja Ha!art, Kraków 2008
* {{inlang|pl}} {{cite book |last=Konik |first=Roman |date=2016 |title=Stanisław Horno-Popławski. Myślenie kamieniem. |location=Wrocław |publisher=Oficyna Wydawnicza Atut |page= |isbn=}}
* {{inlang|pl}} {{cite book |last=Konik |first=Roman |date=2016 |title=Stanisław Horno-Popławski. Myślenie kamieniem. |location=Wrocław |publisher=Oficyna Wydawnicza Atut |page= |isbn=}}
* {{in lang|pl}} {{cite book |last=Turwid |first=Marian |date=1980 |title=Galeria Rzeźby Stanisława Horno-Popławskiego. Kalendarz Bydgoski |url= |location=Bydgoszcz |publisher=Towarzystwo Miłośników Miasta Bydgoszczy |pages=59–62 |isbn=}}
* {{inlang|pl}} Materiały archiwalne Pracowni Plastyki Współczesnej Instytutu Sztuki Polskiej Akademii Nauk w Warszawie


{{Bydgoszcz personages}}
{{Bydgoszcz personages}}


{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Horno-Popławski, Horno-Popławski}}

[[:Category:1902 births]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Horno-Poplawski, Stanislaw}}
[[:Category:1997 deaths]]
[[:Category:20th-century male artists]]
[[Category:1902 births]]
[[:Category:People from Sopot]]
[[Category:1997 deaths]]
[[:Category:Polish educational theorists]]
[[Category:20th-century male artists]]
[[:Category:Polish sculptors]]
[[Category:People from Sopot]]
[[:Category:Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń faculty]]
[[Category:Polish educational theorists]]
[[:Category:People from Kutaisi]]
[[Category:Polish sculptors]]
[[:Category:Academy of Fine Arts in Gdańsk]]
[[Category:Polish male sculptors]]
[[:Category:Artists associated with Białystok]]
[[Category:Academic staff of Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń]]
[[:Category:Recipients of the Gold Cross of Merit (Poland)]]
[[Category:People from Kutaisi]]
[[:Category:Recipients of the State Award Badge (Poland)]]
[[Category:Academic staff of the Academy of Fine Arts in Gdańsk]]
[[:Category:Prisoners of Oflag II-C]]
[[Category:Artists from Białystok]]
[[:Category:Vilnius University alumni]]
[[Category:Recipients of the Gold Cross of Merit (Poland)]]
[[:Category:Academy of Fine Arts in Gdańsk]]
[[Category:Recipients of the State Award Badge (Poland)]]
[[Category:Prisoners of Oflag II-C]]
[[Category:Vilnius University alumni]]

Latest revision as of 08:11, 2 August 2023

Stanisław Horno-Popławski
Monument to Henryk Sienkiewicz, Bydgoszcz (1968)
Monument to Henryk Sienkiewicz, Bydgoszcz (1968)
Born(1902-07-14)July 14, 1902
DiedJuly 6, 1997(1997-07-06) (aged 94)
Resting placeGdańsk, Poland
NationalityRussian,  Russian Empire Polish,  Poland
AwardsGolden Cross of Merit

Stanisław Horno-Popławski (1902-1997) was a Russian-Polish painter, sculptor and pedagogue.

Life

[edit]

Stanisław's mother was Maria-Natalie-Agripina Popłavskaya (‹See Tfd›Russian: Мария-Натали-Агрипина Поплавская), née Czeczott (1869-1935).

In March 1891, she married Bartłomiej Józef Popławski (1861-1931) a Russian-Polish railway engineer (1861-1931) who later became president of the Warsaw Shipping and Trade Society. Bartłomiej had just been transferred the same year to Crimea (then part of the Russian Empire), due to poor health and was involved in the construction of the Feodosia-Dzhankoy railway line (1891-1895). A year later in Feodosia, they had a daughter Maria Yadviga (1892-1930s). Stanisław was born on July 14, 1902, in Kutaisi, Georgia, then part of the Russian Empire.[1]

In 1908, the family left Georgia for Moscow where the young Stanisław began his art studies in the late 1910s. While visiting museums and galleries in the Russian capital, he was fascinated by painting. In 1921, Stanisław lived briefly in Vilnius, but soon they transferred from Soviet Union to motherland Poland in 1922.[1]

Tadeusz Pruszkowski ca 1930s

In Warsaw, he resumed his education from 1923 to 1931, at the Warsaw School of Fine Arts under the tutoring of Tadeusz Pruszkowski and Tadeusz Breyer. After graduation, he traveled to France and Italy.[2]

In 1931, Horno-Popławski began his teaching career at the Faculty of Fine Arts of the Stephen Báthory University in Vilnius,[3] today's part of the Vilnius University. He was a member of several associations:

  • the Association of Polish Visual Artists with its periodical official publication "Forma", led by Władysław Strzemiński;[4]
  • the Vilnius Society of Plastic Artists
  • the Warsaw Trade Union of Artists and Sculptors.

In 1935, her mother Maria died in Italy. She was buried in the family vault in the Powązki Cemetery in Warsaw, together with her husband, who died four years earlier.[5]

Stanisław took part to the Second World War from its beginning in September 1939 and got captured. He spent the rest of the conflict in the POW camp for Polish officers "Oflag II-C" located in Woldenberg (today Dobiegniew, Lubusz Voivodeship). During his detention, he realized several religious statues placed in the camp chapel.[3]

A the end of the war, once released from the POW camp, he worked for a year as a professor at the School of Fine Arts of Białystok. It is in the city that he found back his wife and his children he was separated from since 1939.[6]

From 1946 to 1949, he was a teacher at the Faculty of Fine Arts of the Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń. In 1948, he received the second prize in a competition for the design of a monument to Adam Mickiewicz in Poznań.[2]

Ferber house, Gdańsk

In 1949, he moved to Sopot then Gdańsk at the Academy of Fine Arts, where he even served in the position of the Dean of the Faculty of Sculpture in 1949-1950 and in 1956–1960. Between 1951 and 1954, Stanisław was the main expert in the reconstruction project of the Old Town of Gdańsk, designing houses and sculptural decorations. He worked more particularly on:[6]

  • the Ferber House at 28 Długa street;
  • the house at 38 Długa street;
  • the tenement details at 43 Długi Targ square.

The artist's face can be found on the keystone of the vaulted afacade at 1 Pończoszników street.[6]

He took part in exhibitions of National Fine Arts in Warsaw and received a number of high awards in the field of sculpture. In 1952, he took part in the soviet sponsored exhibition "100 Years of Realism in Poland" (‹See Tfd›Russian: 100 лет "реализма" в Польше) in Moscow.

As an outcome of a 1954 competition, he was granted the realization of a monument to Adam Mickiewicz placed in 1955 in the front yard of the "Palace of Culture and Science" in Warsaw.[7]

At the end of the 1950s, inspired by archaic Greek and Etruscan sculptures, Horno-Popławski undertook new formal searches using the expression of natural shapes of "fieldstones", which gave him a high position among the 20th century sculptors.

Stanisław's works, during the post-war years, were exhibited in Poland, in Europe (Paris (1961), Berlin (1971), Bucharest (1972), Oslo and Essen (1974)), as well as in Asia (New Delhi, Kolkata, Bombay, Beijing).[2] He won recognition for his merits in favour of the Polish Culture (1962, 1965, 1995) and was even awarded a gold medal at the "Contemporary Art Biennale" in Florence in 1969.[1] He made two trips to his Georgian roots (1967, 1978), where two of his works are displayed (Kutaisi State Historical Museum and Niko Pirosmani Museum in Tbilisi).[6]

From 1979 to 1983, thanks to Marian Turwid's suggestion,[3] the sculptor moved to a small house in the botanical garden of Bydgoszcz, looking for a city "whose character guarantees the possibility of quiet creative work, and whose atmosphere is devoid of nervous hustle and bustle, which absorbs and disturbs focused actions".[8] On July 22 of this year, then the official holiday in the Polish People's Republic, Horno-Popławski opened in the city garden an open-air gallery of his compositions, which he donated. The collection included the following works: "Partisan", "Memories of Bagrati", "Morena", "Copernicus", "Tadeusz Breyer", "Tehura", "Gruzinka", "Waiting", "Szota Rustawelli", "Colchida", "Żal", "Pogodna", "Beethoven" and "Hair".[2] Unfortunately, most of these works have been stolen.[9]

After this spell in Bydgoszcz, Stanisław moved back to Sopot where he had his atelier set up near the Grand Hotel.[9]

Hi was married to P. Inga Stanisława, a sculptor as well.[10] They had several children, among whom a daughter, P. Jolanta Ronczewska who married in 1960 Polish actor Ryszard Ronczewski.[11]

Stanisław Horno-Popławski died on June 6, 1997, in Sopot.

Family

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Popławski branch

[edit]
  • Bartłomiej Józef Popławski (‹See Tfd›Russian: Варфоломей-Иосиф Иванович Поплавский), Stanisław's father, was born in 1861 in Chita,: his grandfather, a Polish noble, had been exiled to a hard labor settlement in Siberia for having participated in January Uprising.[12] Graduated in 1887 as an engineer from the St. Petersburg State Transport University, he worked for ten years on the construction of many railway lines in Russian Siberia (Trans-Siberian Railway, Chinese-Eastern Railway).[13] He was then posted until 1914 as the manager of the "Society of Warsaw Access Railways" and "Director of the Warsaw Society of Shipping and Trade";[14] as such, he directed the construction of the narrow-gauge railway from "Warszawa Most" to Jabłonna II (1898).[15] At the end of WWI, he returned to Warsaw with his family. He died there on July 4, 1931.
  • Stanisław's grandfather, Ivan Varfolomeevich Popławski (1822-1893) (‹See Tfd›Russian: Иван Варфоломеевич Поплавский), was the vice-governor of the Transbaikal region, a member of the Irkutsk City Duma.[16] He died on October 31, 1893, in St. Petersburg.[17]
  • Stanisław's grandmother, Yadviga Iosifovna Poplavskaya (‹See Tfd›Russian: Ядвига Иосифовна Поплавская), née Ventskovskaya (‹See Tfd›Russian: Венцковская) (1837-1924), was a Polish noblewoman, owner of a tea plantation in Gudauta, Georgia, and of a match factory, "Sun" ("Солнце") in Chudovo, Novgorod province. Together with Ivan, they had 7 children.[16]

Stanisław's uncles were:

Piłsudski c. 1899
  • Jan Popławski (‹See Tfd›Russian: Иван Иванович Поплавский) (1859–1935), a doctor of medical sciences in internal and nervous diseases. In 1900, he was the head of the medical unit for the mentally ill at the "Saint Nicholas hospital" together with the chief physician Otton Czeczott.

During 5 months they hid Józef Piłsudski (1867–1935) feigning mental illness, who has been sent for a medical examination after his arrest in Łódź. Using their official positions, Jan, together with other physicians (Władysław Mazurkiewicz, Aleksander Sulkiewicz and others) helped Piłsudski to escape to Galicia. After this action, Popławski had to leave his post: he then took up a private practice as a physician. Jan enlarged successfully the art collection started by his father. His gathering was focused on Dutch and Flemish painting and the Italian Quattrocento. In 1924, at the personal invitation of Józef Piłsudski, Jan left Leningrad at the age of 65 for Warsaw to attend his seriously ill brother Bartholomew-Joseph, and stayed there. Popławski's collection is today the pride of the National Museum in Warsaw, including, among others, works from Rubens, Van Dyck, Rembrandt, Tintoretto, Jordaens or Jan Steen.[18] Widowed in 1933, Jan moved to a rented apartment at 16 Chłodna street in Warsaw, where his private medical practice received a large high-ranking clientele, in particular Józef Piłsudski. He died in his flat in 1935.

  • Iosif Ivanovich Popławski (1865–1943), a lawyer, legal representative of the Board of the Joint Stock Company of the Chinese Eastern Railway and director of the family match factory "Солнце" in Chudovo. He died in 1943 in USSR.

Czeczott branch

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Otton Czeczott in 1906
  • Stanisław's grandfather was the psychiatrist Otton Dionizy Antoni Czeczott (‹See Tfd›Russian: Оттон Антонович Чечотт (1842-1924). Coming from a noble family of Mogilev, Russian Empire (today's Belarus), he graduated from the "Imperial Medical-Surgical Academy" of Saint-Petersburg in 1866. From 1881 to 1901, he was a senior and then chief doctor of the "Saint Nicholas hospital". He left his position after Józef Piłsudski's escaping from his institution. In 1922, adopting Polish citizenship, he emigrated with his family to Poland. He died on October 8, 1924, and was buried in the Powązki Cemetery in Warsaw.[5]

Stanisław's uncles were:

  • Henryk Czeczott (‹See Tfd›Russian: Генрих Оттонович Чечотт) (1875–1928), an engineer graduated from the Saint Petersburg Mining University in 1900. In 1914, he was sent to the US to study the senior course of the enrichment department of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology under the lead of Robert Hallowell Richards. He set up a gold mine in the Altai Mountains and managed it until the nationalization in 1918.[19] On his initiative, Russia's first department of mineral processing was established at the Mining Institute, which after October Revolution, was transformed into the "Institute of Mechanical Processing of Mineral Resources" (‹See Tfd›Russian: Механобр) under his direction. In 1922, he moved to Poland, where he became a professor at the Krakow Mining Academy. In 1928, during a scientific trip to Germany and Spain, he died on June 6, 1928, in Freiberg from blood poisoning. His body was transported back to Poland and buried at the Evangelical Cemetery in Warsaw.[20]
  • Albert Czeczott (‹See Tfd›Russian: Альберт Оттонович Чечотт) (1873–1955), graduated in 1897, from the "Saint Petersburg Institute of Railway Engineers", where in 1914, he became a professor. After the October Revolution and the following Civil War, he emigrated in 1922, to live in Poland. From 1927 onwards, he taught at the Warsaw Polytechnic Institute and in 1928 he worked also at the Polish Ministry of Railways. In 1933, he supervised the construction of a measuring laboratory in Romania for the study of locomotives. From 1934 to 1937, he worked in Tehran at the construction of the Trans-Iranian Railway. During the German occupation, he was engaged in theoretical work at home. Soon after the liberation of Warsaw by Soviet troops, on February 6, 1945, he resumed his work at the Ministry. In 1951, he moved to the newly created Railway Institute, where he organized a laboratory on flue gas and steam traction. He died on November 3, 1955, in Warsaw.[20]

Recognition

[edit]

Initially, Horno-Popławski's works were following realistic convention. In the last years of his life, he progressively drifted away from the classical line towards compositions realized from slightly worked rough stones. He was going to his studio every day, it was like his factory work. In this way, he did not have to wait for a sudden surge of creative energy.[12] His works are now scattered in many Polish cities.

Popławski's works keep to draw attention. In April 2005, an exhibition was held in the "Exhibition Hall" of Moscow titled "Stanislav Horno-Popławski. The road of art - the art of the road." The display included more than 50 sculptures of the artist loaned from Polish museums, among which the National Museums of Warsaw, Kraków, Poznań, Szczecin or Gdańsk. The exhibit covered works from the 1950s to the 1970s, up to the last ones created in the 1980s-1990s, in particular pieces from his cycle "The Dream of a Stone" (Polish: Sen Kamienia).

This cycle is rated as "oneiric, intuitively archetypal, symbolic" representing "metacultural female heads, which he developed until the last days of his life.", as expressed by dr. Dorota Grubba-Thiede, from the Academy of Fine Art Gdańsk, during a lecture performed for the Art Centre of Bydgoszcz (Polish: Bydgoskie Centrum Sztuki) on June 6, 2020.[10]

Dr. Dorota Grubba-Thiede had the honor to meet the artist in Sopot in 1997. From this conversation stemmed an album-monograph edited by prof. Jerzy Malinowski with the cooperation of the sculptor's family, entitled Stanisław Horno-Popławski (1902-1997) - The Way of Art - The Art of the Way, published in 2002 by the State Art Gallery of Sopot.[10]

On July 22, 1952, by decision of the President of the Republic of Poland, the artist was awarded was awarded the Golden Cross of Merit (Polish: Złoty Krzyż Zasługi) for his works in the field of culture and art.[21]

In 1953 he was awarded the State Award Badge, 2nd echelon.[22]

In 1996, Horno-Popławski was promoted doctor honoris causa of the University in Toruń, UMK of Toruń.[23]

On April 25, 1997, Horno-Popławski was awarded the title of doctor honoris causa from the Academy of Fine Arts in Gdańsk.[24]

In 2004, the Sopot exhibition „Stanisław Horno-Popławski. Droga sztuki- sztuka drogi” traveled to Lviv and Odessa.[1]

Commemorative plaques to his memory have been unveiled in 2005 (Gdańsk) and 2011 (Sopot).[6]

In 2017, the newly open Bydgoszcz Art Centre (Polish: Bydgoskie Centrum Sztuki) has taken as patron name "Horno-Popławski". The gallery at 47 Jagiellońska street has organized an exhibition on the artist in February–March 2020.[25]

Notable works

[edit]

His works can be seen in many museums in Poland and around the world (e.g. Kraków, Poznań, Bydgoszcz, Berlin, Moscow, Tbilisi).[2] Furthermore, many other works are in the hands of private collectors in Norway, Canada, Israel or Japan.[26]

  • Portrait of Antosię from Kalin (1928)

One of the first piece of art realized by Horno-Popławski. It was last seen in an exhibition at the Branicki Palace of Białystok after WWII.[27]

  • Hadasa, Tehura (1930s, 1960s)
Washerwomen, Bialystok

The work was created in Toruń in 1938, commissioned by the then Białystok Voivodeship:[29] it is the only profane work of Stanisław Horno-Popławski in the city.[30] In 1945, it was placed over one of the ponds of the "Planty Park".[31]

In 1978, the monument was restored, cleaned and patched with cement. In 1992, the sculpture was placed in the "Voivodeship Heritage list of Monuments".[30] In 2000, the head of one of the statue was broken and quickly repaired. In March 2003, the monument was devastated again: one of the three figures was halved. In July 2003, the sculpture was restored anew. A scale reproduction of "Praczki" is present in one of Gdańsk museums.[30]

Monument to Adam Mickiewicz in front of the Palace of Culture and Science in Warsaw

Christ at the main altar, Mother of God with Child at the side altar and Christ the Good Shepherd outside the church.[32]

The original monument dates back to 1927, the first elevated to Sienkiewicz in Poland. It was funded via a Committee composed of teachers and cultural activists of Bydgoszcz, led by Witold Bełza.[35] The initial statue was made out of bronze by the artist Konstanty Laszczka.[36] The official unveiling happened on July 31, 1927, by the President of Poland, Ignacy Mościcki.[37] The statue was destroyed by the Nazis in the first days of the occupation, in September 1939.[36]

The new monument, made of granite by Horno-Popławski is located on the very site of its predecessor, in today's Jan Kochanowski Park. The unveiling ceremony took place on May 18, 1968.[36]

The statue of Jan Kiliński was funded by the "Słupsk Craftsmanship association". The monument is made of stone and represents one of the leaders of the Kościuszko Uprising on a pedestal, by the riverside boulevard over the Słupia River, in the vicinity of the local seat of the Craft Guild.

Monument to the Unknown Polish Insurgent

Julian Marchlewski was born in Włocławek in 1866. The unveiling of Horno-Popławski's monument occurred on May 1, 1964, with the participation of Zofia, Marchlewski's daughter.[38] Built of granite, the five-meter-high monument was in the socialist realist style. On the pedestal was an inscription "To Julian Marchlewski, the Great Internationale Patriot, Society of Włocławek and Bydgoszcz. May 1, 1964".[39]

On January 26, 1990, as part of the decommunization, the statue was dismantled and moved to the nearby Bojańczyk brewery.[39] On June 9, 1999, the figure without its pedestal was transferred to the Zamoyski Palace in Kozłówka and joined the Art Gallery of Socialism. The inscription plaque is still in the storage of the Włocławek Museum of the Kujawy and Dobrzyń lands (Polish: Muzeum Ziemi Kujawskiej i Dobrzyńskiej we Włocławku).

Unveiled on December 29, 1986, on the 68th anniversary of the Greater Poland Uprising, it is set up at the very place where originally stood the tomb containing the ashes of an unknown insurgent who died in June 1919. It was razed during WWII. The current monument, based on a design by Horno-Popławski, has been realized and cast by Aleksander Dętkoś, one of his student from Bydgoszcz.[9]

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See also

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References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d Grubba, Dorota (22 August 2014). "Stanisław Horno-Popławski Droga sztuki -sztuka drogi". artinfo.pl. Artinfo. Retrieved 8 May 2021.
  2. ^ a b c d e Sowińska, Hanka (17 March 2017). "Stanisław Horno-Popławski. Kim był?". plus.pomorska.pl. Polska Press Sp zoo. Retrieved 7 May 2021.
  3. ^ a b c Nowicka, Zofia (1994). Bydgoski epizod Stanisława Horno-Popławskiego. Kalendarz Bydgoski. Bydgoszcz: Towarzystwo Miłośników Miasta Bydgoszczy. pp. 105–108.
  4. ^ Kossowska, Irena (December 2001). "Władysław Strzemiński". culture.pl. culture pl. Retrieved 6 May 2021.
  5. ^ a b "Warszawskie Zabytkowe Pomniki Nagrobne". cmentarze.um.warszawa.pl. Urząd m.st. Warszawy. 2009. Retrieved 6 May 2021.
  6. ^ a b c d e f "Horno-Popławski Stanisław". gedanopedia.pl. Fundacja Gdańska. 16 December 2019. Retrieved 8 May 2021.
  7. ^ "PATRON". bcs.bydgoszcz.pl. Bydgoskie Centrum Sztuki. 2017. Retrieved 8 May 2021.
  8. ^ Marta Leszczyńska, Aleksandra Lewińska (8 August 2017). "Horno powraca. Powinieneś poznać jego dzieła". bydgoszcz.wyborcza.pl. Agora SA. Retrieved 8 May 2021.
  9. ^ a b c Dąbska, Ewa (28 February 2020). "Stanisław Horno - Popławski: życiorys - i charakter - w kamieniu wykuty". radiopik.pl. Radio PIK SA. Retrieved 8 May 2021.
  10. ^ a b c Bydgoskie Centrum Informacji (2020). "STANISŁAW HORNO-POPŁAWSKI. OD POEZJI W KAMIENIU DO FEMINIZMU. KONTEKST SZTUKI ZIEMI". visitbydgoszcz.pl. Bydgoskie Centrum Informacji. Retrieved 7 May 2021.
  11. ^ Skutnik, Tadeusz (21 September 2010). "Benefis Ryszarda Ronczewskiego w Sopocie". dziennikbaltycki.pl. Polska Press Sp. z o. o. Retrieved 8 May 2021.
  12. ^ a b Rzekanowski, Paweł (17 September 2016). "Jak zamknąć uczucie w kamieniu. O twórczości Stanisława Horno-Popławskiego". niezlasztuka.net. Niezła Sztuka z miasta Łodzi pochodzi. Retrieved 7 May 2021.
  13. ^ Адрес-календарь. Ч. 1-2 : Общая роспись начальствующих и прочих должностных лиц по всем управлениям в Российской империи на 1896 год. Санкт-Петербу́рг: Российская Национальная Библиотека. 1896. p. 784.
  14. ^ Боханов, Александр Николаевич (1914). Деловая элита России. Москва: Российская Академия Наук Институт российской истории. p. 205. ISBN 5201005934.
  15. ^ Majewski, Jerzy (3 June 2003). "Kolejka jabłonowska". warszawa.wyborcza.pl. Agora SA. Retrieved 7 May 2021.
  16. ^ a b А. В. Петров, М. М. Плотникова (2011). Городские головы, гласные и депутаты Иркутской думы 1872—2011: Биографический справочник. Иркутск: Оттиск. p. 254. ISBN 9785932192894.
  17. ^ Саитов, В. И. (1912). Петербургский некрополь. Санкт-Петербу́рг: Российская государственная библиотека (РГБ). p. 468.
  18. ^ Kudelski, J. Robert (2006). Zaginiony szkic Rubensa (PDF). Warsaw: Narodowy Instytut Muzealnictwa i Ochrony Zbiorów. pp. 5–7.
  19. ^ Orłowski, Bolesław (1984). Słownik polskich pionierów techniki. Katowice: Wydawnictwo "Śląsk". p. 47. ISBN 8321603394.
  20. ^ a b Encyklopedia PWN (2001). "Czeczott Albert". encyklopedia.pwn.pl. Encyklopedia PWN. Retrieved 7 May 2021.
  21. ^ M.P. 1952 nr 70 poz. 1078. Zarządzenie o nadaniu Złotego Krzyża Zasługi (PDF). Warsaw: PREZYDENT RZECZYPOSPOLITEJ. 22 July 1952.
  22. ^ Dziennik Polski (1953). "Dziennik Polski. 1953, nr 173 (22 VII) =nr 2948". mbc.malopolska.pl. Wojewódzka Biblioteka Publiczna w Krakowie. Retrieved 7 May 2021.
  23. ^ Uniwersytet Mikołaja Kopernika (2021). "Doktorzy Honoris Causa". umk.pl. Uniwersytet Mikołaja Kopernika. Retrieved 7 May 2021.
  24. ^ Dorota Grubba-Thiede, Jerzy Malinowski (2002). Stanisław Horno-Popławski. Droga sztuki – sztuka drogi. Sopot: Państwowa Galeria Sztuki. p. 21.
  25. ^ BCS (2020). "Stanisław Horno-Popławski". bcs.bydgoszcz.pl. BCS. Retrieved 8 May 2021.
  26. ^ Konik, Roman (8 April 2017). "Horno - specjalista od kamienia". wspominajbydgoszcz.blogspot.com. wspominaj.bydgoszcz. Retrieved 8 May 2021.
  27. ^ Mikulicz, Tomasz (7 September 2015). "Wtorkowy Poranny: Zachodzą w głowę, gdzie podziała się słynna głowa". polskatimes.pl. Polska Press Sp. z o. o. Retrieved 8 May 2021.
  28. ^ Giniūnienė, Asta (2019). Excellentia virtutum: šventieji. Lietuvos kultūroje (PDF). Vilnius: Kultūros paveldo departamentas prie Kultūros ministerijos. p. 166. ISBN 9786098231137.
  29. ^ Ewika (26 November 2014). "Praczki z Plant". bialystok.naszemiasto.pl. Polska Press Sp. z o. o. Retrieved 7 May 2021.
  30. ^ a b c tz (24 June 2003). "Praczki będą podglądane". poranny.pl. Polska Press Sp. z o. o. Retrieved 7 May 2021.
  31. ^ "Park Planty". info.bialystok.pl. info.bialystok. 2021. Retrieved 7 May 2021.
  32. ^ Ewika (26 November 2014). "Praczki z Plant". bialystok.naszemiasto.pl. Polska Press Sp. z o. o. Retrieved 8 May 2021.
  33. ^ Grzesiuk-Olszewska, Irena (2003). Warszawska rzeźba pomnikowa. Warszawa: Wydawnictwo Neriton. p. 112. ISBN 8388973592.
  34. ^ a b Rzeźba i Formy Przestrzenne. Warszawa: Desa Unicum. 23 October 2018. pp. 74–75, 78–79. ISBN 978-8388115745.
  35. ^ Perlińska, Anna (1997). Zbliża się jeszcze jeden jubileusz... Kalendarz Bydgoski. Bydgoszcz: Towarzystwo Miłośników Miasta Bydgoszczy. pp. 232–235.
  36. ^ a b c Gliwiński, Eugeniusz (1998). Bydgoskie pomniki naszych czasów cz. 2. Kalendarz Bydgoski. Bydgoszcz: Towarzystwo Miłośników Miasta Bydgoszczy. pp. 12, 95–99.
  37. ^ Podgóreczny, Józef (1968). Pomnik Henryka Sienkiewicza z przygodami. Kalendarz Bydgoski. Bydgoszcz: Towarzystwo Miłośników Miasta Bydgoszczy. pp. 86–89.
  38. ^ Richard B. Day, Daniel Gaido (2011). Discovering Imperialism: Social Democracy to World War I. Bydgoszcz: BRILL. p. 301. ISBN 9789004201569.
  39. ^ a b Agnieszka Kowalewska, Olga Krut-Horonziak (2004). Ulice i Pomniki Starego Włocławka. Włocławek: Oficyna Wydawnicza Włocławskiego Towarzystwa Naukowego. pp. 23–25. ISBN 838811574X.
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Bibliography

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  • (in Polish) Agnieszka Markowska, Paweł Rzekanowski (2017). Stanisław Horno-Popławski. Katalog zbiorów Bydgoskiego Centrum Sztuki. Bydgoszcz: Bydgoski Centrum Sztuki. ISBN 9788365533227.
  • (in Polish) Horno. Stanisław Horno-Popławski. Rzeźba. Katalog wystawy. — Warszawa: Centralne Biuro Wystaw Artystycznych «Zachęta», 1970.
  • (in Polish) Dorota Grubba-Thiede, Jerzy Malinowski (2002). Stanisław Horno-Popławski. Droga sztuki – sztuka drogi. Sopot: Państwowa Galeria Sztuki.
  • (in Polish) Ewa Toniak, Olbrzymki. Kobiety i socrealizm, wyd. Korporacja Ha!art, Kraków 2008
  • (in Polish) Konik, Roman (2016). Stanisław Horno-Popławski. Myślenie kamieniem. Wrocław: Oficyna Wydawnicza Atut.
  • (in Polish) Turwid, Marian (1980). Galeria Rzeźby Stanisława Horno-Popławskiego. Kalendarz Bydgoski. Bydgoszcz: Towarzystwo Miłośników Miasta Bydgoszczy. pp. 59–62.