A message from our President, General Lord Guthrie of Craigiebank
'I am delighted to be associated with the work of the Polish Heritage Society and very honoured to serve as its President. The Society's work highlights the enormous contribution which generations of Poles have made to their adopted country. Preserving and celebrating that heritage will only further strengthen the ties between Poland and the United Kingdom.
I worked closely with the Society on the project to build a memorial to the Polish Forces at the National Memorial Arboretum and saw at first hand the energy and dedication of those involved.
I encourage you to explore this website and learn about the many other projects the Society has sponsored. Do please contact us if you would like to be involved in any way'.
General The Lord Guthrie of Craigiebank GCB LVO OBE
A Debt of Dishonour is a unique documentary film dedicated Major General Sosabowski and all ranks who served in the 1st Polish Independent Parachute Brigade Group and to their Comrades-in-Arms of the 1st British Airborne Division that fought in the ill-fated “Operation Market Garden” at Arnhem and Driel during September 1944.
The Polish Heritage Society (UK) Summer Exhibition in association with Polish Arts Festival is delighted to present a sculpture exhibition of works by the internationally renowned Polish sculptor Robert Sobociński on Southend Pier from Saturday 30 June to Sunday 2 September, 2012.
Robert Sobociński was born in 1960 in Poznań, Poland. He graduated from the sculpture faculty at the Academy of Fine Arts in Poznań, and studied architecture at Poznań Polytechnic. He has created works for over 20 years. He has presented his works since the early 1980s, initially in Poland, then also in Germany, Belgium, and for the past 14 years mainly in France.
Robert Sobociński is the author of a number of plein-air sculptures and monuments, among others the Monument of Katyń and Siberia Victims in Poznań.
His first spectacular success (1980) was the award of the 1st prize at the competition for Juliusz Słowacki’s monument in Warsaw. The artist started exhibiting his works in the beginning of the eighties – still during his studies at the Poznań Academy of Arts – at O.N. Gallery, Wielka 19 Gallery and Kontakt Gallery. In 1990 he presented his first bronze sculptures at an individual exhibition at MR Gallery in the rooms of Górków Palace.
Since 1991 his works have been regularly presented at the majority of important sculpture exhibition rooms in Paris, such as DECOUVERT, SAGA, FIAC, Sculpture Triennial in Paris and also within the framework of tens of collective exhibitions in France, Belgium and Germany. At a prestigious exhibition – “Visions of Europe” in the Eiffel Tower – the artist presented a monumental bronze – ‘The Returning’. In autumn 1993 he held an individual exhibition of his works during one of the most important modern arts fairs in the world – the FIAC at the Paris Grand Palace.
In 1995 Robert Sobociński was invited to participate in the European Sculpture Triennial in Paris. At that exhibition he presented the ‘Awaken’ sculpture – greatly exposed as the closing of the main axis of the Botanic Garden. In 2001 – invited again to take part in the Paris triennial – he presented a 3-meter high bronze composition entitled ‘Gaya’. The presentations in France resulted in the permanent presence of his sculptures in private collections all over Europe. His ‘Icarus’ composition stands in a park surrounding a 17th century residence in Normandy. Saint-Tropez is a home for ‘The Returning’. The 6-meter high ‘La Vie’ composition, purchased in 2000 by the France Telecom Mobile, constitutes the central accent of the glass hall of their Paris office building. In the same year, within the framework of the international ‘Transis’ exhibition, Robert Sobociński presented an over 4-meter high bronze work – ‘L’autre’. Today the sculpture – purchased by the authorities of Bar-Le-Duc city – is located in the oldest part of the town, in the park surrounding the City Museum. In 2009 the Polish Armed Forces Memorial designed by Robert Sobociński was unveiled at the National Memorial Arboretum, near Litchfield, Staffordshire, England.
In Poland, the artist presented his works at an individual exhibition at Na Piętrze Gallery in Poznań and at the Sculpture Biennial in Poznań ( 1998, 2000, 2002, 2004). Bronze still remains the artist’s favourite matter. The sculptures are created within the framework of a several weeks, sometimes even several months’ long process of shaping the form prepared for casting. Sobociński’s works seem to present the constant restraining of metal’s energy into the expression of construed forms. His figures, sometimes archaically rudimentary, reflect the roots of sculpture – from the earliest, primal struggle of people in the scope of building cult forms, to the later forms that bear the history of experience.
For more information about the Polish Arts Festival and Robert Sobociński