Igor Mitoraj Litografier, Tegninger og Papirarbejder
Mitorajs Papirarbejder — hvad jeg søger
Ud over sine monumentale bronzer skabte Igor Mitoraj et omfangsrigt korpus af papirarbejder — litografier, raderinger, tegninger og blandede medieværker. Jeg søger aktivt disse værker fra private ejere i hele Polen og Europa.
Typer af Værker
- Originale tegninger — blyant, kul, blæk på papir
- Signerede litografier — nummererede udgaver fra 1980'erne–2000'erne
- Raderinger og akvatinter — særligt værker fra Pietrasanta-perioden
- Monotyger — unikke papirarbejder
- Blandede medier — værker kombineret med collage eller bladguld
Markedskontekst
Sjældne signerede tegninger i god stand kan opnå betydeligt mere. Catawiki, Artcurial og diverse polske auktionshuse sætter regelmæssigt hans papirarbejder til salg.
Tilstand og Provenance
Jeg overvejer værker i alle tilstande. Et autenticitetsattest eller original kvittering er nyttig men ikke afgørende — jeg har adgang til eksperter, der uafhængigt kan verificere tilskrivningen.
Ejer du et Mitoraj-værk?
I buy directly from private owners — no middlemen, no auction fees, complete discretion.
Contact Me DirectlyFrom the Collection — Signed Works on Paper
Tindareos — Sanguine Lithograph
A sanguine (red chalk lithograph) depicting Tindareos — the mythological King of Sparta and father of Helen of Troy. The face is rendered as a bandaged, fragmented head in fluid, gestural red chalk strokes on white paper. Horizontal banding across the face evokes both wound dressing and the passage of time — the damage that recurs across Mitoraj's practice.
Signed Mitoraj in pencil lower right. Numbered edition. An original signed print from the limited graphic oeuvre — Mitoraj produced far fewer works on paper than bronzes, making signed originals significantly rarer. The same subject appears in his monumental Tindaro Screpolato bronzes.
Medium: Sanguine (red chalk) lithograph · Signed: pencil, lower right · Numbered edition
Angelo Fasciato — Colour Etching & Aquatint, 2004
Angelo Fasciato (Bandaged Angel) is a 2004 colour etching and aquatint in rich emerald and teal green. A large head turns in three-quarter profile, built entirely from dense, layered cross-hatching — the incised line of the etching plate reading simultaneously as sculptural mass. The pale ground glows yellow-green beneath the deeper teal of the figure. At the lower centre, a small rectangular vignette contains a winged figure — the angel of the title.
The green palette — evoking oxidised bronze patina and underwater stone — is exceptional within Mitoraj's graphic output, where warm ochres and monochrome dominate. A technically demanding work requiring multiple colour passes through the press. Signed and dated lower right: Mitoraj '04. Small numbered edition.
Medium: Colour etching and aquatint · Date: 2004 · Signed & dated: lower right · Numbered edition
Postać (Figure) — Lithograph
Postać (Polish: Figure) is a black and white lithograph — spare, gestural, and immediate. A standing figure occupies most of the sheet. The face is entirely obliterated by a dense band of rapid horizontal strokes — the characteristic effacement of Mitoraj's bandaged figures. A diagonal sash or band crosses the chest. At the left shoulder, a small rectangular vignette contains a face looking out from within the larger form, a secondary presence nested inside it.
The work has the quality of a preparatory drawing fixed in print — the spontaneous mark of the artist's hand preserved through the lithographic process. No colour, no elaborate staging: the figure, the concealed face, and the white of the paper. Signed lower right: Mitoraj. Small numbered edition.
Medium: Lithograph · Signed: lower right · Numbered edition
'86 Tignes / Centre Tignespace — Signed Poster, 1986
The official poster created by Mitoraj for Tignes Centre Tignespace, the cultural arts centre of the Tignes ski resort in the French Alps, 1986. The image is a gestural, large-format ink sketch of a fragmented torso — dark, confident strokes on cream paper, with diagonal lines crossing the body and a small square motif. The printed '86 TIGNES / CENTRE TIGNESPACE logo appears at the lower right. The poster has been hand-signed in blue ink by Mitoraj — a bold, fluid cursive in the right centre of the sheet.
Artist-signed event posters from this period are rare documents: printed for distribution, not galleries, yet carrying an authentic signature that closes the circle between the printed image and the artist's hand. This example dates from the same year Mitoraj was developing the Centurione series. Minor fold lines and edge wear are part of the object's history.
Type: Official signed poster · Date: 1986 · Signed by hand in blue ink
La Maison du Sculpteur — Colour Lithograph, 1994
La Maison du Sculpteur (The Sculptor's House) is a 1994 colour lithograph in which the human body merges with architecture. A monumental dark torso fills the composition; within it, four yellow-lit windows glow like rooms in a building at night. The title is lettered across the figure in gold: LA MAISON DU SCULPTEUR. Above, loose scribbled marks in dark ink suggest sky or stone.
The image is direct and metaphorically dense: the sculptor's body is his house, lit from within, a shelter for something living. By 1994 Mitoraj was working between Paris and Pietrasanta at the height of his mature period, and the lithograph has the confidence of that moment. Colour lithographs — requiring multiple stone or plate passes — are rarer within his graphic output than monochrome works. Signed and dated lower right: Mitoraj '94. Numbered edition.
Medium: Colour lithograph · Date: 1994 · Signed & dated: lower right · Numbered edition
Papirarbejder — Et Selvstændigt Marked
Mitoraj's works on paper occupy a distinct position within his market. While his bronzes attract the largest prices and the widest collector base, his lithographs, etchings, and drawings appeal to collectors who want to engage with his creative process at a more intimate scale. Works on paper are also the most accessible entry point into a serious Mitoraj collection: signed lithographs begin at at auction, while original drawings in charcoal or sanguine can reach
The graphic work is also where Mitoraj's relationship with classical antiquity is most directly visible. Without the mediation of the foundry and the patina, the drawings show the artist's hand moving directly across paper — sketching heads, torsos, and mythological figures with a fluency that recalls Renaissance masters. The sanguine (red chalk) technique he favoured for many drawings is itself an antiquarian choice: sanguine was the preferred medium of Leonardo, Michelangelo, and Raphael for figure studies.
Tindareos — Sanguine Litografi
The Tindareos sanguine lithograph in the collection is a prime example of Mitoraj's graphic work at its most compelling. Tyndareus — King of Sparta, husband of Leda, father of Clytemnestra and Helen of Troy — appears as a bandaged, fragmented head in fluid sanguine strokes on white paper. The signature (Mitoraj, lower right, pencil) is consistent with his documented hand on works on paper. The subject — Tyndareus — is a recurring presence in Mitoraj's mythology: the same figure appears in the monumental Tindaro Screpolato (Cracked Tyndareus) bronzes, including the celebrated example now in Warsaw after selling for a record €1.6 million in 2025.
Hvad jeg søger i Papirarbejder
Jeg søger aktivt Mitoraj litografier, raderinger, akvatinter og originale tegninger i alle motiver — Eros, Centurione, Perseus, Ikaros, indbundne hoveder og figurstudierne. Jeg overvejer værker i alle tilstande. Kontakt mig med et foto, og jeg svarer samme dag.
Mitoraj Lithographs & Works on Paper
Alongside his sculptural practice, Mitoraj produced a substantial body of lithographs, drawings, and mixed-media works on paper throughout the 1970s and 1980s. These works revisit the same archaeological vocabulary — fragmented faces, helmets, draped torsos — but exploit the softness of lithographic ink to achieve a dreamlike luminosity distinct from his monumental bronzes. Limited editions were published in collaboration with French and Italian print studios and are today held in private collections across Europe. Because many works on paper were not registered in a centralised catalogue, careful cross-referencing with auction records, gallery invoices, and the Atelier Mitoraj archive in Pietrasanta is recommended before purchase.