Igor Mitoraj — Ikaro Alato
Centrum Olimpijskie · ul. Wybrzeże Gdyńskie 4 · Warsaw · 2004
Ikaro Alato is a monumental bronze sculpture by Igor Mitoraj, standing in the forecourt of the Centrum Olimpijskie — the headquarters of the Polish Olympic Committee (Polski Komitet Olimpijski) at ul. Wybrzeże Gdyńskie 4 in Warsaw. Cast in 2004 and placed here in the year of the Athens Summer Olympics, it is one of the most prominently sited works by Mitoraj in Poland and among the largest public bronzes of his Icarus series anywhere in the world.
Mitoraj's Icarus
The figure of Icarus — the youth of Greek mythology who fashioned wings of feathers and wax to escape the labyrinth of Crete, flew too close to the sun and fell into the sea — was one of the defining subjects of Mitoraj's entire artistic career. He returned to it across four decades, in bronze, marble, and relief, in works ranging from small cabinet pieces to monumental outdoor installations. The title Ikaro Alato (Winged Icarus) designates a specific variant within this series: an upright, standing figure who still holds the wings — fragmented, archaic, worn — rather than the fallen horizontal figures known as Icare or Icare Ailé.
For Mitoraj, the Icarus myth was never simply a cautionary tale about hubris. It was a meditation on the human compulsion to reach beyond given limits — to fly — and on the dignity and tragedy of that compulsion in equal measure. The broken wings in this work are not symbols of failure alone. They are remnants of a genuine attempt. The figure stands with them not in defeat but in the composure of someone who has made the attempt and survived its consequences in memory.
The Sculpture
The bronze figure is mounted on a tall, angular dark steel plinth that raises it high above the forecourt, visible from the Vistula embankment and from the approach along ul. Wybrzeże Gdyńskie. The body is characteristic of Mitoraj's mature style: classical in its proportions and musculature, but marked by the fragmentation and incompleteness that made his figures so recognisable. The wings appear as ancient remnants — partial, cracked, carried rather than spread — as though Icarus holds not a living instrument of flight but a relic of one.
The face is turned slightly upward, in the posture of attention or aspiration that recurs across Mitoraj's standing figures. A reflecting pool and fountain at the base of the plinth frame the work in water — an allusion, conscious or not, to the sea into which Icarus fell. The placement in front of a building dedicated to athletic achievement gives the work an additional dimension: the Olympian pursuit of physical limits, and the mythology that both inspired and shadowed the ancient Games.
Photographs — Ikaro Alato, Warsaw
Ikaro Alato — Technical Details
Title: Ikaro Alato (Italian: Winged Icarus)
Artist: Igor Mitoraj (1944–2014)
Date: 2004
Medium: Bronze on steel plinth
Subject: Icarus — Greek mythology · winged figure holding fragmented wings
Location: Forecourt of Centrum Olimpijskie (Polski Komitet Olimpijski)
Address: ul. Wybrzeże Gdyńskie 4, 01-531 Warsaw
Access: Publicly accessible · no admission charge
Plaque: IKARO ALATO / IGOR MITORAJ 2004
Icarus and the Olympic Ideal
The placement of a Mitoraj Icarus at the headquarters of the Polish Olympic Committee is not accidental in its resonance. The ancient Olympic Games emerged from the same Greek world that produced the myth of Icarus — a civilisation in which the mortal aspiration to transcend human limits was simultaneously celebrated and cautioned against. The athlete at Olympia and Icarus on his wax wings are expressions of the same impulse: the reach beyond the ordinary, the wager of the body on an extraordinary attempt.
Mitoraj — who spent much of his life in Pietrasanta, the Tuscan marble-working town where he maintained his studio, and was deeply formed by Italian classicism and Greek antiquity — would have been aware of this resonance. The commission placed his fragmented, winged figure not in a museum or gallery but in front of a building where that aspiration is institutionally organised and celebrated in the present day.
Visiting
The sculpture stands in the forecourt of Centrum Olimpijskie at ul. Wybrzeże Gdyńskie 4, on the left bank of the Vistula near the Gdański Bridge. It is freely accessible from the riverside embankment path and visible from the street. The best light for photography is in the morning, with the sculpture facing the building and the river behind you.
The site is reachable by tram (lines 1, 22, 24 stop nearby at Skwer Hoovera) or on foot along the Vistula embankment from the city centre. Combined visits: the Koneser cultural quarter and the Praga district are a short walk across the Gdański Bridge; the Old Town is approximately 15 minutes' walk south along the embankment.
Interested in Mitoraj Works?
I am a private collector in Warsaw actively buying Igor Mitoraj bronzes, medals, and works on paper. If you have a work available, please get in touch.
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