Igor Mitoraj — Centauro
The Centauro is one of Igor Mitoraj's most directly mythological subjects — the classical hybrid of man and horse, rendered in his characteristic mode of fragmentation and ancient-seeming damage. Where the Greeks imagined the centaur as a creature of violence, wildness, and ambivalent wisdom, Mitoraj transforms it into a figure of stillness and noble ruin: a torso that has survived its own mythology, cracked and weathered like an archaeological discovery rather than a living monster. The result is unmistakably Mitoraj — the myth made object, the object made ancient, the ancient made contemporary.
The Centaur in Mitoraj's Mythology
Mitoraj's engagement with Greco-Roman mythology was systematic rather than opportunistic. He did not select subjects for their popularity or accessibility; he selected them because they offered formal and philosophical problems that his working method — the fragment, the bandage, the crack, the emergence — could engage with directly. The centaur presented a particular kind of formal challenge: a hybrid body, already a violation of natural categories, which he could then submit to a second violation through fragmentation.
The Centauro series typically presents the upper human torso of the centaur emerging from its lower equine body — or, in the more fragmentary versions, isolates the human upper portion entirely, its transition to the horse implied rather than shown. This produces figures that read simultaneously as human torsos and as something fundamentally other: the posture is too low, the proportions suggest mass and power beyond what a purely human figure would carry. The surface treatment — darkened patina, fissured edges, applied texture — reinforces the sense of great age.
Pompeii and the Ancient World
The images documented here were made at Pompeii, where Mitoraj's bronzes occupied the archaeological site in a series of installations that were among the most discussed and photographed presentations of his work. The dialogue between his deliberately ruined figures and the genuinely ruined city was stark and intentional: both were the product of catastrophic interruption, both had survived in fragments, both carried the aura of a classical world simultaneously present and unrecoverable.
The Centauro at Pompeii read differently than it would in a gallery or museum context. Against the excavated streets and collapsed walls, the figure had the quality of something dug up rather than placed — as if the archaeological dig that uncovered the city had also uncovered Mitoraj's bronze, left there by an earlier civilisation that had known it as a living form. The scale relationship between the figures and the site amplified this effect: Mitoraj's works are typically larger than they seem in reproduction, and the monumental Centauro, placed within Pompeian space, assumed the gravity of architecture rather than portable sculpture.
Editions and Scales
The Centauro was produced in multiple scales suited to different contexts:
- Monumental bronze — large-format versions created for outdoor installation, typically cast in small series. These appear in public spaces and institutional collections. The Pompeii installations represent this scale.
- Gallery bronze — mid-scale versions (roughly 60–120 cm), suitable for indoor exhibition. Cast in numbered editions with foundry certificates. These appear regularly at Italian specialist auctions.
- Studio edition — smaller desktop versions (30–50 cm), produced in larger numbered editions. The most accessible form for private collectors. Brown and dark patinas documented; silver patina less common.
As with all Mitoraj editions, authenticity documentation is critical. Works from the Atelier Mitoraj in Pietrasanta come with foundry records. Works sold through Artcurial (Mitoraj's primary Parisian gallery partner) carry gallery provenance. Secondary market works require careful provenance verification.
Centauro — Key Facts
The Centauro signature appears on the base or lower edge, typically engraved. Editions vary by scale; foundry marks differ across casting periods. Gallery and studio-scale Centauro bronzes appear at Italian specialist auction (Wannenes, Pandolfini, Cambi, Bonhams Italy). I buy examples at all scales — send a photograph for a prompt, honest assessment.
The Mythology of the Centaur
The centaur in ancient mythology occupies a complex position between the civilised and the wild, the human and the animal, the rational and the instinctual. The most famous centaurs — Chiron, the wise tutor of heroes; the unruly guests at the Lapith wedding — embody this tension in opposite ways: Chiron as the centaur who transcends his animal nature through knowledge and discipline, the wedding centaurs as those who are overwhelmed by it. Both poles interested Mitoraj.
His Centauro figures carry neither explicit violence nor explicit wisdom — they are beyond both states, already translated into the condition of the fragment that survives after the mythological event has concluded. The war is over, the wedding feast is over, the teaching is done. What remains is the torso: damaged, aged, beautiful, and possessed of a stillness that living centaurs never had.
Buying a Mitoraj Centauro
The Centauro is not among the most commonly encountered Mitoraj works in the secondary market — it surfaces less frequently than the Persée, Tindaro, or Eros Bendato, which makes it of particular interest to collectors seeking works with lower auction visibility. Italian specialist houses are the primary venue; German and Polish houses occasionally handle them. I also purchase privately and can move quickly when a documented example is offered.
Jums ir Mitoraj Centauro?
Any scale, any patina. Send a photograph for a prompt, honest reply.
Sazinieties TiešiSee also: Tindaro Screpolato (auction record) · Persée (ed. 1000) · Mitoraj at Pompeii · All bronzes wanted
Par šo kolekciju
This site documents one private collector's search for works by Igor Mitoraj (1944–2014) — the Polish-French sculptor celebrated for his fractured classical figures in bronze and marble. Mitoraj studied in Kraków under Tadeusz Kantor, trained in Paris at the École nationale supérieure des beaux-arts, and established his permanent studio in Pietrasanta, Tuscany in 1983. His work is held in public collections across Europe and the Americas, and his auction record — €6.89 million for a monumental Tindaro Screpolato at Sotheby's Paris in 2019 — places him among the most sought-after post-war European sculptors. If you have a Mitoraj work available, please use the contact button to get in touch.