Karol Tchorek was a Polish sculptor, art dealer and art collector. The designer of monuments, an activist in the ZPAP, and winner, among other awards, of the Polish Order of Polonia Restituta.
Biography
Karol Tchorek was born on October 30, 1904 in Serock. He came from a poor peasant family and his general education ended quickly. At the age of 15, as a volunteer, he took part in the Polish–Soviet War. In his youth, he worked as a sandblaster on the Vistula river. His artistic education began at the Municipal School of Decorative Arts and Painting in Warsaw, and continued at the capital's School of Fine Arts. His teachers included sculptors Jan Szczepkowski and Tadeusz Breyer. From 1929, he was a member of the Cooperative Sculptural Form. He collaborated with the Society for the Promotion of Industry People, and also began collecting Kurpiancutouts. In 1932 he was given a grant from the National Culture Fund. In 1937 he designed the sarcophagus for former Polish leader Józef Piłsudski. During World War II, two of his studios were destroyed - one in the Warsaw suburb of Powiśle and the other in the town of Brok. He lost his home and also the gallery he ran from 1943 to 1944: the Art Salon Nike. His work continued from 1945 to 1951. Nike was a de facto merger of a private art gallery with an informal antique shop. In 1945 he took part in the General Assembly of Delegates of ZPAP in Kraków, and he became the secretary of the Presidium of its board. He held this position from 1945 to 1946. During this time, he also helped folk sculptor Leon Kudła, whose works he collected. In later years he held senior positions in the Sculpture Section of ZPAP's Warsaw district. In 1949, Karol Tchorek won a competition for the design of plaques commemorating public executions in Warsaw during World War II. To this day, in Warsaw, there are over 160 plaques designed by the artist still remaining. In 1952, he took part in work on the Marszałkowska Residential District, which resulted in the creation of relief Macierzyństwo at Marszałkowska Street in Warsaw. From 1959 he made a monument for soldiers and guerrillas in Ostrów Mazowiecka. In 1970, he made a monument to Polish soldiers in the Scottish city Perth, and in 1975, he designed the sculpture Warszawska jesień, which is located on the Bohdan Wodiczko square behind the Fryderyk Chopin University of Music in Warsaw. Karol Tchorek married Zofia Kochanowiczów. They had two children - Mariusz and Olaf. After World War II, the family lived at ul. Miedzeszyński in Saska Kępa, Warsaw.
Selected works
1937 - Design of Polish leader Józef Piłsudski's sarcophagus
1949 - Tchorek plaques, commemorating struggle and martyrdom in WWII
1952 - Macierzyństwo
1959 - A monument to the soldiers and guerrillas in Ostrów Mazowiecka
1965 - The tombstone of the sculptor Jan Szczepkowski
1970 - A monument to Polish soldiers in Perth
1975 - Warszawska jesień
Tchorek plaques
As the winner of a nationwide contest in 1948, Tchorek became the designer of plaques commemorating the places of execution during World War II in Warsaw. The city placed around 200 plaques made according to his designs from 1949 onwards in places where executions and fighting had taken place. Some of them contain incorrect details so the Council for the Protection of Memory of Combat and Martyrdom had to intervene, although some are still incorrect.
Selected exhibitions
X Salon. Malarstwo, grafika, rzeźba, 1938
I Ogólnopolska Wystawa Plastyki
II Ogólnopolska Wystawa Plastyki
III Ogólnopolska Wystawa Plastyki
Plastycy w walce o pokój, 1950
Rzeźba warszawska, 1945-1958
Rzeźba polska, 1945-1960
Rzeźba w XV-lecie PRL
XX lat Ludowego Wojska Polskiego w twórczości plastycznej
Rzeźbiarze Saskiej Kępy wczoraj i dziś, 2011
Sztuka wszędzie. Akademia Sztuk Pięknych w Warszawie 1904-1944, 2012
In Serock, the hometown of the sculptor, there is a street named after him. In 1990, his studio at Smolna Street was entered in the register of monuments and his legacy is looked after by the Fundacja Tchorek-Bentall whose founder is the artist Katy Bentall, widow of Mariusz Tchorek, the son of the sculptor.