Diary pages (1850) by Cyprian NorwidOriginal Source: https://polona.pl/item/kartki-z-pamietnikow,Mjc3MDI4/0/#info:metadata
Mercurial mediator
Norwid is present in Polish culture also in his specific role - as a mediator between artists and politicians. He was also a friend, confidant or correspondent of dozens of people active in the half-century following the fall of the November Uprising.
"He could often be seen in the studios of Polish artists in Paris, with a cigarette in his mouth, discussing art, with the enthusiasm and faith of his youth" – such were the typical posthumous recollections.
The wanderer
If we consider the length of Norwid's life and artistic career and the scope of his travels, it becomes clear that he was one of the greatest "intermediaries" of Polish and European culture in the 19th century.
Hand, face, knee studies (1843/1883) by Cyprian NorwidOriginal Source: https://polona.pl/item/studia-dloni-twarzy-kolana,MzkxOTU4/0/#info:metadata
Norwid's three handshakes
The proverbial "three handshakes" separated him from the majority of Polish artists of the era. It is impossible to present Norwid's "human cosmos" in this exhibition - It is possible to list a dozen or so people who had the greatest influence on the shape of his life.
Study of a hand (1851) by Cyprian NorwidOriginal Source: https://polona.pl/item/studium-dloni,MzkxOTc1/0/#info:metadata
John III Sobieski (1829) by Marcello Baciarelli, Józef KośmińskiOriginal Source: https://polona.pl/item/jan-iii-sobieski,MTA4MzQ5OA/0/#info:metadata
King's descendant
Family relationships and parallels were of great importance to him. As a compensation for early orphanhood? No, rather as a consciousness of being deeply rooted in the legacy of the Polish Commonwealth.
Norwid, though ironic towards the pretensions and haughtiness of the emigrated nobility, himself quite seriously referred to his kinship with King John III Sobieski (their common ancestor was Sebastian Sobieski, who died in 1557!).
Fryderyk Chopin occupied a special place in Norwid's life: the poet witnessed his "last days", visiting him in his Paris apartment, and reminiscing about it in the essay "Black Flowers”.
Norwid dedicated one of his most famous poems to the composer. The point of the text, titled "Chopin's Piano" ("Fortepian Szopena") was the destruction of the instrument, kept in Warsaw by the relatives of the late artist, by Cossacks pacifying the city.
Musician (1841/1883) by Cyprian NorwidOriginal Source: https://polona.pl/item/muzyk-niepotrzebny-fotografia-rysunku-cypriana-kamila-norwida,NTg0MzkzMg/0/#info:metadata
Friend and polemicist
Norwid argued with Teofil Lenartowicz (1822-1893), a poet, ethnographer, and conspirator, about "folklore" and the authenticity of referring to folk roots in poetry.
Norwid was averse to Lenartowicz's ostentatiously simple lyricism, calling him tartly "Dante playing the pipe".
And yet, still at the end of his life, they both read and commented on each other's works, Lenartowicz in a dream (carefully recorded) lamenting Norwid's fate.
Child's prayer (1855) by Cyprian NorwidOriginal Source: https://polona.pl/item/on-n-allume-point-une-chandelle-pour-la-mettre-sous-un-boisseau,MzkxMjg2/0/#info:metadata
Death of a conspirator
While still a high school student, Norwid meets Karol Levittoux (1820-1841) - a student of pedagogical courses, one of a crowd of young men plotting against the tsar.
Levittoux - arrested and tortured, fearing to betray his colleagues - decided to inflict his own death by arson, becoming one of the figures of the Polish Romantic imagination. "He was found on his knees with his chest and face charred," Norwid wrote of him.
Head of a woman with her hair up high (1855) by Cyprian NorwidOriginal Source: https://polona.pl/item/szkic-glowy-kobiecej-od-tylu-i-studia-glowy-ponizej,MzkyMTMx/0/#info:metadata
The Unfulfilled Muse
Norwid's greatest love was Maria Kalergis - a countess, cosmopolitan of Polish-Russian descent, patron of the arts, and also a person with a very complex personal and family situation.
Norwid most likely met Kalergis in December 1845. He accompanied her on her travels through Italy, visited her in many European cities, and remained associated with her (and present in the circle of her salon) for several years to come.
Fragment of Norwid's letter with a sketched profile of Krasiński (1848) by Cyprian NorwidOriginal Source: https://polona.pl/item/fotografia-listu-cypriana-kamila-norwida-z-1848-r,NTg0NDAwMg/0/#info:metadata
First of the Bards
At the beginning of 1848, Norwid met the first of the three Polish Romantic poets, recognized by tradition as "The Bards": Zygmunt Krasiński (1812-1859), a pessimistic aristocrat.
Krasiński was enamored of the young Norwid, writing of "fire in an alabaster vessel". Both were distancing themselves from the populism, and both declared an almost ultramontane attachment to the Church.
In later years, however, Krasiński treated Norwid with distance and despise.
Armchair' politician
The poet did not have a happy hand in politics, but he was not indifferent to it: he valued far-reaching political initiatives above gestures and desperate actions.
As early as 1844, he came into contact in Italy with Ludwik Orpiszewski, one of the diplomatic agents of Duke Adam Czartoryski (1770-1861): the first authority of the Polish political emigration. In the spring of 1849 he presented himself to Czartoryski in Paris.
In February 1848, owing it to Krasiński, Norwid met Adam Mickiewicz (1798-1855), the greatest poet of Polish Romanticism. In the hectic year of 1849, Norwid meets the third of the "bards" of Polish Romanticism, Juliusz Słowacki (1809-1849) - almost on his deathbed, visiting him in his apartment on rue Ponthieu a month before his death.
Self-portrait (1880) by Cyprian NorwidOriginal Source: https://polona.pl/item/autoportret-fotografia-rysunku-cypriana-kamila-norwida,NTg0Mzg3NA/0/#info:metadata
Jules Michelet, Ary Scheffer, Alexander Herzen, Paul Delaroche... So many great names, so many contacts, salons - and none of them was able to pull Norwid out of his deepening loneliness.