Encyclopedia

Mloda Polska

Also found in: Wikipedia.
(redirected from Young Poland)
The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Młoda Polska

 

the conventional name for the period in the development of Polish literature and plastic arts between 1890 and 1918. The term is also applied to the neoromantic tendencies in Polish literature and plastic arts of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The realist school, represented by such writers as B. Prus, E. Orzeszkowa, M. Konopnicka, S. Zeromski, and W. Reymont, also flourished at this time.

The aesthetics of Mloda Polska as the totality of neoromantic tendencies (impressionism and symbolism in literature) was expounded in articles by A. Gorski, S. Przybyszewski, and Z. Przesmycki. It was a contradictory aesthetics, reflecting both the mystical and elitist attitudes of some members of the artistic intelligentsia and an individualist protest against the capitalist system and bourgeois culture. The works of a number of writers, notably S. Wyspiariski, J. Kasprowicz, and K. Tetmajer, reveal their efforts to reconcile the aesthetics of Mloda Polska with socially conscious, humanistic art.

In the plastic arts the Mtoda Polska movement brought together artists who were opposed to the dominant conservative trends and sought new means of expression. Some turned to folk subjects and folk art traditions. The movement did not produce an overall, coherent artistic program. Within the mainstream of Mloda Polska there coexisted such diverse styles as impressionism (the painters J. Pankiewicz, L. Wyczółkowski), symbolism in its various forms, (the painters F. Ruszczyc and J. Malczewski), and art nouveau (the painters and graphic artists S. Wyspianski, J. Mehoffer, W. Wojtkiewicz, K. Frycz), whose masters sought to create a national monumental-decorative style and to achieve universal forms. The Mloda Polska period saw the development of Polish sculpture, which was also influenced by impressionism and art nouveau (K. Laszczka, W. Szymanowski, and X. Dunikowski).

Młoda Polska architecture employed motifs from folk wood architecture. This trend led to the emergence of the Zakopane style (architect S. Witkiewicz) and to the spread of art nouveau, which sometimes acquired national-romantic overtones (architects T. Stryjeński and F. Mączyński).

An achievement of the Mloda Polska period was the rapid development of applied art, combining art nouveau elements with folk motifs in the design of books, magazines, interiors, furniture, metal objects, and rugs. The works of Wyspianski, Frycz, and W. Jastrzbowski exemplify this trend in applied art.

REFERENCES

Vitt, V. V. “Literatura 1890–1918 gg.” Istoriia pol’skoi literatury, vol. 2. Moscow, 1969.
Literatura okresu Młodej Polski, vols. 1–3. Warsaw, 1967–73.
Rogatko, B. Utopia Mtodej Polski. Łódź, 1972.
Dobrowolski, T. Sztuka Młodej Polski. Warsaw, 1963.
Sztuka Młodej Polski: Katalog wystawy. Kraków, 1965.
Wallis, M. Secesja. Warsaw, 1967.

Młoda Polska

 

(Young Poland), a revolutionary organization of Polish exiles that existed from 1834 to 1836. It was founded in Bern as part of the federation of Young Europe, led by G. Mazzini. Young Europe was a secret international association of revolutionary democratic organizations, whose goal was the establishment of a republican form of government in the European countries. Mloda Polska aimed at reestablishing Poland as an independent bourgeois-democratic republic. Headed by J. Lelewel, the organization exercised considerable influence on the conspiratorial revolutionary organizations operating in Poland.

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
Mentioned in
References in periodicals archive
Young Poland Under 21 international Max Stryjek has shown a great deal of potential, as does ex-Ireland U19 stopper James Talbot.
He is the key artist of Modernism in Poland, and the driving force behind the M?oda Polska (Young Poland) period in letters.
She discusses a survey of the main trends in British literature; Polish Romanticism: madness, vampirism, messianism; Polish positivism: a set of restrictions; Young Poland: decadence and melancholia; the role of mothers; the role of fathers; and metaphors.
Merely existential problems, separated from the context of the events shattering the life of community, rarely appear in it, for example in very early Romanticism, then in the Young Poland period (at the turn of 19th century, when the movement called Jugendstil, the equivalent of Secession in visual arts, appeared in Europe), and recently in the period of political transformation, as a result of so-called "Autumn of Nations" that took place in 1989.
A century ago, an avant-garde modernist movement, "Young Poland," rejuvenated the city with inventive representations of an age of insouciance.
Of particular importance is the study of Karlowicz's place in the Young Poland (Mloda Polska) movement by noted British scholar Alistair Wightman, the author of a well-received monograph, Karlowicz, Young Poland and the Musical Fin-de-siecle, published by Ashgate in 1996 and subsequently translated into Polish.
It was, for example, home of the Young Poland modernist group, the Formists, the Polish Futurists, and the Zwrotnica circle associated with the art critic and poet Tadeusz Peiper, who was editor of a little magazine called Zwrotnica (Railway Switch).
Young Poland goalkeeper Szczesny is expected to be sidelined for around six weeks with a finger problem which saw him replaced inside 20 minutes at the Nou Camp, where the Gunners saw their Champions League dreams ended by Barcelona.
Young Poland stopper Szczesny has impressed in his outings so far, which included a Premier League clash at Old Trafford.
Young Poland stopper Szczesny - who had a productive loan spell with Brentford last season - has impressed in his outings so far, which included a Premier League clash at Old Trafford.
The list is again chronological, beginning with Old Polish literature then moving on to Enlightenment literature, Romanticism, Positivism, the Young Poland, literature of the Second Republic (1918-1939), and post-1939 literature.
Copyright © 2003-2025 Farlex, Inc Disclaimer
All content on this website, including dictionary, thesaurus, literature, geography, and other reference data is for informational purposes only. This information should not be considered complete, up to date, and is not intended to be used in place of a visit, consultation, or advice of a legal, medical, or any other professional.