ANTONI SUCHANEK
Born
April 27, 1901 in Rzeszów, Poland; died September 22, 1982 in Gdynia, Poland
Background
Suchanek studied at the Kraków Academy
of Fine Arts 1917-23 and was director of the graphic art department of the Polish
Library in Bydgoszcz. He painted many
marine landscapes and exhibited works at the Society for the Promotion of Fine
Arts in Warsaw. 1937-39, he managed
the Zachety gallery of the Warsaw Fine Arts Society. During World War II, Suchanek rescued some
of the gallery's considerable art collection that included Jan Matejko's famous
painting Battle of Grunwald, hiding
the works in the Warsaw National Museum.
Arrest and Deportation to Auschwitz
June 5, 1943, he
was arrested in Warsaw during his daughter's wedding. His daughter, Teofilia, was sent to Auschwitz,
his son-in-law, Mieczysław Uniejewski vel Ludwik Raczynski, was shot, and the
entire wedding party of 89 people, many of whom belonged to the Polish Home
Army, was sent to Pawiak prison. At
Pawiak, while waiting to be shot, Suchanek wrote: "Day after day, I observe
through a crack in my cell those going to be 'worked out,' my ears are becoming
numb from screams and moans...I sit, draw, because they allowed me to do so,
and wait patiently, when finally I will also stand under this historical tree,
black gate, on a sunny day." Throughout
his stay at Pawiak, Suchanek painted and drew, producing about 100 pencil portraits
of fellow prisoners on pages of a notebook. One day, German guards burst into his cell,
searched its contents, and seized all the artist's sketches.
August 25, 1943, Suchanek was remanded
to Auschwitz, where he was assigned prisoner number 139388.
Work Assignments at Auschwitz
He
was initially taken to barrack 11, the "Block of death," and then
transferred to the camp museum, where he painted landscapes in watercolors. When he was starving, fellow prisoner and artist
Wiktor Tolkin gave him food. None of
the artworks Suchanek produced at Auschwitz survived the war.
Release from Auschwitz and After
Suchanek was released
from Auschwitz in fall of 1943, and then returned to Warsaw, where he hid in
the house of the artist Kazimierz Borzym. He painted obsessively about Auschwitz themes, creating a body of
works that burned during the Warsaw uprising in 1944. After the uprising, Suchanek went to Kraków. There, he drew views of the city, which he
sold to survive. Following the war,
Suchanek worked as a portrait and landscape painter. He also published the folio Warsaw
in Ruins, illustrated with his lithographs, that was later given to the
Museum of the City of Warsaw. 1946 Suchanek
settled in Gdynia, participating in that city’s postwar artistic renaissance.
Bibliography:
Archives at
the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum in Oświęcim.
Jaworska,
Janina. Nie wszystek umrę... Warsaw, 1975.
Archives of the Pawiak Prison Museum
in Warsaw.