Andrzej Pityński | |
Birth Name: | Andrzej Piotr Pityński |
Birth Date: | 15 March 1947 |
Birth Place: | Ulanów, Poland |
Death Place: | Mount Holly, New Jersey, United States |
Nationality: | Polish-American |
Known For: | Sculpture |
Notable Works: | Katyn Memorial (Jersey City), The Partisans, Patriot Monument |
Style: | Monumental |
Andrzej Piotr Pityński (15 March 1947 – 18 September 2020)[1] was a Polish-American monumental sculptor who lived and worked in the United States.[2] A book of his works was published in 2008.[3]
In January, 2006, his Partisans (1979) was removed from the corner of Beacon and Charles streets on the Boston Common, where it had stood since 1983. Although it was originally destined for Warsaw, the work – which depicts guerrilla Polish freedom fighters in World War II – was not welcomed in communist Poland at that time. On September 6, 2006, the work was moved to the MBTA's Silver-Line World Trade Center Station on the South Boston waterfront.[4] It was permanently relocated to the center median of D Street, at the intersection with Congress Street, on November 17, 2018. [5] [6]
Describing his "Partisans" Pitynski said, that he dedicated this monument to all "Fighters for Freedom in the World", and used Polish Partisans as an example.[7]
Andrzej Pityński created the Patriot Monument in 2010. The bronze sculpture, symbolizing Polish patriotism, stands in the center of Stalowa Wola. Officially unveiled on 11 September 2011.[8] [9]
Pitynski has worked on a number of works remembering the Katyn massacre including the Katyn Memorial which stands in Exchange Place in Jersey City, New Jersey and the National Katyń Memorial which stands in the Inner Harbor in Baltimore.
The memorial to the victims of the Volhynian slaughter, commissioned by the Polish Army Veterans' Association in America, designed by Andrzej Pityński in 2017, has been erected in Domostawa, Poland.
Andrzej Pityński passed away on 18 September 2020 in the United States. On 26 October 2024, he was laid to rest in his hometown of Ulanów, Poland, fulfilling his wish to be buried in his native soil after a four-year wait. The funeral began with a Holy Mass at the Church of St. John the Baptist and St. Barbara in Ulanów. The artist's ashes were then interred at the Holy Trinity Cemetery.[10]