<p>This article examines the representations of pain in Abakanowicz’s artwork in a number of different ways. As scholars have shown, Abakanowicz’s portrayal of the fragmented and mutilated body was influenced by the figurative work of other post-war sculptors in Poland, including Alina Szapocznikow, Magdalena Wi?cek and Jacek Walto?. The truncated limbs, exposed viscera and scarred surfaces in Abakanowicz’s works such as Heads (1973-75), Seated Figures (1974-79) and Backs (1976-80) suggest trauma. As well as using the prevalent cultural motif of the disfigured body to imply suffering, the artist also explored, as this article shows, the biological mechanisms that allow the sensation of pain to be registered in the human body. In London during the 1970s, Abakanowicz met neuroscientist Patrick Wall who, along with Ronald Melzack, offered a new model for understanding pain with their influential Gate Control Theory (1965). This article examines how Abakanowicz’s work can be understood in terms of Wall’s ideas, especially the complex network of nerves that produce the feeling identified as pain in the brain. Finally, I will also explore the metaphorical dimension of pain in the weaponry of War Games (1987-1933).</p>
History
School affiliated with
Lincoln School of Humanities and Heritage (Research Outputs)