
Numbers
196 × 135 cm, acrylic on canvas, 2025

Numbers (detail)
acrylic on canvas, 2025
Pavlo Kovach with Waldemar Tatarczuk
Numbers (detail)
acrylic on canvas, 2025
Pavlo Kovach serves in the Armed Forces of Ukraine. He works at headquarters, where his responsibilities include handling cases of soldiers reported missing at the front. Each such disappearance is assigned a specific registration number. Kovach, who did not abandon his artistic practice after being mobilised, has invoked these numbers in his artistic actions, inscribing them, among other places, on laurel leaves. The painting presented in the exhibition is the result of a collaboration in which Waldemar Tatarczuk assumed the role of executor of a painterly scenario developed by Pavlo Kovach. The work refers both to Kovach’s own artistic practice and to the work of the Polish artist Roman Opałka (1931–2011). In the mid-1960s, Opałka initiated a painting project entitled OPALKA 1965 / 1 –, referred to by the artist himself and by critics as the ‘Programme’. He continued this project for three and a half decades, until his death. As part of the ‘Programme’ Opałka painted consecutive numbers in white paint on canvases, beginning with the numeral “1.” The first painting was executed on a black background; in subsequent works, he continued the count on grey grounds that gradually grew lighter with each new canvas, moving steadily toward white. In accordance with Kovach’s concept, Tatarczuk works on a canvas of the same format – 196 × 135 cm – used by Opałka. He repeats the gesture of painting numbers in white, but transforms its meaning. In Opałka’s work, counting had an existential dimension: the paintings functioned as personal clocks measuring the artist’s own passing time. In the work created through the collaboration between Kovach and Tatarczuk, each number conceals a different person, their drama and unknown fate; within the abstract digits is inscribed a landscape of contemporary, war-torn Ukraine.
Pavlo Kovach born 1987, Uzhhorod. Graduated from the A. Erdeli Uzhhorod College of Art (2005) and the Lviv National Academy of Arts (2011). Winner of the MUHi competition (2012) and the IN-OUT Festival (Gdańsk, 2018). Co-founder of the Jefremova 26 Gallery and Detenpyla Gallery. Since 2012, he has been the founder and a member of Open Group. The collective received the Main Prize of the PinchukArtPrize (2015) and the Special Mention of the Allegro Prize (2020). Open Group curated the Ukrainian Pavilion at the Venice Biennale in 2019 and represented Poland at the Biennale in 2024 under the curatorial guidance of Marta Czyż..Pavlo is one of the curators of the Lviv Municipal Art Center. As a member of Open Group, he has participated in numerous exhibitions, including Wild Grass: Our Lives (8th Yokohama Triennale, Japan, 2024), Forever and a Day (Amsterdam, Netherlands, 2024), OurYears, Our Words, Our Losses, Our Searches, Our Us (Jam Factory Art Centre, Lviv, 2023).He lives and works in Lviv. Since 2023 he has served in the Armed Forces of Ukraine.