Giving Has Never Been a Disinterested Act

HOS Gallery Warsaw presents The Gift / Das Gift, curated by Marianna Łomża. Four artists on desire, sacrifice, and the cost of giving.
HOS Gallery Group Show The Gift , exhibiton submission catapult contemporary art platform curated by Marianna Lomza
HOS Gallery Group Show The Gift - with Artists Julia Szczerbowska, Kama Kicińska, Zuzanna Mazurek, Julia Bachur and Amelia Woroszyl - Image Courtesy by the Gallery - Photo Szymon Sokolowski

In Proto-Germanic, the same root word covered both gift and poison, one term for two opposite outcomes of the same act of passing something on.

That the two languages diverged from this shared root is not incidental. A gift produces gratitude, gratitude produces obligation, and obligation slowly returns the gesture to the economic structure it pretended to escape.

HOS Gallery Group Show The Gift - with Artists Julia Szczerbowska, Kama Kicińska, Zuzanna Mazurek, Julia Bachur and Amelia Woroszyl
HOS Gallery Group Show The Gift - with Artists Julia Szczerbowska, Kama Kicińska, Zuzanna Mazurek, Julia Bachur and Amelia Woroszyl Image Courtesy by the Gallery - Photo Szymon Sokolowski
HOS Gallery Group Show The Gift
HOS Gallery Group Show The Gift - with Artists Julia Szczerbowska, Kama Kicińska, Zuzanna Mazurek, Julia Bachur and Amelia Woroszyl Image Courtesy by the Gallery - Photo Szymon Sokolowski
how gallery presents the gift a group show
HOS Gallery Group Show The Gift - with Artists Julia Szczerbowska, Kama Kicińska, Zuzanna Mazurek, Julia Bachur and Amelia Woroszyl Image Courtesy by the Gallery - Photo Szymon Sokolowski

What interests the exhibition is not the opposition between gift and poison but the zone where the two become indistinguishable.

Desire, devotion, and care can operate as sustenance or as toxin, depending on whose body absorbs them and under what conditions. The four practices gathered here do not resolve that ambivalence. They make it available for examination.


The Gift / Das Gift
Artists:
Julia Szczerbowska, Kama Kicińska, Zuzanna Mazurek, Julia Bachur, Amelia Woroszył
Exhibition:
The Gift / Das Gift
City:
Warsaw, Poland
Dates:
Address:
Dzielna 5 lok. 5B, Warsaw
Curator:
Marianna Łomża
Photography:
Szymon Sokolowski
Image Courtesy:
Courtesy HOS Gallery

A gift may bring joy or create dependency and in many cases, it does both. The distance between generosity and sacrifice is not always a matter of degree. It is often a matter of who decides.

HOS Gallery has built a consistent program around practices that resist clean categorization, work that pushes against medium while remaining formally precise.

The Gift / Das Gift brings together four Polish artists whose individual practices circle a shared conceptual knot, desire, the gesture of giving, and what that gesture costs. The works do not share a visual language. They share an inquiry.

Artist List: Julia Szczerbowska, Kama Kicińska, Zuzanna Mazurek, Julia Bachur and Amelia Woroszył

Artists Julia Szczerbowska, Kama Kicińska, Zuzanna Mazurek, Julia Bachur and Amelia Woroszyl
HOS Gallery Group Show The Gift - with Artists Julia Szczerbowska, Kama Kicińska, Zuzanna Mazurek, Julia Bachur and Amelia Woroszyl Image Courtesy by the Gallery - Photo Szymon Sokolowski
installation view How Gallery
HOS Gallery Group Show The Gift - with Artists Julia Szczerbowska, Kama Kicińska, Zuzanna Mazurek, Julia Bachur and Amelia Woroszyl Image Courtesy by the Gallery - Photo Szymon Sokolowski

Curatorial Voice by Marianna Lomza

In Proto-Germanic, the root *geban / *giftiz meant “that which has been given,” “a gift,” or “something passed on.” Over the centuries, however, through semantic drift and the evolution of language toward euphemism, the word Gift underwent a transformation.

While the shared root has retained a positive connotation in English, in German, used for years as a euphemism for lethal mixtures, it gradually narrowed its meaning to “a deadly dose” and now signifies poison.

How gallery , female exhibiton now, currently with sculpture paintings and installations
HOS Gallery Group Show The Gift - with Artists Julia Szczerbowska, Kama Kicińska, Zuzanna Mazurek, Julia Bachur and Amelia Woroszyl Image Courtesy by the Gallery - Photo Szymon Sokolowski
Julia Bachur, artwork , hos gallery
HOS Gallery - Julia Bachur - Desire and avoidance - Image Courtesy of the Gallery - Photo Photo Szymon Sokolowski

A gift may be a source of joy, but also a mechanism of dependency. A “pure” gift seems difficult to imagine in a world where every such gesture carries with it an expectation of reciprocity, gratitude, or symbolic return.

Gratitude automatically produces obligation and immediately entangles one in an economy of exchange. Perhaps the most radical gift, understood as the offering of oneself, may operate according to the same logic, generating a responsibility that bears the marks of sacrifice.

Desire, and the devotion that follows it, can hardly be considered a disinterested gesture.

Kama Kicinska, artwork, detail
Kama Kicinska, Yes to all, 2026, inkjet print mounted on a lightbox, 141x101x10 cm - Image Courtesy by the artist and HOS Gallery
Zuzanna Mazurek, detail painting, has gallery, pink
Zuzanna Mazurek, Gossip oil on canvas 120x130 cm 2026 - Image Courtesy by the artist and HOS Gallery
Julia Szczerbowska, figurative painting, artwork, how gallery
Julia Szczerbowska, “Dreaming of moving out”, 50 40cm, oil on canvas, 2026 Image Courtesy of the Hos Gallery

Desire may confront us both with fantasy and with lack; it need not be directed toward another person, but toward an object, an idea, or the absolute. It can even lead toward truth and goodness, provided it undergoes proper transformation and purification.

According to the belief that relinquishing the ego may open the possibility of happiness through surrender to that which exceeds the individual, in an act of love free from possession.

The works of the artists brought together in the exhibition do not form a unified narrative; rather, they interweave, revealing successive aspects of desire and sacrifice.

Kama Kicinska fragile sculpture , black
Kama Kicinska, Lots Wife, 2025, steel, leather, foil, acrylic paint, 240x60x35 Image Courtesy of the Hos Gallery Photo Szymon Sokolowski
Julia Szczerbowska exhibition detail, at HOS gallery, Poland
Julia Szczerbowska, “burnt matches”, 13_16 cm, oil on canvas, sand, 2026 - HOS Gallery Group Show The Gift - Courtesy by the Gallery - Photo Szymon Sokolowski

Their practices guide the viewer through a series of tensions, from the primal impulse, through the gesture of giving to others and its ambivalence, to the moment of purification, sublimation, and the deconstruction of the very idea itself.

Kama Kicińska examines the structure of desire as a multilayered phenomenon, rooted in the body, history, and relations of power. She seeks to capture its tension, fragmentation, and temporality. Here, this drive appears as a primal, wild, even deceptive force, one that can both forge connection and lead to the loss of subjectivity.

Zuzanna Mazurek gossip on canvas for hos gallery
Zuzanna Mazurek, Gossip oil on canvas 130x150cm 2026 - Image Courtesy of the Gallery Photo Szymon Sokolowski

Similarly precarious is the balancing on the boundary between care and sacrifice, between devotion to others and self-effacement, which forms the central motif of Zuzanna Mazurek’s oil paintings.

The artist highlights the entanglements inherent in giving to others and emphasizes that the key distinction between these two attitudes lies in choice, one not dictated by oppressive obligation or by the perception of women as the titular “gift,” always at others’ disposal.

From the perspective of the “after”, of sublimation and purification, speak Julia Szczerbowska and Julia Bachur. Bachur’s practice, grounded in the theory of the abject, visualizes, without erotic literalness, the trace that desire leaves in matter. Transmission, surrender, loss, and the disintegration of the “self” are here transformed.

hos gallery
Installation view - HOS Gallery - The Gift Exhibition - Image Courtesy of the Gallery Photo Szymon Sokolowski

Her delicate, soft objects reveal that what repels may simultaneously attract, and that beauty may emerge from discomfort. Szczerbowska approaches purification as a quiet, almost imperceptible experience, unfolding through traces of matter altered by fire.

A light palette, luminosity, and the repetition of motifs create an atmosphere of apparent calm in which tension is displaced inward. Her works align more closely with a gesture of withdrawal than of transgression, proposing a form of transformation achieved through attention and stillness.

Finally, Amelia Woroszył reverses the logic of desire and of the gaze toward the image itself, proposing enigmatic representations thatstand in opposition to “obscenity,” understood as the absolute absence of mystery. The titular “poison” resides in what the image offers the viewer: an impulse toward interpretation that ultimately proves uncertain.

Amelia Woroszyl painting artist HOS gallery
Amelia Woroszyl, vanity mirror (a play) 2026 oil on canvas, wood, tin object 120 x 66 Image Courtesy of the Gallery Photo Szymon Sokolowski
HOS Gallery Amelia Woroszyl wall piece
Amelia Woroszyl, telltale nerve 2026 oil on canvas , wood, 170 x 84 cm Image Courtesy of the Gallery Photo Szymon Sokolowski

The Gift / Das Gift is an exhibition about the impulses and tensions embedded in human relations; about how that which is given continues to resonate. It asks whether a gift can ever exist outside the structures that inevitably return it to us.

Curator: Marianna Łomża


There is a broader moment in which the structures of care and devotion have become sites of renegotiation, where what was assumed to be selfless is examined for the patterns of expectation embedded within it. The Gift / Das Gift does not make a political argument directly.

It stays with the phenomenology, how desire feels, what giving costs, where the self moves in the process of devotion. The four practices do not reach a shared conclusion, they arrive at the same unresolved site from different directions.

What the gift continues to carry after the gesture is complete is the question the exhibition leaves open.

Instagram Julia Szczerbowska
Julia Bachur on Instagram
Zuzanna Mazurek Instagram
Instagram Kama Kicińska
Instagram Amelia Woroszyl
HOS on Instagram

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This is a exhibition review published by Catapult — an independent editorial platform for contemporary art, based in Vienna. We publish exhibition reviews, artist features, interviews, and critical context, with a focus on emerging and mid-career practices from Europe and beyond.
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