Malinowski
Born in Poland and trained at the prestigious Warsaw School of Fine Arts, Malinowski has lived and worked in France for over four decades. Before devoting himself entirely to painting, he built a distinguished career as an illustrator and film poster designer. His work in the cinematic world earned wide recognition, notably through the now-iconic poster for Luc Besson’s Le Grand Bleu (1988), which has become a touchstone of French visual culture.
In recent years, Malinowski has dedicated himself exclusively to easel painting, where his mastery of composition and symbolism fully unfolds. His paintings are immediately recognizable for their refined palette of whites, reds, and blues — colors that create a universe both timeless and intimate. Each canvas explores the subtle interplay between purity and sensuality, silence and emotion, revealing a world of restraint charged with poetic tension.
Malinowski’s figures, often caught in moments of introspection or quiet revelation, evoke a profound spiritual resonance. Through their gestures, glances, and postures, they invite viewers into a space of contemplation — a theatre of the soul where myth, memory, and the sacred intertwine.
Today, his works are held in numerous private and public collections around the world. They enrich the contemporary art landscape through their originality, sophistication, and quiet power. Malinowski’s art — poetic, enigmatic, and luminous — continues to bridge cultural and spiritual dimensions with rare sensitivity.
His paintings are represented by the