@ARTICLE{Gyurkovich_Mateusz_Gedymin_Evolution_2024, author={Gyurkovich, Mateusz Gedymin and Gyurkovich, Jacek Karol and Oktawiec, Wojciech}, volume={vol. LII/1}, journal={Teka Komisji Urbanistyki i Architektury Oddziału Polskiej Akademii Nauk w Krakowie}, pages={87–105}, howpublished={online}, year={2024}, publisher={Polsh Academy of Sciences, Branch in Kraków (Polska Akademia Nauk Oddział w Krakowie)}, abstract={The research goal of this paper was to systematize Cęckiewicz’s religious architecture through a comparative analysis of distinctive works from different periods of his artistic activity. Witold Cęckiewicz was a full professor and an honorary doctor of the Cracow University of Technology, a mentor, teacher and educator of several generations of architects and urban planners at the Faculty of Architecture of this University. He was a full member of the Polish Academy of Sciences and honorary chairman of the Architecture and Urban Planning Committee of the Polish Academy of Sciences, as well as a member of the Polish Academy of Arts and Sciences. He was an outstanding designer of many works: buildings and urban complexes, sculptures and monuments, a graphical artist and poet, the author of several volumes of poetry, which are words and poetic verses expressing thoughts about space and beauty. He made an invaluable contribution to the development of Polish architectural thought and the shape of the space that surrounds us through his own works and the achievements of his many students. His rich body of work — both designs and completed projects — which consists of works from a period of the clash and birth of new stylistic directions in architecture, is worth analysing and discussing, especially in the field of religious architecture.}, type={Article}, title={Evolution of Styles in Professor Witold Cęckiewicz’s Religious Architecture}, URL={http://czasopisma.pan.pl/Content/134126/03_Teka_tom_specjalny_2024.pdf}, doi={10.24425/tkuia.2024.152186}, keywords={Witold Cęckiewicz, Polish architecture after the Second World War, religious architecture}, }