Extraction
On the second day of the Nobody Reads This: Art Book Fair, on Saturday, 23 May 2026 at 6:00 p.m., the Warsaw premiere of Michał Łuczak's book Extraction, published by Sun Archive, will take place.
Michał Łuczak was born, raised, and continues to live in Upper Silesia, a region of southern Poland where hard coal has been mined for over 200 years. Near his former home, a mine extracts coal from a depth of more than 1,000 meters. A second mine was shuttered two years ago, after 135 years of operation. His former house is still visibly crooked, although the inhabitants no longer feel the slant. Outside, the sidewalk sinks into the ground. This process—the result of mining operations hollowing out the earth beneath us—will continue long after the last mine has been sealed. Across the street is a spoil tip: a heap of mining waste overgrown with pioneer plants. Eventually, someone will haul it away as raw material for road construction, and the pile will be gone. In winter, you can see the baleful air we breathe. Unfortunately, the artist did contribute to this himself, for his crooked house had a coal-fired furnace in the basement, which burns what is rosily branded “eco-pea” coal. Since 1989, when communism collapsed in Poland, Upper Silesia has undergone constant transformation. The majority of the region’s mines have been shuttered because the deposits are exhausted or the seams are too deep to be profitable. The Polish government recently announced that, by 2049, there will be no more coal mines operating in the country.
Extraction is a record of the multilevel experience of living in the shadow of a mine, and a visual representation of mining’s impact on landscape, architecture, the air, and humans.