Andrzej Piotr Pityński (15 March 1947 – 18 September 2020)[1] was a Polish-American monumental sculptor who lived and worked in the United States.
Although it was originally destined for Warsaw, the work – which depicts guerrilla Polish freedom fighters in World War II – was not welcomed in communist Poland at that time.
On September 6, 2006, the work was moved to the MBTA's Silver-Line World Trade Center Station on the South Boston waterfront.
The memorial to the victims of the Volhynian slaughter, commissioned by the Polish Army Veterans' Association in America, designed by Andrzej Pityński in 2017, has been erected in Domostawa, Poland.
His works expressed both the glorious and the tragic, embedding themselves permanently in our collective consciousness as symbols of the complex and challenging history of the Republic of Poland.This article about a Polish sculptor is a stub.