Born in Sopot, Poland in 1945, studied architecture and poster design. As a student he begun contributing drawings to Polish magazines.
From 1970 to 1972 Dudziński lived in London working for such underground magazines as Oz, Ink and Time Out. Back in Poland he quickly established his reputation, specifically with the help of a wingless bird of contest named Dudi − a regular feature in Poland’s foremost satirical weekly Szpilki. His work appeared in choice Polish periodicals, he designed posters for film and theater, illustrated books for children, designed sets for the stage and television and exhibited his fine art at Warsaw’s leading galleries.
In 1977 Dudziński was invited to the International Design Conference in Aspen, Colorado. He stayed on in New York City afterwards. Since then his work was published in most of the leading magazines and newspapers both in the US and Europe (including The Atlantic Monthly, The Boston Globe, Newsweek, The New York Times, Playboy, Rolling Stone, Vanity Fair, The Washington Post and Time. He received commissions from AT&T, Citicorp, IBM, Deutche Telekom, Nestle, The Royal Bank of Scotland, and many others.