Selected Topics from the Czech Art History II
Erasmus course, winter semester of 2019/2020 chief coordinator PhDr. Lenka Šimková
Ing. Mgr. Markéta Čejková
Czech Modernism in Architecture (focused on Prague)
The lecture will outline the Czech architectional modernism between the world wars with the special focus on Prague. The economic, political and cultural specifics will be briefly discussed first to explain the unique situation of Czechoslovakia as a newly established democracy. The lecture will then cover the individual as well as collective housing with excellent examples of Villa Müller designed by Adolf Loos, the housing estate Baba built in Prague 6 by almost exclusively Czech architects continuing with examples of other than housing architecture.
Recommended reading:
Premysl Veverka, Radomira Sedlakova, Petr Krajci, Zdenek Lukes, Dita Dvorakova, Pavel Vlcek: Great Villas of Prague, Prague 2008 Petr Urlich (ed), Lenka Popelová, Radomíra Sedláková, Pavel Skranc, Pavel Vlček, Petr Vorlík: Great Buildings of Prague 6, Prague 2009 Jana Hornekova, Karel Ksandr, Maria Szadkowska, Vladimir Slapeta: Villa Müller, Prague 2002
Czech Cubism in Architecture (focused on Prague)
The lecture will discuss the very specific aspect of cubism developed almost exclusively by the Czech architects. It will cover the background, the development and the most interesting constructions completed within a very short time period between 1911 and 1927. The buildings and constructions discussed are mostly located in Prague but a few out of Prague ones will be mentioned as well. As a bonus cubistic design realised by the Czech cubistic architects will be covered by the lecture as well.
Recommended reading:
Zdeněk Lukes, Ester Havlova: Czech Architectural Cubism, Prague 2006
Museum of Czech Cubism, entrance fee
The lecture will be held in the Museum of Czech Cubism focusing on cubistic design (furniture, glass, porcelaine and china, paintings, posters, etc.). As the museum is located in a very famous cubistic house designed by Josef Gočár, the lecture will also cover the architecture and design of the building.
Marie Fiřtová, M.A.
Prague – Munich: cultural influences around the mid-19th century
The fine arts in the Czech lands during the nineteenth century are without any doubt interwoven with German Munich as an important centre of the arts next to Düsseldorf and Vienna. Many Czech painters went to Munich to deepen their knowledge and to get to know the local art collections. The other way around, some of the Munich artists, such as Christian Ruben and Maximilian Haushofer, came to Prague to teach at the Prague Academy of Fine Arts. In this talk I would like to give a general overview of the evolution of the romantic and the beginning of the realistic painting (mainly on the example of the landscape) on the Czech artistic scene and focus on the obvious tension between the academic and non-academic art around the mid-19th century.
Literature:
Taťána Petrasová – Rostislav Švácha (eds.), Art in the Czech Lands 800–2000, Praha: Artefactum – Arbor vitae societas, 2017 TaťánaPetrasová, Roman Prahl (eds.), Mnichov - Praha: výtvarné umění mezi tradicí a modernou = München - Prag: Kunst zwischenTraditionundModerne. Praha: Academia, 2012 Haushoferova krajinářská škola = Die Landschaftsschule von Haushofer = Haushofer'slandscapepaintingschool: Galerie Kroupa, Litomyšl, 28.5.-10.7.2016. Překlad Marek Bárta a Eva Žallmannová. Litomyšl: Miroslav Kroupa - Galerie Kroupa, 2016.
Mgr. Anežka Mikulcová
Forgotten genres of visual culture of the late 18th and 19th century (Portrait Silhouettes, Profile Portraits, Shadow Theatre, Papercutting etc.)
The goal of this lecture is to offer a wider perspective on late 18th and 19th century art, which is usually observed only through so called higher culture (paintings, sculptures, architecture). However, art of this epoch was much more varied and it was composed of different fields of arts and applied arts. The main centrepiece of the lecture will be portrait silhouettes that are a specific part of visual culture. They range from the leisure-time product of dilettantes to high-quality and cultivated art expression of specialists. They can be created with different techniques like painting, cutting, verreé glomisé or mechanical tracing the shadow, which contributed to the diversity of this art. Silhouettes correspond with the then taste, which was formed by classicism, physiognomy, relation between shadow and lights etc. We will also observe how this field of art changed its character at the turn of 19th and 20th century in connection with photography, film and graphic design. Through their interconnection with other nowadays forgotten genres we will also speak about Shadow Theatre, Paper Cutting or Wax Portraits.
Recommended literature in chronological order:
August Edouart, A treatise on Silhouette Likenesses, London 1835 E. Nevill Jackson, The history of silhouettes, London 1911 Max von Boehn, Miniaturen und Silhouetten. EinKapitelausKulturgeschichte und Kunst, München 1917 [later 1919] Raymond Lister, Silhouettes: an Introduction to their History and to the Art of Cutting and Painting them, London 1950 Emma Rutherford, Silhouette. The Art of Shadow, New York 2009 Asma Naeem, Black Out. Silhouette Then and Now, Washington 2018
Mgr. Milan Matějka ymago de praga, beautiful madona/pieta as complex Bildforms - peak of visual arts in Medieval Bohemia
Relevance of Prague artistic center was determined by intense touch with foreign environment. From the perspective of European art-history the term international gothic can be related, for its Prague variety we can use term beautiful style (krásnýsloh, Schöne Stil). Advanced visual culture and production of sophisticated religious images was attached to following polarity: cherishly nourished cult of Holy Virgin supported by circle of archbishop of Prague at one side and questioning the legitimacy of presence of artworks in liturgical space by the reformists at the other. Formentioned polarity is dependant with beautiful Madonna and beautiful pieta phenomena, that could be understood as an „complex visual form“, from the perspective of Bohemian art history (or in the more escalated national Czech perspective) as the absolute peak of domestic visual tradition, that was not surpassed in following centuries . However, beautiful artworks were subject of criticism from reform-oriented theologians (Matěj z Janova, Mikuláš z Drážďan, Jan Hus), later on being systematically destroyed in war and turmoil to come. Ongoing research is trying to answer the reasons for the excessive beautiful form of artworks and its role for Christian Bohemian audience in late 14th century from perspective of visual studies, gender, religious and political propaganda and medieval theology and philosophy. In my lecture I would like to introduce the beautiful phenomena in the context of medieval art in Bohemia and current state of research and methodology related to the topic, that can allow us partial interpretation of the artworks, a well as their role in medieval society.
"honest pictures" - visual art in religiously disturbed country
As we can track in the pastoral and religious essays of the scholars of the period the contemporary beautiful phenomena was refused as “untruthful” and manipulative formal artistic creation. If we follow religious writing of the period ((Matěj z Janova, Mikuláš z Drážďan, Jan Hus), we can reconstruct the art theory leading to refusal of beautiful phenomena and creation of honest relevant artworks “truthfully” representing the religious figures. In my lecture I would like to introduce visual turn leading to birth of new visual language creating the honest pictures (term firstly used in The Compacts of Basel) and violently harsh refusal of previous visual tradition and I would like to try to introduce the role of art in religiously and socially disturbed society.
Michaela Ottová: TheBeautiful Madonna and mediaevalemotions – Tensionbetweenform and content. In: Art and architecturearound 1400. Global and regionalperspectives, Maribor 2012 ¨
Milena Bartlová: WasQueen Sophia ofBavariaan Art Patron?. Milena Bartlová. In: Prag unddiegrossenKulturzentrenEuropas in der Zeit der Luxemburger (1310-1437) Praha, 2008, 623-634.
Ruben Ernst Weltsch, Archbishop John ofJenstein (1348-1400). Papalism, Humanism and Reform in Pre-Hussite Prague, TheHague 1968
Complete list of Czech and German language literature will be provided during the lectures.
Individual visit of The Collection of Medieval Art in National Gallery (Kláštersv. AnežkyČeské, 15min of walk from Celetná 20) current exhibition at Prague Castle dedicated to Václav IV. is recommanded. As well as Calvary in Church of Holy Virgin at Týn close to the Campus.) Personal experience with Pieta and Virgin (Křivákova piet
The course is specifically designed for foreign students coming to Prague to learn more about Czech art and its historical, political and social context. However, the aim of the course is not simply to summarize the most important facts, artists and artworks but rather to introduce the students to a selection of interesting moments in the Czech art history with the help of a range of interdisciplinary approaches and new methodological tools.
As for the time period, the course will cover the period from Middle Ages to the twentieth century with a stronger focus on modern art.