František Gross. Ladislav Novák. Špálova galerie, listopad 1965
- Used
- Condition
- See description
- Seller
-
Berlin, Germany
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About This Item
With a long introduction by literary and art critic JindÅich Chalupecký (1910-1990), a poem by Novák, artist biographies and lists of works exhibited. An important exhibition held at the Václav Å pála Gallery, a hugely influential gallery in the relatively liberal mid-1960s, where Chalupecký also created many international links in his programming (among others, Chalupecký arranged a Duchamp retrospective in 1969 and supported young Czech performance artists). The liberal period of the 1960s, which resulted in the infamous Prague Spring, would soon come to an end: after the Soviet Invasion and ensuing wave of repressions, arts and culture would be under strict ideological control into the late 1980s. The present exhibition combined the lettrist work of Gross with that of Novák, an artist and concrete poet not affiliated with any group and interested, above all, in the combination of letter and image. Gross was an early member of the Czech post-war artist collective "Skupina 42" (Group 42), formally founded in 1940, during the German Protectorate. The group was forbidden by the Communist government in 1948, but its members and artists continued to work and impact the Czech art scene well into the 1970s. "Skupina 42" was significantly shaped by the experience of war and the German occupation. It combined pre-war tendencies such as cubism, futurism, and constructivism with existentialist and surrealist thought and images. Nevertheless it also sought to counteract a certain academic quality in art and was drawn to a kind of urban realism: the city in its manifold forms was an important theme, and ties to American literature and art were also strong.
Outside the Czech Republic, KVK, OCLC show the copies at the British Library, Getty, and Tate. With a long introduction by literary and art critic JindÅich Chalupecký (1910-1990), a poem by Novák, artist biographies and lists of works exhibited. An important exhibition held at the Václav Å pála Gallery, a hugely influential gallery in the relatively liberal mid-1960s, where Chalupecký also created many international links in his programming (among others, Chalupecký arranged a Duchamp retrospective in 1969 and supported young Czech performance artists). The liberal period of the 1960s, which resulted in the infamous Prague Spring, would soon come to an end: after the Soviet Invasion and ensuing wave of repressions, arts and culture would be under strict ideological control into the late 1980s. The present exhibition combined the lettrist work of Gross with that of Novák, an artist and concrete poet not affiliated with any group and interested, above all, in the combination of letter and image. Gross was an early member of the Czech post-war artist collective "Skupina 42" (Group 42), formally founded in 1940, during the German Protectorate. The group was forbidden by the Communist government in 1948, but its members and artists continued to work and impact the Czech art scene well into the 1970s. "Skupina 42" was significantly shaped by the experience of war and the German occupation. It combined pre-war tendencies such as cubism, futurism, and constructivism with existentialist and surrealist thought and images. Nevertheless it also sought to counteract a certain academic quality in art and was drawn to a kind of urban realism: the city in its manifold forms was an important theme, and ties to American literature and art were also strong.
Outside the Czech Republic, KVK, OCLC show the copies at the British Library, Getty, and Tate.
Outside the Czech Republic, KVK, OCLC show the copies at the British Library, Getty, and Tate. With a long introduction by literary and art critic JindÅich Chalupecký (1910-1990), a poem by Novák, artist biographies and lists of works exhibited. An important exhibition held at the Václav Å pála Gallery, a hugely influential gallery in the relatively liberal mid-1960s, where Chalupecký also created many international links in his programming (among others, Chalupecký arranged a Duchamp retrospective in 1969 and supported young Czech performance artists). The liberal period of the 1960s, which resulted in the infamous Prague Spring, would soon come to an end: after the Soviet Invasion and ensuing wave of repressions, arts and culture would be under strict ideological control into the late 1980s. The present exhibition combined the lettrist work of Gross with that of Novák, an artist and concrete poet not affiliated with any group and interested, above all, in the combination of letter and image. Gross was an early member of the Czech post-war artist collective "Skupina 42" (Group 42), formally founded in 1940, during the German Protectorate. The group was forbidden by the Communist government in 1948, but its members and artists continued to work and impact the Czech art scene well into the 1970s. "Skupina 42" was significantly shaped by the experience of war and the German occupation. It combined pre-war tendencies such as cubism, futurism, and constructivism with existentialist and surrealist thought and images. Nevertheless it also sought to counteract a certain academic quality in art and was drawn to a kind of urban realism: the city in its manifold forms was an important theme, and ties to American literature and art were also strong.
Outside the Czech Republic, KVK, OCLC show the copies at the British Library, Getty, and Tate.
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Details
- Bookseller
- Penka Rare Books and Archives (DE)
- Bookseller's Inventory #
- P6499
- Title
- František Gross. Ladislav Novák. Špálova galerie, listopad 1965
- Book Condition
- Used
- Quantity Available
- 1
- Keywords
- czech, czechoslovak, post-war, modernism, modernist, avantgarde, avant-garde, skupina 42, poetry, poetics, art
Terms of Sale
Penka Rare Books and Archives
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About the Seller
Penka Rare Books and Archives
Biblio member since 2014
Berlin
About Penka Rare Books and Archives
We specialize in rare books, manuscripts, and ephemera related to Russia and Eastern Europe. Members of VDA (Verband Deutscher Antiquare) and ILAB (International League of Antiquarian Booksellers). For more information, please visit www.penkararebooks.com or contact us at info@penkararebooks.com.
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