Cosi nevyslovitelného

Cosi nevyslovitelného
Author: Vladimír Birgus
Publisher:
Total Pages: 140
Release: 2003
Genre: Photography
ISBN:

A publisher, educator, historian and curator, Vladimír Birgus is a devoted photographer of the subjective moment. Since the early 1970s he has been capturing people and places in compositions that treat color and tone rigorously but never foreclose on the reading of the image. Something Unspeakable follows him through different cities and everyday encounters, moods, hidden desires and emotions.

Jaromír Funke

Jaromír Funke
Author: Antonín Dufek
Publisher:
Total Pages: 248
Release: 2013
Genre: Avant-garde (Aesthetics)
ISBN:

The Photographer František Drtikol

The Photographer František Drtikol
Author: Vladimír Birgus
Publisher:
Total Pages: 230
Release: 2000
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN:

"Although the book covers many aspects of Drtikol's career and life-work, it is mainly devoted to his photographs. 120 duotone and 8 colour full-page reproductions of Drtikol's works from the Museum of Decorative Arts in Prague and a number of other public and private collections illustrate representative selections from all his creative periods, with an emphasis on Drtikol's masterly nudes from the second half of the 1920s, when he moved gradually from his beginnings in pictorialism and symbolism to react in his highly individual way to current avant-garde trends. The text, supplemented with almost fifty other reproductions, analyzes and characterizes Drtikol's photographs and locates them in the wider spiritual and artistic context of their time with the help of quotations from Drtikol's notes and correspondence. The monograph also contains a complete exhibition history, bibliographic listing, and a number of little known works, some never before published."--BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved

Czech Photography of the 20th Century

Czech Photography of the 20th Century
Author: Vladimír Birgus
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2010
Genre: Photography
ISBN: 9788074370274

"Czech Photography of the 20th Century, published simultaneously in Czech and English versions, is the first book to present the main trends, figures, and works of Czech photography from the beginning to the end of the last century to such a large extent. Its 517 plates include not only the most important, well-known photographs and photomontages, but also works that have long been forgotten or are published for the first time. The book is arranged in seventeen chapters, supplemented with chronologies of the most important events in twentieth-century Czech photography and history." --Publisher's website.

Once upon a time in the East

Once upon a time in the East
Author: Vladimír Birgus
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2009
Genre: Photography
ISBN: 9788074370052

Drawn from a broad range of photography, from works by famed photographers to anonymous images, Once Upon a Time in the East offers a portrait of Czechoslovakia across the 20th century, registering its dramatic changes of regime as well as more intimate scenes of daily life. Communist demonstrations and festivals are documented alongside domestic scenes in pubs and cottages. Among the historic moments recorded in this volume are the blasting of the Stalin monument in Prague in 1962 (taken by an unknown photographer); Milon Novotny's photographs of the funeral parade of Jan Palach in 1969; and an incredible series of surveillance photographs taken by an unidentified member of the Czech secret police, which furtively documents equally furtive assignations on the streets of Prague. Works by Ivo Gil, Josef Koudelka, Jindrich Streit, Miroslav Tichy, Jiri Toman and many others are also included.

The Founder of Modern Czech Architecture 1871-1923

The Founder of Modern Czech Architecture 1871-1923
Author: Jan Kotera
Publisher: Kladenska Kant
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2003-10-02
Genre:
ISBN: 9788086217475

There are only a few figures in modern Czech art as legendary as the architect Jan Kotera. In his lifetime, Kotera was a symbol of the spirit of modernity, a pivotal role-player in early twentieth-century Czech fine art culture. A student of Otto Wagner, friend of Josef Hoffman and early member of the Viennese Secession, Kotera brought international standards to Czechoslovakia, introducing his country's architects to the work of Louis Sullivan and Frank Lloyd Wright while retaining an interest in folk structures. Some of his most notable structures and designs include the City Museum in Hradec Králové, his own villa and studio in Vinohrady and his housing colony for railway employees in Louny.