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The Politics of Artistic Identity: the Czech Art World in the 1950s and 1960s*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 September 2008
Extract
Since the Czech 'revivalist' movement of the last century, Czech art – along with the roles assigned to its artists – has been undergoing a continual process of definition and redefinition. The question of what constituted and what should constitute Czech artistic identity has often proved politically charged, with artists and art historians on opposing sides attacking each other for their political views. More often than not, debates on the issue have been part and parcel of wider social contexts in which artists and art historians have competed for influential positions and artistic prestige within the art world itself.
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References
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2 Inherent in all artistic discourse is the concept of artistic quality, by which ‘good’ artists are distinguished from ‘bad’, and hierarchies of artistic reputation are created. A higher reputation normally brings commercial benefits in the art market and a place in art history. However, the definition of artistic quality is never totally fixed, and art specialists may support conflicting opinions. Defining what is art and what not thus often remains a contentious issue debated by art historians and artists who struggle for the acceptance of their own particular viewpoint. In specific socio-historical contexts the struggle for artistic recognition becomes inseparably linked with political power struggles.
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10 ibid.
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28 Members included the painters Eva Burešová, Věra Hařmanská, Vladimír Jarcovják, Čestmir Kafka, Dalibor Matouš, V. Menčik, Karel Vaca, Jitka Válová and Kvéta Válová and the sculptors Zdenek Fibichová, Eva Kmentová, Václav Preclík, Zdeněk Šimak and Olbram Zoubek.
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36 Lamač, Miroslav, ‘Moderni umění 1’, Výtvamé umění, Vol. 17, no. 5 (1956), 212.Google Scholar In the same issue Picasso was quoted as attacking the idea that Realism and Abstractionism were incompatible artistic categories. The quote was taken from his interview with Christian Zervos, originally published in Picasso 1930–35 (ed. Cahiers d'art). Picasso's and Lamač's statements reinforced each other.
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41 The first part of the essay was accompanied by twenty-three reproductions of works by Vasilij Kandinsky (3), Joan Miró (2), Hans Arp (1), Willi Baumeister (1), Hans Hartung (1), Marcel Duchamp (1), Robert Delaunay (2), Franz Marc (1), Piet Mondrian (2), Fernand Léger (1), Umberto Boccioni (1), Alberto Magnelli (2), Giacomo Balla (1), Auguste Herbin (1) and František Kupka (1). The second part of the essay, published in the next issue (no. 5), contained twenty-six reproductions of paintings by Piet Mondrian (1), Emilio Vedova (1), Roger Bissiere (1), Ernst Wilhelm Nay (2), Jean Bazaine (1), (Otto) Wols (1), Mark Tobey (1), Georges Mathieu (1), Hans Hartung (1), Dieira da Silva (1), Geer van de Velde (1), Jackson Pollock (1), Alfred Manessier (1), Boris Lanskoy (1), Georg Meistermann (1), Fritz Winter (1), Maurice Esteve (1), Bram van Velde (1), Gustave Singier (1), Renato Birolli (1), Jean Atlan (1), Gérard Scheider (1), Jean Dubuffet (1), Pierre Soulae (1) and Alfred Manessier (1).
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48 See Kříź, , ‘Imaginace-struktura-divnost’, in Vykoukal, Jiří, ed., Záznam nejrozmanitějších faktorů. České malířství 2. poloviny 20. století ze sbírek galení (Prague: Národní galerie, 1993), 37;Google ScholarTetiva, Vlastimil, České malířstvi a sochařství 2. poloviny 20. stol, 90.Google Scholar
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51 See Rupnik, Jacques, The Other People (London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1988), 171–2Google Scholar; Fejto, François, A History of the People's Democracies (New York: Penguin Books, 1971), 70.Google Scholar
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53 For a detailed analysis of subsequent developments in the Czech art world, see Svašek, , ‘Styles, Struggles, and Careers’, 88–234.Google Scholar
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