PRESS RELEASE / 15/4/2015

The National Gallery in Prague invites you to the Mysterious Distances of Symbolism

Symbolism as an independent phenomenon. The exhibition Mysterious Distances, Symbolism in Bohemian lands, 1880–1914 is presenting a style of art which made Czech visual art for the first time part of European art. And yet Symbolism in visual art has never been presented to such an extent as it is done now. So on April 22 the convent of St Agnes of Bohemia will turn into a place full of secrets, myths and symbols.

As to the dates, the exhibition, the name of which refers to a volume of poems by Otokar Březina, is framed by the years of the opening of the National Theatre and the beginning of the First World War. In that period exceptional works influenced by Symbolism were produced in Bohemian lands. Previouslly, Symbolism was presented mainly as a subchapter of Art Nouveau. And yet it has the merit of incorporating Czech art of the next decade, in a natural way, in the culture of the old continent.

”In Symbolism for the first time and most unequivocally criticism of the national tendencies dominating 19th-century Czech culture was manifested. The artiststhought themselves part of the spiritual community, regardless of national or social belonging”,the author of the exhibition, Otto M. Urban, says. Not only the visual artists sought related souls among their foreign counterparts in Paris, London, Berlin or Vienna. Thanks to them, later even Czech representatives of Expressionism, Cubism and Surrealism could enter the international world.

The exhibitionMysterious Distances, Symbolism in Bohemian lands, 1880–1914introduces such well known and recognized artists as Alfons Mucha, Max Švabinský, František Bílek, Josef Váchal, Bohumil Kubišta and Jan Zrzavý. Beside them, represented here are artists less often exhibited and almost unknown abroad – Maxmilián Pirner, Beneš Knüpfer, August Brömse, Jaroslav Panuška, Josef Mandl, Tavík František Šimon and Alois Boháč. ”In those days artists increasingly often applied the theory of synthetism, in an attempt to link art and life, to perceive beauty, but also pain in a deeper way. The pragmatic reality, however, was in direct contradiction to it so thatmany artists chose voluntary loneliness and dreaming in the twilight of studios or cafés,” says Otto M. Urban.

The works on display come from large prestigious Czech galleries and in some cases from galleries abroad, but also from minor museums and regional institutions. Often the picture of Czech Symbolism is enriched by a large group of items on loan from private collections. The exhibition was made possible by the collaboration of the National Gallery in Prague, the Olomouc Museum of Art, and the Arbor vitae publishing house, as part of the international project of Czech-Polish cultural cooperation in 2014–2015. The exhibition in St Agnes’ convent follows after the exhibition held in 2014 in Olomouc Museum of Art, which on a smaller scale was also presented at the International Center of Culture in Cracow, under the name The Rulers of Dreams.

“Unlike the preceding exhibition, the core of this one consists of works from the collection in the National Gallery in Prague, which previously was represented at the Olomouc exhibition in a selection only. The Prague exhibition is based on a large number of exhibits from its own sources, containing seminal works of Czech Symbolism, presented here in a new context. Greater attention is also given to Symbolist books, which played an undisputable role in the development of modern Czech literature”, says the curator of the exhibition Anna Pravdová. The way Symbolism crossed to other cultural forms will be reflected by an accompanying programme at the exhibition, which will put into a common context visual art and literature as well as theatre and music. The exhibition Mysterious Distances, Symbolism in Bohemian lands 1880–1914 is supplemented by a book of the same name, published by Arbor vitae, Olomouc Museum of Art and the National Gallery in Prague.

Press materials and pictures from the exhibition:

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General partner of NG

Komerční banka

Partner of the exhibition

Ferona

Principal media partner of NG

Česká televize

Media partner of NG

Český rozhlas, Hospodářské noviny, Aktuálně.cz, Prague Events Calendar, Anopress IT

Contact

Národní galerie v Praze

Staroměstské náměstí 12, 110 15 Praha 1

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Tereza Ježková

+420 728 301 377