Josef Mařatka
Josef Mařatka (21 May 1874, Prague – 20 April 1937, Prague) was a Czech sculptor.
Life
From 1889 to 1896, he studied at the School of Applied Arts under Celda Klouček,[1] who was a paleontologist as well as a sculptor. In 1899, he attended the Academy of Fine Arts, where he studied with Josef Václav Myslbek. The following year, he went to Paris and was briefly employed in the studios of Auguste Rodin.[1] His first exhibition was held in Prague in 1902.
He began by responding to the influences he had absorbed from the expressionist movement, incorporating elements of symbolism and Art Nouveau. His most important work from this period is the Opuštěna Ariadna (Abandoned Ariadne, 1903). He later came under the influence of Antoine Bourdelle. After World War I, he returned to the styles he had learned from Myslbek, combining Neoclassicism with a bit of early Socialist Realism; for example, Praha svým vítězným synům (Prague's Victorious Sons) at the Emmaus Monastery.[2]
Figures from "Prague's Victorious Sons"
The monument was destroyed during the German Occupation and restored in 1998.
References
- 1 2 Brief Biography @ Who Was Who in Our History in the 20th Century
- ↑ Remembrance ceremony for the Czech Legionaries on the website of the Ministry of Defence (Czech Republic)
Writings/Further reading
- Josef Mařatka: Vzpomínky a záznamy (Memories and Records), introduction by Petr Wittlich, Prague, Karolinum, 2003, ISBN 80-246-0518-X
- Josef Mařatka : 1874-1937", exhibition catalog, Gottwald Regional Art Gallery, 1989
- Josef Mařatka, introduction by Jaromír Pečírka, Prague, Mánes Union of Fine Arts, Melantrich, 1942
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Josef Mařatka. |
- Events of the Day (Událost Dne) Brief Biography with comments from Mařatka's grandson, the composer Kryštof Mařatka
- Muzeum Moderního Umĕní, Mařatka's "Deserted Ariadne" (in English)
- Galerie Plastik Hořice Mařatka's memorial for the actress Hana Kvapilová. An appreciation by Jana Cermanová.
- List of works relating to Mařatka in the National Library of the Czech Republic