Alfons Mucha “Shaping the Czech Identity”

Czech Center New York / The Bohemian National Hall

poster for Alfons Mucha “Shaping the Czech Identity”

This event has ended.

The exhibition Alfons Mucha: Shaping the Czech Identity celebrates the centenary of the establishment of Czechoslovakia in 1918 by exploring Mucha´s contribution to the nation´s struggle for national identity and self-determination.

After a successful career as a leading exponent of the Art Nouveau style in Paris and America, Mucha returned to his native Czech lands in 1910 to paint his magnum opus, The Slav Epic, a cycle of twenty monumental paintings depicting Czech and Slavic history. The Slav Epic was presented as a gift to the nation in 1928 on the tenth anniversary of its independence.

A large-screen projection of his life´s work, The Slav Epic, forms a spectacular and moving backdrop and context for the display of the first postage stamps and banknotes Mucha created for the newly independent Czechoslovak state. Curated by the Mucha Foundation’s Tomoko Sato, the exhibition also includes a range of works in which Mucha addresses Czech identity through lithographs, drawings, photographs, and writings on display in Czech Center New York.

Through his work Alfons Mucha, a passionate patriot and keen political thinker, contributed greatly to creating the image of the First Republic and regarded his art as a means to serve his homeland. His life story and work is, however, also inherently associated with the United States of America and the patron Charles Richard Crane. Mucha painted The Slav Epic at Zbiroh Chateau for eighteen years. Without the support of Charles Richard Crane, an American businessman and philanthropist, the work would probably never have come to life. Crane met the painter in New York City and decided to provide financial support for Mucha’s project. He also agreed that all twenty canvases would be dedicated to the City of Prague once finished, to be put on permanent display in a hall expressly built by the City for that purpose. Mucha expressed his gratitude by incorporating his portrait of Josephine Crane Bradley, his patron´s daughter, as Slavia in his design for the first Czechoslovak 100 koruna banknote.

Alfons Mucha: Shaping the Czech Identity will be presented by the Czech Center New York in cooperation with The Mucha Foundation and the Permanent Mission of the Czech Republic to the UN in New York.

Media

Schedule

from May 31, 2018 to June 22, 2018

Opening Reception on 2018-05-31 from 19:00 to 22:00

Artist(s)

Alfons Mucha

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