Vojtech Preissig “COURAGE OF AN ARTIST”

Czech Center New York / The Bohemian National Hall

poster for Vojtech Preissig “COURAGE OF AN ARTIST”

This event has ended.

Selected works by Vojtech Preissig

Curated by Charlotta Kotik, Curator Emerita, Contemporary Art, The Brooklyn Museum

“The real test of a man is not how well he plays the role he has invented for himself, but how well he plays the role that destiny assigned to him.” — Václav Havel

The role that destiny assigned to artist Vojtech Preissig was a significant one, and he accepted the responsibility toward his nation without hesitation and with singular bravery.

Born in the Czech part of Austria–Hungary in 1873, Preissig attended Prague’s School of Art, Architecture and Decorative Arts in the 1890s and moved to Paris in 1897. Interested in printmaking, he also worked with Alphons Mucha and quickly attained renown as a skilled graphic artist. In 1903 Preissig moved back to Prague and established a press where he published graphic works by leading Czech artists of the day. His reputation as a master of etching, aquatints and engravings grew, and in 1909 he published the acclaimed book Color Etchings and Color Engravings. The next year, in 1910, he moved to New York City before going on to work at the Wentworth Institute in Boston.

During World War I, Preissig committed his talent and resources to the cause of liberating Czechs and Slovaks from the domination of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. He created posters and other printed matter calling on citizens of the United States and Europe to support his people’s fight for independence. In this way he played an active role in the political movement that ultimately resulted in the formation of Czechoslovakia in 1918. After the entry of the United States into World War I, Preissig also created materials urging Americans to support the war effort.

In the 1920s, Preissig returned to his new homeland, which he so fervently helped create, and worked as a graphic and book artist as well as a painter. With the onset of Nazism in Germany, Preissig’s work became politicized again and he launched the clandestine magazine Into Action. He joined the resistance in the late 1930s and was arrested by German authorities in 1940, together with his daughter, Irena. She was executed in Berlin in 1942, while Preissig himself died in Dachau concentration camp in June 1944.

While highly regarded for his work in various media, exploring ideas of modernism and abstraction, Preissig also never hesitated to step into the role of artist-activist. His commitment to the ideals of freedom and self-determination for all people was unwavering in the face of brutal dictatorship. His art is a living testament to the principles of humanism for which he did not hesitate to sacrifice his own life.
ACCIDENTAL ARMY - Amidst the chaos of World War One and the Russian Revolution, 70,000 Czech and Slovak P.O.Ws switched sides. They became The Czechoslovak Legion―an Allied army fighting for a country of their own―Czechoslovakia. They captured half the Trans-Siberian Railway, half the Czar’s gold, and the heart of a new nation. The documentary was created by the Czech Legion Project - www.czechlegion.com. 47 minutes.

Media

Schedule

from March 03, 2015 to May 08, 2015

Opening Reception on 2015-03-03 from 19:00

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