
- The Czech Republic ranks among the most attractive
tourist destinations in all of Europe thanks to numerous
artictic monuments which display a rich variety of
artistic styles combined with high preservation
standards.
- After the fall of the Great Moravian Empire (905), which
was artistically influenced by Byzantium, Czech art
developed within the scope of West European artistic
styles, though these styles were often adapted in unique
ways.
- Czech Gothic painting in particular developed its own
distincive style (anonymous Master of the Vyssi Brod
Altar, Master Theodoricus etc.).
- Also outstanding is the work of architect Petr Parler,
especially the Gothic St.
Vitus Cathedral at Prague Castle and the decoration
of the Old Town Bridge Tower of the famous Charles
Bridge.
- The late Gothic Vladislav Hall at Prague Castle, a work
by Benedikt Reid, is one of the most marvellous
secular halls of late Gothic style in the world.
- During the Renaissance and the Manneristic Period
numerous foreigners, mainly Italians, worked in Bohemia.
The Emperor Rudolf
II (who reigned between 1576 and 1611), an ardent
collector and patron of the arts, brought many
outstanding works by European artists to Bohemia which
today form the basis of various contemporary collections.
- The appearance of the Czech landscape was considerably
enriched by Baroque architecture (especially by the
buildings of Christopher and Kilian Ignaz Diezenhoffer
and Giovanni Santini)
- In addition, Czech Baroque painting (Petr Brandl, Jan
Kupecky etc.) as well as sculpture (Ferdinand
Maximilian Brokoff, Matthias Bernhard Braun) reached
a high standard.
- At the beginning of 20th century Czech Art Nouveau was
among the world's finest (mainly in architecture and
applied arts); the painterAlfons
Mucha in particular made the style famous abroad.
- Cubistic architecture is completely unique in Prague and
functionalist buildings are also of great artistic value.
A number of remarkable Czech artists of the 20th century
lived and worked at least partly abroad, for example the
painters Frantisek Kupka, Emil Filla, Toyen and Josef
Sima.
- Even contemporary Czech art, in spite of the difficulties
in the communist era, retains a high standard (Jan
Zrzavy, Mikulas Medek, Jiri Tichy, Jiri Kolar).
- The birth of photography as an original art form is
connected with names such as Frantisek Drtikol,
Jaromir Funke, Jaroslav Rossler and Josef Sudek.
The Czech music scene came alive in the 19th century as
national awareness began to increase, fostering composers the two
great composers Antonin Dvorak and Bedrich Smetana whose
work is played all over the world to this day. In the early part
of this century the Czech composer Leos Janacek wrote
strikingly original music that has achieved increasing popularity
around the world in recent years.
- The roots of Czech musical history are lodged in the
distant 9th century. Over the course of the 11th century
Gregorian chants predominated. They were complimented by
traditional Czech sacred songs such as Saint Wenceslas.
- Between 1583 and 1612 during the reign of Rudolf II,
the Habsburg Imperial Orchestra - among the biggest
ensembles in Europe - had its seat at Prague Castle. The
Czech composer J.D. Zelenka, a contemporary of
Bach's, was hailed as one of the leading composers of his
age.
- The arrival of the musical classicism period at the end
of the 18th century saw the establishment of several new
municipal opera houses in the country including the famed
F.A. Nostitz theatre (later renamed the Stavovske
theatre). It was here that some of Mozart's most famous
operas had their opening nights.
- A distinctive trait of the period was the emigration of
Czech musicians fleeing low standards of living and
religious oppression in their homeland. Czech musicians
remained popular abroad though (J. V. Stamitz worked
at Mannheim, the Benda family in Berlin and Gotha,
J. Myslivecek in Italy, A. Rejcha in
Paris).
- The establishment of a new period of Czech music is
connected with B. Smetana (1824-1884), A.
Dvorak (1841-1904) and Z. Fibich (1850-1900).
In the period 1890-1930 the leading personalities were L.
Janacek, J. B. Foerster, O. Ostrcil, V. Novak and J. Suk,
and later J. B. Martinu.
- In the second half of the 20th century M. Kabelar and
P. Eben achieved a worldwide reputation.
- The foundation of the Czech Philharmonic was of decisive
importance for musical life. They performed for the first
time in 1896 (among the conductors were V. Talich, R.
Kubelik, K. Ancerl, and V. Neumann).
- Czech concert art was made famous above all by several
internationally acclaimed violinists, pianists, chamber
ensembles and singers. Among them are the violinist F.Ondricek,
singers F. Burian and J. Novotna, and the
pianist R. Firkusny chamber. In addition to the
Czech Philharmonic, the Symphonic Orchestra of the City
of Prague FOK is also well known.
- The highlight of Czech concert life is the annual musical
festival Prague Spring, featuring performers from
around the world.
- Despite political repression, jazz and rock‚n roll
music started to develop at the end of the 1950s, mainly
in clubs and alternative theatres. These were hot-beds of
creativity from which many world-famous names arose, such
as J. Stivin and R. Dasek. Many of them, such as J.
Mraz, J. Hammer and A. Vitous established themselves
as international stars living abroad.
After centuries of development, Czech literature began to
attract international attention over the course of this century.
Recently, the names of several Czech writers have joined the
ranks of the world's literary luminaries and their work has been
translated into dozens of languages.
Perhaps one of the most famous of Prague's literati was the
German-Jewish writer Franz Kafka. In a series of unique
novels and short stories Kafka mapped out the state of modern
society. The dilemmas his characters found themselves in came to
symbolize the absurdities of modern life, which people now
describe as Kafkaesque.
Kafka's works are echoed in the internationally renowned
novels of Milan Kundera which delve into the problematics
of personal identity in today's world.
- Many great writers emerged out of the period between the
two world wars. Among them, perhaps the most famous was Karel
Capek a humanist who wrote a number of anti-military
works. In one of them he invented the word ‚Robot'
which became an international word (R.U.R.- Rossum's
Universal Robots). He also founded the crucial Czech
literary organization PEN Club.
- Other Czech writers, such as V. Nezval, K. Biebl, K.
Teige, J. Seifert were on the cutting edge of the
avant-garde of poetism and surrealism. In 1984 Seifert
became the first Czech writer to be awarded the Nobel
Prize for literature.
- Up to the end of World War II the Czech lands were also
home to several German and Jewish writers living in
Prague: Rainer Maria Rilke, Franz Werfel and Max Brod.
- After 1948, literature was materially and intellectually
impoverished by the imposition of a centralized state
ideology. Not until the 1960s as the communist regime
eased did a new literary generation arise and efforts to
renew contacts with Europe were revived.
- However, the short period of artistic freedom ended in
August 1968 with the invasion of the armies of the Warsaw
Pact. The majority of the most important authors of the
generation continued their work abroad; or their samizdat
works circulated during the following two decades only in
typed copies. Among these were the internationally
renowned authors:
- The emigre prose writers Milan Kundera, Arnost Lustig,
Egon Hostovsky and Josef Skvorecky, and those who stayed
home, Ludvik Vaculik, Ladislav Fuks, Bohumil Hrabal and
Ivan Klima.
- The theatre has played a crucial role in the history of
the Czech nation. So much more fitting that today, Vaclav
Havel, the country's most famous dissident playwright
is also the president of the republic. Among his most
famous absurdist plays, which have been translated and
performed all over the world, are Temptation, Memorandum
and The Garden Party.
- Havel, along with fellow playwrights like Josef Topol,
were tapping into a long theatrical tradition that began
in the 12th century.
- In 1862 the first permanent Czech theater Prozatimni
divadlo (The Provisional Theater) was opened. The
National Theater has stood as a strong symbol of national
independence since it opened in 1881, thanks to public
donations and collections. The first performance at the
theatre was Smetana's Libuse, an opera based on the
legendary founding of the city of Prague. Although it
burned down afterwards it re-opened in 1883.
- Between 1927 and 1938 the Osvobozene divadlo (The
Liberated Theater) served as a breeding ground for a new
genre of satiric political commentary developed by the
authors and actors J. Voskovec and J. Werich.
- After World War II regional theaters began to open. At
the end of the 1950s theater life was revived with the
creation of several small theaters: Divadlo Na Zabradli -
Theater on the Balustrade, Semafor Theater, Divadlo za
Branou - Theater Beyond the Gate (at present Divadlo za
Branou II), and Cinoherni klub.
- Czech stage design (F. Troster, F. Muzika, J. Capek,
J. Svoboda - the founder of Laterna Magica) enjoyed
great success abroad as did ballet (P. Smok), mime
(L. Fialka, B. Hybner, B. Polivka) and puppet
theater (Spejbl a Hurvinek Theatre, Vychodoceske loutkove
divadlo DRAK - East Bohemian Puppet Theater DRAK in
Hradec Kralove).
FILM
Czech filmmaking leaped into the international spotlight over
the past couple of decades thanks to the work of directors Milos
Forman and Jiri Menzel, whose films are played in moviehouses
all over the world. Forman won Oscar awards for his films One
Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest and Amadeus and Menzel secured one
for Ostre sledovane vlaky/Closely Watched Trains.
- Film history in the Czech Republic goes back to 1898 when
the first ones were produced by J. Krizenecky. The
film era began to really take off in the country when
permanent movie theatres started operating in 1907 and
with the arrival of permanent film distributors in 1909.
- In the 1930s Czech writers and cinematographers began
making headway in the production of exceptional artistic
films, documentaries and the first sound newsreels.
- In 1945 Czechoslovak cinematography was nationalized.
However its growth was slowed down after February 1948
when communist leaders started to interfere in film
production and pushed the production of propaganda
films.At that time puppet films by J. Trnka and
cartoons and feature films by K. Zeman and J.
Svankmajer achieved world wide fame.
- In the 1960s productions by young artists formed the
so-called Czech New Wave. Both Forman and Menzel were a
part of this wave along with J. Jires, V. Chytilova,
J. Nemec, E. Schorm and F. Vlacil. After the
Soviet-led invasion in 1968 a series of films were locked
away and prohibited. Among them J. Kadar‚s and E.
Klos‚s Obchod na korze /The Shop on the Main Street/,
which was awarded an Oscar in 1966, and J. Menzel‚s
Ostre sledovane vlaky /Closely Watched Trains/, which
received the same award the following year.
- The most important modern film festivals which take place
in the Czech Republic are the International Film Festival
in Karlovy Vary and the Children‚s Film Festival in
Zlin.
- Every year the Czech Republic produces approximately 30
feature films and 1,200 documentaries and cartoons.
- Recently, the state film industry went through economic
transformation and privatization. A network of private
film companies and distributors is now operating in the
country.