Jump to content

Zdenek Rykr

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Ser Amantio di Nicolao (talk | contribs) at 03:43, 24 June 2018 (External links: add authority control, test using AWB). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Zdeněk Rykr (26 October 1900 – 15 January 1940) was a Czech painter, illustrator, journalist and theatre designer.

Life

Zdeněk Rykr was born in the Chotěboř train station. When he was seven his family moved to Kolín, where his father, a railway inspector, had been transferred. This is where he spent his childhood and student years. After graduating from the grammar school he was not accepted to the Academy of Fine Arts in Prague, and so he chose to study Art History and Classical archaeology at the faculty of philosophy, where he completed a doctorate in 1924. Despite the knowledge he accumulated during his studies, his artistic abilities were self-taught. At the beginning his artwork is mostly paintings, and subsequently evolves into graphic design.

In 2016, film director Andrea Culková released H*art On, a documentary about the lives of Zdeněk Rykr and his wife Milada Součková. In the film, Součková is portrayed by Czech musical artist Sonja Vectomov.[1][2]

Work

In 1925 he illustrated Emil Vachek’s Bidýlko and from 1925 to 1927 he was a theatre designer at the National Theatre (Prague). In parallel, he worked as a graphic designer for advertising, for example for the Baťa company. His designs for the Maršner chocolate company, for which he created the blue Orion star for the Kofila chocolate wrapper, are still famous today. He also created designs for the Kolín oil refinery, Kulík coffee, Čedok and [Škoda Auto].

His art gradually strayed from his early paintings realism, and from the 1930s he focused on the creation of assemblages and collages, which foreshadowed his work of the 1960s. He got inspired by his numerous travels across the globe, and was strongly influenced by Surrealism and Oriental Calligraphy.

In the 1920s he also worked as a journalist, contributed to the creation of the satiric magazine Trh, authored pamphlets, and in 1930-31 edited the magazine Domov a svět. His pointed criticism and controversial opinions made him an unpopular figure in the 1920s and 30s. He is associated with the Devětsil generation of avant-garde artists rather as an outsider or lone wolf. He tried on many styles, which he quickly discarded as worthless. His generation saw him as a disjointed eclectic or as the dark conscience of the avant-garde.

At first he exhibited as a guest with the Tvrdošíjni group of painters, and later had several solo shows and even exhibited his work at the [Société des Artistes Indépendants Salon des indépendants in Paris], where unlike in his native country it was a great success.

To avoid the Gestapo he committed suicide by throwing himself under a train at Barrandov, Prague, on 15 January 1940.

His wife Milada Součková (1898–1983) was a Czech writer, literary historian and diplomat.

Bibliography

  1. LAHODA, Vojtěch. Zdeněk Rykr 1900-1940. Praha : Galerie hlavního města Prahy, 2000. 377 s. [[:cs:Speciální:Zdroje knih/807010077X|ISBN 80-7010-077-X]] (in Czech).
  2. URBAN, Jiří. Zdeněk Rykr : Výběr z malířského díla. Roudnice nad Labem : Galerie Roudnice nad Labem, 1983. 24 s.

References

  1. ^ Jægtnes, H. S., "The artist’s talking head", Modern Times, Oct 28, 2016.
  2. ^ Institute of Documentary Film, HART*ON, Czech Republic, France, 2016.