Jan Saudek  

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-'''Jan Saudek''' (b. [[13 May]] [[1935]], in [[Prague]], [[Czechoslovakia]]) is a Czech [[Fine_art_photography|art photographer]] best known for his hand-tinted portrayal of [[painterly]] [[dream art|dream worlds]], often inhabited by [[erotic photography|nude or semi-nude]] figures surrounded by bare plaster walls or painted backdrops. 
-== Biography ==+'''Jan Saudek''' (born 13 May 1935) is an [[Czech photographer]] and painter, known for such photos as ''[[Odalisque with Nargilé and Snake]]''.
-Many of his family members died in the [[Concentration camp Theresienstadt|Theresienstadt concentration camp]] during [[World War II]]. Jan and his brother Karel were held in a children's concentration camp near the [[Poland|Polish]] border. He survived the war and worked for a printer starting in 1950. After completing his military service, he was inspired in 1963 by [[Edward Steichen|Steichen's]] ''[[Family of Man]]'' to try to become a serious art photographer. In 1969 he traveled to the United States and was encouraged in his work by curator [[Hugh Edwards]]. +His work is noted for its [[hand-tinted]] portrayal of [[painterly]] [[dream world]]s, often inhabited by [[nude]] or semi-nude figures surrounded by bare [[plaster]] walls or [[painted photography backdrops]].
-Returning to Prague, he was forced to work in a clandestine manner in a cellar, to avoid the attentions of the secret police, as his work turned to themes of personal erotic freedom, and used implicitly political symbols of corruption and innocence. From the late 1970s he gradually became recognised in the West as the leading Czech photographer, and also developed a following among photographers in his own country. In 1983 the first book on his work was published in the English-speaking world. Following this, in 1984 the [[Communist]] authorities allowed him to cease working in a factory, and gave him permission to apply for a permit to work as an artist. In 1987 the archives of his negatives were seized by the police, but later returned.+He frequently re-uses elements (for instance, a clouded sky or a view of Prague's [[Charles Bridge]]). In this his photographs suggest the studio and [[tableaux vivants]] works of mid-19th century [[erotic photographer]]s, as well as the works of the 20th-century painter [[Balthus]], and of [[Bernard Faucon]].
-== Work==+==Biography==
-His best-known work is noted for its hand-tinted portrayal of [[painterly]] [[dream art|dream worlds]], often inhabited by nude or semi-nude figures surrounded by bare plaster walls or painted backdrops, frequently re-using identical elements (for instance, a clouded sky or a view of Prague's Charles Bridge). In this they echo the studio and [[Tableaux Vivant|tableaux]] works of mid nineteenth century erotic photographers, as well as the works of the painter [[Balthus]], and the work of [[Bernard Faucon]]. His early art photography is noted for its evocation of childhood. Later his works often portrayed the evolution from child to adult (re-photographing the same composition/pose, and with the same subjects, over many years). Religious motives or the ambiguity between man and woman have also been some of Jan Saudek's recurring themes. His work was the subject of attempts at censorship in the West during the 1990s.+He and his twin brother [[Kaja Saudek]] are holocaust survivors.
-Some of the works of Jan Saudek have entered popular culture in the West, being used as covers for the [[CD]] albums of [[Soul Asylum]] (''[[Grave Dancers Union]]''), [[Daniel Lanois]] (''[[For the Beauty of Wynona]]''), and [[Beautiful South]] (''[[Welcome to the Beautiful South]]'').+Jan Saudek's art work represents a unique technique combining photography and painting. In his country of origin, Czechoslovakia, Jan was considered a disturbed artist and oppressed by authorities. His art gained more prominence during the 1990s, thanks to his collaboration with the publisher [[Taschen]].
-Saudek currently lives and works in [[Prague]]. His brother is also an artist, and is now the best-known Czech [[graphic novel]]ist. +During the 2000s, Saudek lost all his photo negatives in matrimonial dispute and his pictures are now displayed on internet for free. Jan claims they were stolen from him.
-==Books==+Jan is the author of many “[[mise en scene]]” that were re-taken and copied by other artists. The cliché of a naked man holding a naked new born baby with tenderness became a picture that was reproduced so many times that the composition became as commonplace as posing for a graduation picture.
-* ''Jan Saudek''[http://www.taschen.com/pages/en/catalogue/books/photography/all/facts/01758.htm] (1998, [[Taschen]]) ISBN 3-8228-7916-9+During his life in communist Czechoslovakia, Jan was labeled by the totalitarian regime as a pornographer.
-==Films==+He lived in poverty using the only room in his basement as his studio. A disintegrating wall and a window giving a glimpse into the backyard became the witnesses of his fantasies and collaborations with models of all different sizes and origins.
 +==Life==
 +Jan Saudek and his twin brother Karel (also known as Kája) were born to a Slavic (Czech) mother and [[Jew|Jewish]] father in Prague in 1935. Their mother's family came to Prague from [[Bohemia]], and their father from the city of [[Děčín]] in the northwest part of that area. During World War II and after the invasion of the German [[Nazis]], both sides of his family were racially persecuted by the invaders. Many of his Jewish relatives died in [[Theresienstadt concentration camp]] during the war. Jan and his brother Karel were sent to a children's concentration camp for [[Mischlinge]] (mixed-blood in German, as Nazis classified Jews as a race distinct from "[[Aryan]]s"), located in Silesia near the present [[Poland|Polish]]-Czech border. Their father Gustav was deported to Theresienstadt concentration camp in February 1945. Although their mother and many other relatives died, both sons and father survived the war. A Communist-dominated government gained power after the war to rule the country, enforced by the [[Soviet Union]] and considered to be behind the [[Iron Curtain]].
 +
 +According to Saudek's biography, he acquired his first camera, a [[Brownie (camera)|Kodak Baby Brownie]], in 1950. He apprenticed to a photographer, and in 1952 started working in a print shop; he was restricted to this work by the Communist government until 1983. In 1959, he started using the more advanced [[Flexaret|Flexaret 6x6]] camera, and also engaged in painting and drawing. After completing his military service, he was inspired in 1963 by the catalogue for American photographer [[Edward Steichen]]'s ''[[The Family of Man]]'' exhibition, and began to work to become a serious art photographer. In 1969, Saudek traveled to the United States, where he was encouraged in his work by curator [[Hugh Edwards (photographer)|Hugh Edwards]] of the [[Art Institute of Chicago]].
 +
 +Returning to [[Prague]], Saudek had to work at his photography clandestinely in a cellar, to avoid the attentions of the secret police. With his work turning to themes of personal erotic freedom, he used implicitly political symbols of corruption and innocence. From the late 1970s, he became recognized in the West as the leading Czech photographer, and also developed a following among photographers in his own country.
 +
 +In 1983, the first book of Saudek's work was published in the English-speaking world. The same year, he became a freelance photographer; the Czech [[Communist]] authorities allowed him to stop working in the print shop, and gave him permission to apply for a permit to work as an artist. In 1987, the archives of his negatives were seized by the police, but later returned.
 +
 +Saudek lives and works in Prague. His brother [[Kája Saudek]] was also an artist, the best-known Czech [[graphic novel]]ist.
 +
 +==Work==
 +His best-known work is notable for its hand-tinted portrayal of painterly dream worlds, often inhabited by nude or semi-nude figures surrounded by bare plaster walls or painted backdrops. He frequently re-uses elements (for instance, a clouded sky or a view of Prague's [[Charles Bridge]]). In this his photographs suggest the studio and [[Tableaux Vivant|tableaux]] works of mid-19th century erotic photographers, as well as the works of the 20th-century painter [[Balthus]], and of [[Bernard Faucon]].
 +
 +Saudek's early art photography is noted for its evocation of childhood. His later works often portrayed the evolution from child to adult (re-photographing the same composition/pose, and with the same subjects, over many years). Religious motifs and the ambiguity between man and woman have also been some of Saudek's recurring themes. During the 1990s, his work at times generated censorship attempts in the West because of its provocative sexual content.
 +
 +Saudek's imagery has sometimes had a mixed reception internationally. He gained early shows in 1969 and 1970 in the United States and in Australia. In 1970 his work was shown at the [[Australian Centre for Photography]] and was welcomed by curator [[Jennie Boddington]] at the [[National Gallery of Victoria]]. Decades later, by contrast, his photograph ''Black Sheep & White Crow,'' which features a semi-naked pre-pubescent girl, was removed from the Ballarat International Foto Biennale in [[Victoria, Australia]] just before the opening on 21 August 2011; objections had been made related to allegations of child prostitution for his subject.
 +
 +Saudek's photographs have been featured as covers for the albums of [[Anorexia Nervosa (band)|Anorexia Nervosa]] (''[[New Obscurantis Order]]''), [[Soul Asylum]] (''[[Grave Dancers Union]]''), [[Daniel Lanois]] (''[[For the Beauty of Wynona]]''), [[Rorschach (band)|Rorschach]] (''Remain Sedate''), and [[Beautiful South]] (''[[Welcome to the Beautiful South]]'').
 +
 +==Publications (selected)==
 +* Jan Saudek-Photo, and Jiri Masin Milos Macourek, House of Lords of Kunštát, Brno, Czech Republic, 1970.
 +* ''The World of Jan Saudek: Photographs.'' Jacques Baruch Gallery, Chicago, IL, 1979.
 +* ''Jan Saudek-Il teatro de la vita.'' Giuliana SCIM, Selezione d'Imagini, Milan, Italy, 1981.
 +* ''Story from, Czechoslovakia, My Country, and Photographs by Jan Saudek.'' Aperture Nr. 89, New York, 1982.
 +* ''The World of Jan Saudek.'' Anna Fárová, The Master Collection Book III, Rotovision, Geneva, Switzerland 1983.
 +* ''Images from, Czechoslovakia.'' [[University of Iowa Museum of Art]], Iowa City, IA, 1983.
 +* ''Story photo.'' Daniela Mrázková, Mlada Fronta, Prague, 1985.
 +* ''Jan Saudek-35 Jahre Photos / 35 Years of Photography.'' Manfred Heiting, Photography Forum Frankfurt, Frankfurt, Germany 1986.
 +* ''50 Jahre moderne Farbfotografie.'' Manfred Heiting, [[Photokina 1986|Photokina]], Cologne, Germany 1986.
 +* ''Jan Saudek-200 Photographs 1953-1986.'' [[Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris]], Paris, 1987.
 +* ''20 Years of Czechoslovak Art: 1968-1988.'' Anne Baruch, Chicago, IL 1988.
 +* ''The Second Israeli Photography Biennal''e, Museum of Art, Ein Harod, Israel, 1988.
 +* ''Jan Saudek-100 Fotografías 1953-1986.'' Primavera Fotografica, Barcelona, Spain, 1988.
 +* ''Jan Saudek-Monsieur Nicole'' (fashion catalog "Matsuda"), New York 1989.1991 (?).
 +* ''Photographs Tschechoslowakische der Gegenwart.'' Edition Braus, Heidelberg, Germany, 1990.
 +* ''Jan Saudek-Life, Love, Death & Other Such Trifles.'' Art Unlimited, Amsterdam, 1991.
 +* ''Jan Saudek-Theatre of life.'' Daniela Mrázková, Panorama, Prague, 1991.
 +* ''Jan Saudek-l'amour.'' VIS & VIS Nr. 10, Paris, 1992.
 +* ''Jan Saudek, Galerie Municipale du Chateau d'Eau'', Toulouse, France, 1992.
 +* Photo La Collection de la FNAC, Calais des Estats de Bourgogne, Dijon, France 1993.
 +* ''Jan Saudek-life, love, death & other such trivia.'' Slovart, Prague, 1994.
 +* ''Jan Saudek-Jubilations and Obsessions.'' Rosbeek, Amsterdam, 1995.
 +* ''Jan Saudek-Letter.'' Sarah Saudek, Prague, 1995.
 +* ''The World of Jan Saudek 1959–1995.'' Museum of Art, Olomouc, Czech Republic, 1995.
 +* ''Jan Saudek 1895'' Krišal Gallery, Geneva, Switzerland, 1995.
 +* ''Photographie des 20. Jahrhunderts.'' Museum Ludwig, Taschen, Cologne, Germany 1996.
 +* ''Security and search in, Czech Republic photography of the 90s.'' Vl. Birgus / Mir.Vojtěchovský, Kant, Prague, 1996.
 +* ''The Photography Book.'' [[Phaidon Press]], London, 1997.
 +* ''Jan Saudek-Photographs 1987–1997.'' [[Taschen]], Cologne, Germany, 1997.
 +* ''The Body in Contemporary, Czech Republic Photography.'' Vl. Birgus Macintosh Gallery, Glasgow, Scotland, 1997.
 +* ''Jan Saudek.'' Christiane Fricke, Taschen , Cologne, Germany, 1998.
 +* ''From Sudek to Saudek''- Czech Photography in the 20th Century, The Eli Lemberger Museum of Photography, Tel-Hai, Israel, 1998.
 +* ''Masterpieces of Erotic Photography.'' [[Carlton Publishing Group|Carlton]], London, 1998.
 +* ''Jan Saudek three-Love.'' BB Art, Prague, 1998.
 +* ''Zärtliche Betrachtung schöner Damen-aus der Sammlung Photo Fritz Gruber.'' Wienand Verlag, Cologne, Germany, 1998.
 +* ''Absolut Originale, Absolit Originale Collection.'' Stockholm, Sweden, 1999.
 +* ''Jan Saudek 1959–1999.'' Mennour Gallery, Paris, 1999.
 +* ''Jan Saudek Single-married divorced widower.'' Slovart, Praha, Czech Republic, 2000.
 +* ''20th Century Photography.'' Museum Ludwig, Cologne, Germany 2001.
 +* ''Jan Saudek-Realities.'' Arena Edition, Santa Fe, NM, 2002.
 +* ''Czech and Slovak Photography 80s and 90s of the 20th century.'' the Art Museum, Olomouc, Czech Republic 2002.
 +* ''Absolut Generations.'' 50th [[Venice Biennale]], Venice, Italy 2003.
 +* ''Dictionary of, Czech Republicech and Slovak artists 1950–2004.'' Chagall Art Centre, Ostrava, Czech Republic 2004.
 +* ''Saudek.'' Daniela Mrázková, Slovart, Prague, 2005.
 +* ''The Best of Jan Saudek.'' Saudek.com, Prague, 2005.
 +* ''Chains of Love.'' Saudek.com, Prague, 2007.
 +* ''Evenings with a photographer.'' IDIF, Prague, 2007.
 +* ''ACP-learn creative shooting.'' Zoner Press, Brno, Czech Republic, 2007.
 +* ''2006/2007 National Theatre.'' Gallery, Prague, 2007.
 +* ''Jan Saudek'' (1998, [[Taschen]]) {{ISBN|3-8228-7916-9}}.
 +*''Pouta lásky'' (Chains of Love). [Saudek.com] {{ISBN|80-239-8225-7}}.
 +*''Saudek''. Prague: Slovart. {{ISBN|80-7209-727-X}}.
 +* Saudek, Jan: ''Ženatý, svobodný, rozvedený, vdovec''. Prague: Slovart, 2000. {{ISBN|80-7209-701-6}}.
 +* Saudek, Jan: ''Národní divadlo 2006/07.'' National Theatre 2006/07 Season. Prague: Národní divadlo, 2007. {{ISBN|9788072582716}}.
 +
 +==Films and radio==
* ''Jan Saudek: Prague Printemps'' (1990). (26-minute film by [[Jerome de Missolz]] about Saudek). * ''Jan Saudek: Prague Printemps'' (1990). (26-minute film by [[Jerome de Missolz]] about Saudek).
 +* ''Jan Saudek: Bound by Passion'' (2008). (feature-length film by [[Adolf Zika]] about Saudek).
 +* ''Saudek Brothers Documentary'', [[Czech Radio]], 2001
 +
 +==Exhibitions==
 +
 +===Solo exhibitions===
 +2015
 +Valeria Rabbit Hole Art Room, Warsaw, Poland
 +
 +2012
 +* Int. Photofestival Spillimbergo & Udine, Italy Centres of Art, Tarnow, Poland
 +
 +2011
 +* Chamber Gallery U Schell, Budweis, Czech Republic
 +* Visio Art Gallery, Plzeň
 +* Mondo Bizzarro Gallery, Rome, Italy
 +* Phototheatron, Athens, Greece
 +* Galerie Esther Woerdehoff (group exhibition), Paris
 +* Ballarat Int. Photo Biennale, Melbourne, Australia
 +2010
 +* Fotografija Gallery, Ljubljana, Slovenia
 +* Fotofestival Nordic Light, Kristiansund, Norway
 +* Kunsthandel gallery, Graz, Austria
 +* Nordic Light (int. Festival of photography) Kristiansund, Norway
 +* Fotografia Galerija, Ljubljana, Slovenia
 +2009
 +* Gallery Velvet Kelly, Žilina, Slovakia
 +* Monopoli-Castello Carlo V., Italy
 +2008
 +* Velvet Gallery, [[Bojnice]], Slovakia
 +* Royal Palace (along with JPWitkinem ([[Joel-Peter Witkin]]?)), Milan, Italy
 +2007
 +* Galerie Jan Saudek, Prague, Czech Republic
 +2006
 +* International fotobienále, 6th edition, Moscow, Russia
 +* IN FOCUS Gallery, Cologne, Germany
 +2005
 +* House White Unicorn, Prague, Czech Republic
 +* Gallery of Photography Past Rays, Japan
 +* K. Mennour Gallery, Paris
 +2004
 +* Krišal Gallery, Geneve, Switzerland
 +* Lattuada Studio Gallery, Milan, Italy
 +2003
 +* Broel Museum
 +* Biennale de Venise, Italy
 +* FIAC, Galerie K. Mennour, Paris
 +* Krišal Gallery, Geneve, Switzerland
 +2001
 +* Comenius Museum, Naarden, Netherlands
 +* University of Nothingham
 +2000
 +* Carousel de Louvre, Paris Art Gallery Mennour, Paris
 +1999
 +* Paris Photo Gallery Mennour, Paris
 +* VB Photographic Centre, Kuopio, Finland
 +1998
 +* Bergamot Station Art Center BGH Gallery, Santa Monica, CA
 +* Municipal House in Prague, Czech Republic
 +* The Museum of Photography, Tel-Hai, Israel
 +1997
 +* Museo Ken Damy, Brescia, Italy
 +* Paris Photo, Krišal Gallery, Paris
 +1996
 +* Museum of Art, Olomouc, Czech Republic
 +1995
 +* A Gallery for fine photography, New Orleans, LA
 +1994
 +* Parco Gallery, Tokyo
 +1993
 +* Month of Photography, Palffy Palace, Bratislava, Slovakia
 +1992
 +* Galerie Municipale du Chateau d'Eau, Toulouse, France
 +1991
 +* Musee National d'Art Moderne, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris
 +* Portfolio Gallery, London
 +1990
 +* Robert Koch Gallery, Los Angeles, CA
 +* Gallery Yokohama, Yokohama, Japan
 +* RIP, Arles, France
 +1989
 +* Photography Forum Frankfurt, Frankfurt, Germany
 +* Jan Kesner Gallery, Los Angeles, CA
 +1987
 +* Musee d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, Paris
 +1986
 +* [[Centre national de la photographie]], Paris
 +* Photography Forum Frankfurt, Frankfurt, Germany
 +1985
 +* Münchner Stadtmuseum, München, Germany
 +1984
 +* Musee National d'Art Moderne, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris
 +1981
 +Cincinnati Art Museum, Cincinnati, OH
 +Jacques Baruch Gallery, Chicago, IL
 +Marcuse Pfeifer Gallery, New York
 +
 +1980
 +FNAC - Montparnasse, Paris
 +[[photokina 1980|photokina]], Cologne, Germany
 +
 +1979
 +G. Ray Hawkins Gallery, Los Angeles, CA
 +
 +1978
 +* Cincinnati Art Museum, Cincinnati, OH
 +* International Museum of Photography at George Eastman House, Rochester, NY
 +1977
 +* [[Australian Centre for Photography]], Sydney, Australia
 +* National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, Australia
 +* RIP, Arles, France
 +1976
 +* Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, IL
 +* Jacques Baruch Gallery, Chicago, IL
 +1969
 +* [[Indiana University Bloomington]], Bloomington, IN
 +}}
 +
 +===Group exhibitions (selected)===
 +{{columns-list|colwidth=22em|
 +2012
 +* Int. Photofestival Spillimbergo & Udine, Italy
 +* Centres of Art, Tarnow, Poland
 +
 +2011
 +* Chamber Gallery U Schell, České Budějovice, Czech Republic
 +* Visio Art Gallery, Plzen, Czech Republic
 +* Mondo Bizzarro Gallery, Rome, Italy
 +* Phototheatron, Athens
 +* Galerie Esther Woerdehoff (group exhibition), Paris
 +* Ballarat Int. Photo Biennale, Melbourne, Australia
 +
 +2010
 +* Fotografija Gallery, Ljubljana, Slovenia
 +* Kunsthandel gallery, Graz, Austria
 +* ''Nordic Light'' (international festival of photography) Kristiansund, Norway
 +* 2009
 +* Münchner Stadt Museum - ''History of nude in photography'' (museum collection)
 +* Munich State Museum, Munich, Germany
 +
 +2003
 +* Absolut Generations, 50th Biennale of Modern Art, Venezia, Italy
 +
 +2001
 +* ''Nude in, Czech Republicech Photography'', Museum of Art, Olomouc, Czech Republic
 +* ''Nude in, Czech Republicech Photography'', Prague Castle, Prague, Czech Republic
 +* ''Typical Men'', Gallery of Modern Art, Glasgow, Scotland
 +2000
 +* ''Absolut Ego'', Musee des Arts Decoratifs, Paris
 +
 +1998
 +* ''Zärtlicher Blick auf schöne Damen'', Museum Ludwig, Cologne, Germany
 +
 +1997
 +* ''Month of Photography'', Paris
 +* ''The Body in Contemporary, Czech Republicech Photography'', Macintosh Gallery, Glasgow, Scotland
 +
 +1996
 +* ''Security and search in, Czech Republicech photography 90s'', Prague Castle, Prague, Czech Republic
 +1995
 +* ''Fotofeis'' - Scottish International Festival of Photography, Scotland
 +1993
 +* ''Fotofeis'' - Scottish International Festival of Photography, Scotland
 +
 +1990
 +* ''Tschechoslowakische Photos der Gegenward'', Museum Ludwig, Cologne, Germany
 +
 +1985
 +* ''Das Aktfoto'', Münchener Stadtmuseum, München, Germany
 +}}
 +
 +==Collections==
 +{{BLP unsourced section|date=November 2015}}
 +Saudek's work is held in the following permanent collections:
 +* The Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, IL
 +* Boston Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MA
 +* Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris
 +* International Museum of Photography at George Eastman House, Rochester, NY
 +* The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
 +* Moravian Gallery in Brno, Czech Republic
 +* Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, Paris
 +* Musée Paul Getty, Los Angeles, CA
 +* Museum Ludwig, Cologne, Germany
 +* National Gallery of Australia, Canberra, Australia
 +* National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, Australia
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Jan Saudek (born 13 May 1935) is an Czech photographer and painter, known for such photos as Odalisque with Nargilé and Snake.

His work is noted for its hand-tinted portrayal of painterly dream worlds, often inhabited by nude or semi-nude figures surrounded by bare plaster walls or painted photography backdrops.

He frequently re-uses elements (for instance, a clouded sky or a view of Prague's Charles Bridge). In this his photographs suggest the studio and tableaux vivants works of mid-19th century erotic photographers, as well as the works of the 20th-century painter Balthus, and of Bernard Faucon.

Contents

Biography

He and his twin brother Kaja Saudek are holocaust survivors.

Jan Saudek's art work represents a unique technique combining photography and painting. In his country of origin, Czechoslovakia, Jan was considered a disturbed artist and oppressed by authorities. His art gained more prominence during the 1990s, thanks to his collaboration with the publisher Taschen.

During the 2000s, Saudek lost all his photo negatives in matrimonial dispute and his pictures are now displayed on internet for free. Jan claims they were stolen from him.

Jan is the author of many “mise en scene” that were re-taken and copied by other artists. The cliché of a naked man holding a naked new born baby with tenderness became a picture that was reproduced so many times that the composition became as commonplace as posing for a graduation picture.

During his life in communist Czechoslovakia, Jan was labeled by the totalitarian regime as a pornographer.

He lived in poverty using the only room in his basement as his studio. A disintegrating wall and a window giving a glimpse into the backyard became the witnesses of his fantasies and collaborations with models of all different sizes and origins.

Life

Jan Saudek and his twin brother Karel (also known as Kája) were born to a Slavic (Czech) mother and Jewish father in Prague in 1935. Their mother's family came to Prague from Bohemia, and their father from the city of Děčín in the northwest part of that area. During World War II and after the invasion of the German Nazis, both sides of his family were racially persecuted by the invaders. Many of his Jewish relatives died in Theresienstadt concentration camp during the war. Jan and his brother Karel were sent to a children's concentration camp for Mischlinge (mixed-blood in German, as Nazis classified Jews as a race distinct from "Aryans"), located in Silesia near the present Polish-Czech border. Their father Gustav was deported to Theresienstadt concentration camp in February 1945. Although their mother and many other relatives died, both sons and father survived the war. A Communist-dominated government gained power after the war to rule the country, enforced by the Soviet Union and considered to be behind the Iron Curtain.

According to Saudek's biography, he acquired his first camera, a Kodak Baby Brownie, in 1950. He apprenticed to a photographer, and in 1952 started working in a print shop; he was restricted to this work by the Communist government until 1983. In 1959, he started using the more advanced Flexaret 6x6 camera, and also engaged in painting and drawing. After completing his military service, he was inspired in 1963 by the catalogue for American photographer Edward Steichen's The Family of Man exhibition, and began to work to become a serious art photographer. In 1969, Saudek traveled to the United States, where he was encouraged in his work by curator Hugh Edwards of the Art Institute of Chicago.

Returning to Prague, Saudek had to work at his photography clandestinely in a cellar, to avoid the attentions of the secret police. With his work turning to themes of personal erotic freedom, he used implicitly political symbols of corruption and innocence. From the late 1970s, he became recognized in the West as the leading Czech photographer, and also developed a following among photographers in his own country.

In 1983, the first book of Saudek's work was published in the English-speaking world. The same year, he became a freelance photographer; the Czech Communist authorities allowed him to stop working in the print shop, and gave him permission to apply for a permit to work as an artist. In 1987, the archives of his negatives were seized by the police, but later returned.

Saudek lives and works in Prague. His brother Kája Saudek was also an artist, the best-known Czech graphic novelist.

Work

His best-known work is notable for its hand-tinted portrayal of painterly dream worlds, often inhabited by nude or semi-nude figures surrounded by bare plaster walls or painted backdrops. He frequently re-uses elements (for instance, a clouded sky or a view of Prague's Charles Bridge). In this his photographs suggest the studio and tableaux works of mid-19th century erotic photographers, as well as the works of the 20th-century painter Balthus, and of Bernard Faucon.

Saudek's early art photography is noted for its evocation of childhood. His later works often portrayed the evolution from child to adult (re-photographing the same composition/pose, and with the same subjects, over many years). Religious motifs and the ambiguity between man and woman have also been some of Saudek's recurring themes. During the 1990s, his work at times generated censorship attempts in the West because of its provocative sexual content.

Saudek's imagery has sometimes had a mixed reception internationally. He gained early shows in 1969 and 1970 in the United States and in Australia. In 1970 his work was shown at the Australian Centre for Photography and was welcomed by curator Jennie Boddington at the National Gallery of Victoria. Decades later, by contrast, his photograph Black Sheep & White Crow, which features a semi-naked pre-pubescent girl, was removed from the Ballarat International Foto Biennale in Victoria, Australia just before the opening on 21 August 2011; objections had been made related to allegations of child prostitution for his subject.

Saudek's photographs have been featured as covers for the albums of Anorexia Nervosa (New Obscurantis Order), Soul Asylum (Grave Dancers Union), Daniel Lanois (For the Beauty of Wynona), Rorschach (Remain Sedate), and Beautiful South (Welcome to the Beautiful South).

Publications (selected)

  • Jan Saudek-Photo, and Jiri Masin Milos Macourek, House of Lords of Kunštát, Brno, Czech Republic, 1970.
  • The World of Jan Saudek: Photographs. Jacques Baruch Gallery, Chicago, IL, 1979.
  • Jan Saudek-Il teatro de la vita. Giuliana SCIM, Selezione d'Imagini, Milan, Italy, 1981.
  • Story from, Czechoslovakia, My Country, and Photographs by Jan Saudek. Aperture Nr. 89, New York, 1982.
  • The World of Jan Saudek. Anna Fárová, The Master Collection Book III, Rotovision, Geneva, Switzerland 1983.
  • Images from, Czechoslovakia. University of Iowa Museum of Art, Iowa City, IA, 1983.
  • Story photo. Daniela Mrázková, Mlada Fronta, Prague, 1985.
  • Jan Saudek-35 Jahre Photos / 35 Years of Photography. Manfred Heiting, Photography Forum Frankfurt, Frankfurt, Germany 1986.
  • 50 Jahre moderne Farbfotografie. Manfred Heiting, Photokina, Cologne, Germany 1986.
  • Jan Saudek-200 Photographs 1953-1986. Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, Paris, 1987.
  • 20 Years of Czechoslovak Art: 1968-1988. Anne Baruch, Chicago, IL 1988.
  • The Second Israeli Photography Biennale, Museum of Art, Ein Harod, Israel, 1988.
  • Jan Saudek-100 Fotografías 1953-1986. Primavera Fotografica, Barcelona, Spain, 1988.
  • Jan Saudek-Monsieur Nicole (fashion catalog "Matsuda"), New York 1989.1991 (?).
  • Photographs Tschechoslowakische der Gegenwart. Edition Braus, Heidelberg, Germany, 1990.
  • Jan Saudek-Life, Love, Death & Other Such Trifles. Art Unlimited, Amsterdam, 1991.
  • Jan Saudek-Theatre of life. Daniela Mrázková, Panorama, Prague, 1991.
  • Jan Saudek-l'amour. VIS & VIS Nr. 10, Paris, 1992.
  • Jan Saudek, Galerie Municipale du Chateau d'Eau, Toulouse, France, 1992.
  • Photo La Collection de la FNAC, Calais des Estats de Bourgogne, Dijon, France 1993.
  • Jan Saudek-life, love, death & other such trivia. Slovart, Prague, 1994.
  • Jan Saudek-Jubilations and Obsessions. Rosbeek, Amsterdam, 1995.
  • Jan Saudek-Letter. Sarah Saudek, Prague, 1995.
  • The World of Jan Saudek 1959–1995. Museum of Art, Olomouc, Czech Republic, 1995.
  • Jan Saudek 1895 Krišal Gallery, Geneva, Switzerland, 1995.
  • Photographie des 20. Jahrhunderts. Museum Ludwig, Taschen, Cologne, Germany 1996.
  • Security and search in, Czech Republic photography of the 90s. Vl. Birgus / Mir.Vojtěchovský, Kant, Prague, 1996.
  • The Photography Book. Phaidon Press, London, 1997.
  • Jan Saudek-Photographs 1987–1997. Taschen, Cologne, Germany, 1997.
  • The Body in Contemporary, Czech Republic Photography. Vl. Birgus Macintosh Gallery, Glasgow, Scotland, 1997.
  • Jan Saudek. Christiane Fricke, Taschen , Cologne, Germany, 1998.
  • From Sudek to Saudek- Czech Photography in the 20th Century, The Eli Lemberger Museum of Photography, Tel-Hai, Israel, 1998.
  • Masterpieces of Erotic Photography. Carlton, London, 1998.
  • Jan Saudek three-Love. BB Art, Prague, 1998.
  • Zärtliche Betrachtung schöner Damen-aus der Sammlung Photo Fritz Gruber. Wienand Verlag, Cologne, Germany, 1998.
  • Absolut Originale, Absolit Originale Collection. Stockholm, Sweden, 1999.
  • Jan Saudek 1959–1999. Mennour Gallery, Paris, 1999.
  • Jan Saudek Single-married divorced widower. Slovart, Praha, Czech Republic, 2000.
  • 20th Century Photography. Museum Ludwig, Cologne, Germany 2001.
  • Jan Saudek-Realities. Arena Edition, Santa Fe, NM, 2002.
  • Czech and Slovak Photography 80s and 90s of the 20th century. the Art Museum, Olomouc, Czech Republic 2002.
  • Absolut Generations. 50th Venice Biennale, Venice, Italy 2003.
  • Dictionary of, Czech Republicech and Slovak artists 1950–2004. Chagall Art Centre, Ostrava, Czech Republic 2004.
  • Saudek. Daniela Mrázková, Slovart, Prague, 2005.
  • The Best of Jan Saudek. Saudek.com, Prague, 2005.
  • Chains of Love. Saudek.com, Prague, 2007.
  • Evenings with a photographer. IDIF, Prague, 2007.
  • ACP-learn creative shooting. Zoner Press, Brno, Czech Republic, 2007.
  • 2006/2007 National Theatre. Gallery, Prague, 2007.
  • Jan Saudek (1998, Taschen) Template:ISBN.
  • Pouta lásky (Chains of Love). [Saudek.com] Template:ISBN.
  • Saudek. Prague: Slovart. Template:ISBN.
  • Saudek, Jan: Ženatý, svobodný, rozvedený, vdovec. Prague: Slovart, 2000. Template:ISBN.
  • Saudek, Jan: Národní divadlo 2006/07. National Theatre 2006/07 Season. Prague: Národní divadlo, 2007. Template:ISBN.

Films and radio

  • Jan Saudek: Prague Printemps (1990). (26-minute film by Jerome de Missolz about Saudek).
  • Jan Saudek: Bound by Passion (2008). (feature-length film by Adolf Zika about Saudek).
  • Saudek Brothers Documentary, Czech Radio, 2001

Exhibitions

Solo exhibitions

2015 Valeria Rabbit Hole Art Room, Warsaw, Poland

2012

  • Int. Photofestival Spillimbergo & Udine, Italy Centres of Art, Tarnow, Poland

2011

  • Chamber Gallery U Schell, Budweis, Czech Republic
  • Visio Art Gallery, Plzeň
  • Mondo Bizzarro Gallery, Rome, Italy
  • Phototheatron, Athens, Greece
  • Galerie Esther Woerdehoff (group exhibition), Paris
  • Ballarat Int. Photo Biennale, Melbourne, Australia

2010

  • Fotografija Gallery, Ljubljana, Slovenia
  • Fotofestival Nordic Light, Kristiansund, Norway
  • Kunsthandel gallery, Graz, Austria
  • Nordic Light (int. Festival of photography) Kristiansund, Norway
  • Fotografia Galerija, Ljubljana, Slovenia

2009

  • Gallery Velvet Kelly, Žilina, Slovakia
  • Monopoli-Castello Carlo V., Italy

2008

2007

  • Galerie Jan Saudek, Prague, Czech Republic

2006

  • International fotobienále, 6th edition, Moscow, Russia
  • IN FOCUS Gallery, Cologne, Germany

2005

  • House White Unicorn, Prague, Czech Republic
  • Gallery of Photography Past Rays, Japan
  • K. Mennour Gallery, Paris

2004

  • Krišal Gallery, Geneve, Switzerland
  • Lattuada Studio Gallery, Milan, Italy

2003

  • Broel Museum
  • Biennale de Venise, Italy
  • FIAC, Galerie K. Mennour, Paris
  • Krišal Gallery, Geneve, Switzerland

2001

  • Comenius Museum, Naarden, Netherlands
  • University of Nothingham

2000

  • Carousel de Louvre, Paris Art Gallery Mennour, Paris

1999

  • Paris Photo Gallery Mennour, Paris
  • VB Photographic Centre, Kuopio, Finland

1998

  • Bergamot Station Art Center BGH Gallery, Santa Monica, CA
  • Municipal House in Prague, Czech Republic
  • The Museum of Photography, Tel-Hai, Israel

1997

  • Museo Ken Damy, Brescia, Italy
  • Paris Photo, Krišal Gallery, Paris

1996

  • Museum of Art, Olomouc, Czech Republic

1995

  • A Gallery for fine photography, New Orleans, LA

1994

  • Parco Gallery, Tokyo

1993

  • Month of Photography, Palffy Palace, Bratislava, Slovakia

1992

  • Galerie Municipale du Chateau d'Eau, Toulouse, France

1991

  • Musee National d'Art Moderne, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris
  • Portfolio Gallery, London

1990

  • Robert Koch Gallery, Los Angeles, CA
  • Gallery Yokohama, Yokohama, Japan
  • RIP, Arles, France

1989

  • Photography Forum Frankfurt, Frankfurt, Germany
  • Jan Kesner Gallery, Los Angeles, CA

1987

  • Musee d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, Paris

1986

1985

  • Münchner Stadtmuseum, München, Germany

1984

  • Musee National d'Art Moderne, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris

1981 Cincinnati Art Museum, Cincinnati, OH Jacques Baruch Gallery, Chicago, IL Marcuse Pfeifer Gallery, New York

1980 FNAC - Montparnasse, Paris photokina, Cologne, Germany

1979 G. Ray Hawkins Gallery, Los Angeles, CA

1978

  • Cincinnati Art Museum, Cincinnati, OH
  • International Museum of Photography at George Eastman House, Rochester, NY

1977

1976

  • Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, IL
  • Jacques Baruch Gallery, Chicago, IL

1969

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Group exhibitions (selected)

Template:Columns-list

Collections

Template:BLP unsourced section Saudek's work is held in the following permanent collections:

  • The Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, IL
  • Boston Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MA
  • Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris
  • International Museum of Photography at George Eastman House, Rochester, NY
  • The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
  • Moravian Gallery in Brno, Czech Republic
  • Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, Paris
  • Musée Paul Getty, Los Angeles, CA
  • Museum Ludwig, Cologne, Germany
  • National Gallery of Australia, Canberra, Australia
  • National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, Australia




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