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Jiří Šalamoun "... and one more thing"

Jiří Šalamoun is probably the most prominent Czech illustrator from the second half of the 20th century. Examples of his excellent visual interpretations include Dickens The Pickwick Papers, Saltykov-Shchedrin, Sternes Tristram Shandy and Saroyans Tracys Tiger. Children love the stories of Feek the Maxidog and let‘s not forget Tolkiens Hobit and Coopers The Last of the Mohicans. And there will always be Hofmans Mr. Tau. Our exhibition, which was prepared for the artists important anniversary, will present Šalamouns illustrations, graphics and freehand drawings.




 

Exhibition plan



Jiří Šalamoun

17. 4. 1935

graphic artist, illustrator, animated film designer, film, theatre and exhibition poster designer and poet. He studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in Prague (1952–1956), Hochschule für Grafik und Buchkunst in Leipzig (1956–1959), and finished his studies at the Prague Academy (1961).

In the 1960s, besides illustration, he devoted himself to graphic layouts for the publishing houses Mladá Fronta and Československý Spisovatel and for almost two decades worked with his wife Eva Natus editing the journal Film a Doba (Film and Time). From the middle of the 1970s he collaborated on animated films. During this period Šalamoun’s graphic work began to evolve, but his illustrated work remains key and is represented by more than a hundred illustrated book titles. The fundamental relationship the artist has with the text – which he thinks through carefully and which becomes, in essence, a conversation – is projected onto his graphic works as well. His film work is dominated by the serial Maxidog Fík, of which there also exists a book version.

Jiří Šalamoun’s work is marked by a specific humour – primarily sarcastic, bitter, ironic and grotesque – something along the lines of his slightly older colleagues from the artistic group Šmidrs (K. Nepraš, J. Koblasa, B. Dlouhý, J. Vožniak, the music composer R. Komorous and the theoretician J. Kříž). Their grotesque humour, which represents a distancing from the unhappy Czech historical arc of the 20th century, also creates the context in Šalamoun’s work. Besides this specific grotesque perception, Šalamoun’s work is based on the need to create a story, develop, reveal and characterise its layers and then assemble it into his own interpretation or bitter commentary. This involves not only his illustration work, but also his work in graphics, film and poetry.


 

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The Madman’s Manuscript (part of the The Pickwick Papers, 1981)The Madman’s Manuscript (part of the The Pickwick Papers, 1981)The Madman’s Manuscript (part of the The Pickwick Papers, 1981)Fantastic stories, Svoboda, Prague 1968Fantastic stories, Svoboda, Prague 1968Fantastic stories, Svoboda, Prague 1968Fantastic stories, Svoboda, Prague 1968Fantastic stories, Svoboda, Prague 1968Fantastic stories, Svoboda, Prague 1968Fantastic stories, Svoboda, Prague 1968Fantastic stories, Svoboda, Prague 1968Fantastic stories, Svoboda, Prague 1968Quartet
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