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Distributed for Karolinum Press, Charles University

Czech Secession

Art and Architecture 1890–1914

Translated by Adrian Dean
A lavishly illustrated exploration of forward-looking Czech art around the turn of the twentieth century.
 
Though it’s less widely heralded than Berlin and Vienna, 1890s Prague was every bit as much a fin-de-siècle cultural center as its Mittel European peers. At the end of the nineteenth century, the city found itself home to a fervent coterie of young visual artists all deliberately pushing against—indeed, seeking to secede from—the traditional artistic structures of the day.

This book traces Czech Secessionist art from the turn of the twentieth century by following its three main stylistic schools: naturalistic-impressionistic, symbolist, and ornamental-decorative. Though these styles developed separately, their symbiotic relationship gives the art a deeper significance and disrupts the traditional understanding of Art Nouveau and Secessionist art as an eclectic decorative style that faded away at the beginning of the twentieth century. Illustrated with more than three hundred color plates, Czech Secession is a fittingly lush tribute to one city’s underappreciated and forward-looking artistic blossoming.
 

496 pages | 313 color plates | 10 1/2 x 9 1/4 | © 2022

Architecture: European Architecture

Art: Art Criticism, European Art


Table of Contents

Secession

Signals

The End of the Century

Go to the People

Into the Wider World

Defiance

Spring

Fairy Tales

Senses

Epoch

Synthesis

Expression

Geometrisation

The Second Secession

Legacy

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