NEWS | 8. 2. 2019
New York, Paris, Tokyo and Olomouc can now boast the photographs of world-renowned photographer Jaromir Funke. Take the last three days to come and see the work of one of the most important personalities of the interwar avant-garde.
The exhibition is devoted exclusively to the most important segment of his work – his avant-garde studies in the style of functionalism, new objectivity, abstraction and surrealism. Some of Funke’s photographs from the 1920s, with their pioneering use of light and translucence not only as compositional elements but as subjects in themselves, rank among the most radical examples of abstraction in international photography. His cycles Reflexes, exploring the phantasmagorical opposition between reality and reflection, and Time Persists, capturing eerie encounters between disparate objects in unexpected contexts, were the first surrealist works of Czech photography. Avant-garde tendencies are also evident in his photographs of architecture and details of industrial buildings, as well as in his nudes, portraits, landscapes and social documentary shots. The exhibition, which beside original period prints of his most famous images also presents some of his lesser-known and hitherto unpublished work, has been put together by Vladimír Birgus and Štěpánka Bieleszová with the kind assistance of Funke’s daughter, Miloslava Rupešová, Institute of Creative Photography of the Silesian University in Opava and Leica Gallery Prague.