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Bela Kolářová

© André Villers
© André Villers
© André Villers
© André Villers

Běla Kolářová belongs to the generation which touched off an iconoclastic revolution and “rearmament“ in Czech art during the 1960s. This new wave hit the scene with a program of objective tendencies, proclaiming that art can exist as a process, concept, method, experiment and language, or as something “concrete“—such as a found and designed object. Kolářová’s training is in photography, and her role in the 1960s reversal was associated with this medium from the beginning. As with many of her contemporaries, she arrived at the conclusion that it is not possible to photograph the world, i.e. to use

classic methods of representing reality. She therefore invented her own method and technology, the artificial negative. She pressed small objects into layers of paraffin on small pieces of cellophane, or she actually applied small fragments of natural and artificial materials. Instead of choosing the world that it is possible to photograph and represent as an exterior appearance, she chose the world that is possible to accept, to appropriate as an assemblage of material fragments, using light to transfer them into an autonomous picture on the sensitive surface of photographic paper. A different order of reality emerges in these photographs which operate somewhere between Man Ray’s photograms, Duchamp’s ready-mades and an “absolute” record of light. J.S.

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1923, Terezín / CZ, at that time ČSSR – 2010, Praha / CZ