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Emil Filla

Head of a Man with a Pipe

Hlava muže s dýmkou
Hlava muže s dýmkou
Hlava muže s dýmkou
Artist (1882, Chropyně - 1953, Praha), Czech
Original Title Hlava muže s dýmkou
Date1915
Mediumoil and sand on plywood
Dimensions 51,5 × 42,5 cm
Classifications paintings
Credit LineKunsthalle Praha
DescriptionEmil Filla is one of the most important figures of Czech modernism. He spent his life developing cubist principles, which he synthesized with a knowledge of both older art and contemporary tendencies. The possibility of manifesting individual artistic freedom was an essential value for Filla. His modernist inclinations were first awakened by the 1905 Prague exhibition of Norwegian painter Edvard Munch. In his early expressionist period, Filla typically combined a wide range of influences. Apart from Edvard Munch, some of his most significant inspirations include Honoré Daumier, Pierre Bonnard, Rembrandt and El Greco. Filla’s engagement with their work during this period is evidenced by a soft morphology, an emphasis on color and its sensorily liberated application and morphological function, as well as an exaltation of expression. His encounter with the pre-cubist paintings of Picasso, Braque, and Derain subsequently influenced his move toward primitivist painting in the form of figurative canvases with religious motifs. Their expressiveness and emphasis on a spiritual dimension convey strongly metaphorical content linked to his idealistic view of the role of new art in social transformation. From 1912 onward, Filla’s work became closely aligned with the repertoire and morphology of Picasso’s cubism, which he considered a timeless lens for viewing reality. He was the only Czech artist to engage with all the evolutionary phases of Picasso’s and Braque’s cubism. However, he did not approach their evolution chronologically, and the message conveyed by his cubism was also fundamentally different. Unlike Picasso’s anti-painterly and spontaneous dadaist gestures, Filla sought a more sensorily painterly and simultaneously more scientifically grounded outcome prioritizing a conceptual, spiritual dimension. Filla’s Dutch period, between 1914 and 1920, which combines elements of analytical and synthetic cubism with influences from Dutch 17th century art, is generally considered the pinnacle of his cubism. Typical of his work from the 1920s, following a return to the newly established Czechoslovakia, were large still lifes in a synthetically cubist style, marked by a richer color palette and more cultivated of painterly techniques. The sensory dimension was further amplified in the latter half of the 1920s, influenced by the general inclination toward painterly vitalism. An important element of Filla’s practice in the 1930s were sensorily conceived figural canvases with deformed morphologies inspired by primitivism. Given their possibilities of associative interpretation, these works also shared an affinity with surrealism. In 1936, Filla began working on the allegorical cycle Battles and Figths, inspired by classical mythology, which conveyed his concern with the contemporary state of affairs in Europe. Simultaneously, he also worked on the cycle Songs, inspired by Czech and Slovak folksongs, and containing a subtext of nostalgia and of the tragedy of its protagonists. The hybrid, almost postmodern style of the subsequent cycle Songs II (1946–1950), based on Slovak folksongs, demonstrates Filla’s familiarity with late cubism and influences of Chinese ink painting and the work of Mikoláš Aleš. This cycle also contains elements of folk and slapstick humor, which helped him cope with heavy experiences during the war. His last cycle, Central Bohemian Highlands (1947–1952), focuses on landscapes and can be understood as reflecting an encounter with the landscape and its spiritual dimension.

Male Head with Pipe (1915) was created during Filla’s stay in Rotterdam during the first half of 1915. Although its overall aesthetic is cubist, it follows neither analytical nor synthetic cubism. During his Dutch period, Filla used this more formal style, based on work with basic geometric planes, in parallel with “Old Master” cubism, seemingly in dialogue with some of Picasso’s heads from 1913. The head is composed of several overlapping geometric planes, which themselves resemble an abstract composition. The right part of the man’s head is defined merely by a curve and a strand of hair. To emphasize the haptic qualities of the painting, Filla mixed sand into the paint, which accentuates the textured surface of the cheek, created using a spatula. This divergent materiality spotlights the variedness of reality.

Emil Filla (1882, Chropyně – 1953, Prague) studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in Prague from 1903 to 1906. In 1906, he traveled to study in Germany, the Netherlands, and Paris. He stayed in Paris several times between 1909 and 1914, becoming acquainted with both modern and older art and studying specialized literature. From 1907 to 1908, Filla was a member of the art group Osma, which brought together the young generations of Czech and German-Jewish artists. Between 1909 and 1911, he was a member of the Mánes Union of Fine Arts, but a generational divide within the group led to the 1911 founding of the Group of Fine Artists, in which Filla belonged to the orthodox cubist division following in the footsteps of Picasso and Braque. In the years before World War I, Filla and his colleagues developed close ties with German gallery owners and partook in internationally oriented projects presenting the most cutting-edge avantgarde tendencies; examples of such events include the 1912 Sonderbund group exhibition in Cologne and the 1913 First German Autumn Salon at the Der Sturm gallery in Berlin. From 1914 to 1920, Filla lived in the Netherlands, a neutral territory during the war. Alongside painting, he spent this time studying and partaking in the Czech resistance movement. In 1920, he rejoined the Mánes Union of Fine Artists and became one of the most prominent figures of Czech art both domestically and abroad. In 1932, his work was extensively featured in the exhibition Poesie 1932, which marked the beginnings of surrealism in Czech art. On the first day of World War II, Filla was transported to the Buchenwald concentration camp. Upon his return home in 1945, he was appointed as professor of monumental painting at the Academy of Arts, Architecture, and Design in Prague. He had solo exhibitions in 1945 and 1947; later, he was only allowed to exhibit his paintings of the Central Bohemian Highlands, which the socialist rhetoric of the time inaccurately described as Filla’s first step toward socialist realism. A rediscovery of his cubist work only began to take place in the 1950s. A more comprehensive review of Filla’s unique contribution to Czech modernist painting was only achieved in exhibitions after the year 2000, such as: Scream, Mouth! Preconditions of Expressionism, Prague City Gallery – Municipal Library, Prague, 2006–2007; Quarrels of Maturity: Facets of modernity at the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries, 1890–1918, Gallery of Fine Arts in Ostrava, 2008; Rembrandt’s Tram: Cubism, Tradition, and “Different” Art, Gallery of Western Bohemia in Pilsen, 2015; The Man with a Burning Mane: Emil Filla and Surrealism 1931–1939, Museum Kampa, Prague, 2017; Years of Disarray 1908–1928: Avantgardes in Central Europe, Olomouc Museum of Art, 2018; Kubišta–Filla: A Pilsen Disputation, Gallery of Western Bohemia in Pilsen, Meat Market Exhibition Hall, Pilsen, 2019. His works are held in every important public collection in the Czech Republic, as well as in the collections of Kunstmuseum Bochum, Kunstmuseum Bern, and the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris.

Ležící žena
Emil Filla
1932
Od Brníkova
Emil Filla
1951
U Loun
Emil Filla
1952
Žena s kočárkem
Bohumil Kubišta
1908
Černý pierot
Jindřich Štyrský
1923
Akvárium
Jindřich Štyrský
1927
Všudypřítomné oko
Jindřich Štyrský
1936
Všudypřítomné oko II
Jindřich Štyrský
1936
Kořeny
Jindřich Štyrský
1934