Josef Bolf
Mask
Artist
Josef Bolf
(1971, Praha), Czech
Original Title
Mask
Date2011
Mediumoil, acrylic and ink on wooden board
Dimensions16 × 25 cm
Classificationspaintings
Credit LineKunsthalle Praha (Eva and Petr Zeman Collection)
DescriptionJosef Bolf is one of the most distinctive artists in contemporary Czech painting. His paintings are inhabited by wounded and frightened creatures, half-human and half-animal. The depicted situations elicit feelings of sadness, revulsion, and vulnerability, which draw on the author’s depressive states as well as the artist’s personal experience of growing up on an unfinished suburb of Prague’s South End during the era of Normalisation, when the collective unconscious resonated with the potential threats of the Cold War. Bolf came on the art scene in the late 1990s and early 00s, and succeeded in rehabilitating and innovating existential figural works by connecting the theme of his own childhood with the aesthetics of pulp genres – comics, cheap horrors, naive sci-fi stories, and video games. He also used inferior materials and children’s artistic techniques. Later, his stylisation became more classical, but his works are still populated by the same childhood heroes who find themselves in the inhuman scenery of panel-house architecture whose concrete facade and malfunctioning infrastructure create a sense of irreverence for the human scale. The personal, autobiographical line thus merges with inspirational vectors derived from pop culture, art, literature, but also psychoanalysis, and opens up vistas of collective memory. His work seems to re-play scenes from one and the same story, but possess an inner focus and the promise of personal revitalisation. The works from recent years, which largely show the overlapping and collaging of motifs and their complicated layering, departs from the sense of personal projection in favor of depicting the chaos of the contemporary world, full of catastrophe and the human individual’s psychological malaise.
Mask (2009) is conceived as a detail of a larger pictorial scene. It portrays the head of a boy with a mask against the backdrop of a housing estate. The dark color palette paired with the gloomy shadows on his face imbue the scene with a horror-like a horror-like atmosphere and act as starting-point for an imagined narrative permeated with existentialist weight and omnipresent fear—a reference to Bolf’s childhood in Czechoslovakia during the normalization.
Josef Bolf (*1971, Prague) studied at the the Academy of Fine Arts in Prague and completed scholarships at Kongsthögskolan in Stockholm and the Academy of Fine Arts in Stuttgart and in 2007 he completed a residency in New York (international Studio and Curatorial Program). At the end of the 1990s he became a member of his peer group Bezhlavý Jezdec whose members often worked in conceptual art and the moving image, which is a medium Bolf himself occasionally employs. In 2005 he was among the finalists of the Jindřich Chalupecký Award, and his work regularly appears at important exhibitions dedicated to contemporary art. Since 2018, he has been a professor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Prague, and he had a solo exhibition in 2019 at the National Gallery Prague (A Premonition of Shadow, National Gallery Prague – Trade Fair Palace). Bolf has also had solo exhibitions abroad, for instance in Slovakia (White and Weiss Gallery, Bratislava, 2022), France (Galerie Dukan, Paris, 2011, 2016), Hungary (Trafo Gallery, Budapest, 2015), German (Galerie Dukan, Leipzig, 2014), China (Arcaute – Arte Contemporáneo, Beijing, 2012, 2013), Switzerland (Arthobler Gallery, Zurich, 2013), and the USA (Ana Cristea Gallery, New York City, 2010) Many of his works are held in institutional and private collections in the Czech Republic and abroad.
Mask (2009) is conceived as a detail of a larger pictorial scene. It portrays the head of a boy with a mask against the backdrop of a housing estate. The dark color palette paired with the gloomy shadows on his face imbue the scene with a horror-like a horror-like atmosphere and act as starting-point for an imagined narrative permeated with existentialist weight and omnipresent fear—a reference to Bolf’s childhood in Czechoslovakia during the normalization.
Josef Bolf (*1971, Prague) studied at the the Academy of Fine Arts in Prague and completed scholarships at Kongsthögskolan in Stockholm and the Academy of Fine Arts in Stuttgart and in 2007 he completed a residency in New York (international Studio and Curatorial Program). At the end of the 1990s he became a member of his peer group Bezhlavý Jezdec whose members often worked in conceptual art and the moving image, which is a medium Bolf himself occasionally employs. In 2005 he was among the finalists of the Jindřich Chalupecký Award, and his work regularly appears at important exhibitions dedicated to contemporary art. Since 2018, he has been a professor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Prague, and he had a solo exhibition in 2019 at the National Gallery Prague (A Premonition of Shadow, National Gallery Prague – Trade Fair Palace). Bolf has also had solo exhibitions abroad, for instance in Slovakia (White and Weiss Gallery, Bratislava, 2022), France (Galerie Dukan, Paris, 2011, 2016), Hungary (Trafo Gallery, Budapest, 2015), German (Galerie Dukan, Leipzig, 2014), China (Arcaute – Arte Contemporáneo, Beijing, 2012, 2013), Switzerland (Arthobler Gallery, Zurich, 2013), and the USA (Ana Cristea Gallery, New York City, 2010) Many of his works are held in institutional and private collections in the Czech Republic and abroad.
Josef Bolf