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Jaroslav Kukal: Bezčasí (Timelessness)

March 26, 2009

From the accompanying text by the exhibition Curator, Jan Mlčoch: “The 70s in the Czech lands were a swamp which was threatened to be swallowed up by any movement. Not falling into despair was incomparably more difficult than obtaining scarce consumer goods. The environment of cultural and political dissent consisting of more or less isolated freer islands was captured in photographs from several points of view. The official, but at the same time hidden, view was recorded by the cameras of State Security workers. Totally opposite positions come from photographs by the few photographers who directly participated in Underground activities - either as direct participants or as witnesses. (...) Jaroslav Kukal was one of the few people who, by their contributions and immediacy, brightened up the stuffy atmosphere of standardisation. Although his work has been repeatedly recalled, photographic archives still await a more comprehensive treatment, extensive exhibition and book presentation. The photographer would have been 60 years of age today.”

Hospodářské noviny is the media partner of the exhibition.

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Letters to Olga – essays written in prison, letter

„I am a child of the age of conceptual, rather than mystical, thought and therefore my god as well – if I am compelled to speak of him (which I do very unwillingly) – must appear as something terribly abstract, vague and unattractive. But it appears so only to someone I try to tell about him – the experience itself is quite vivid, intimate and particular, perhaps (…) more lively than for someone whose “normal” God is provided with all the appropriate attributes (which oddly enough can alienate more often than drawing one closer). And something else that is typical of my god: he is a master of waiting, and in doing so he frequently unnerves me. It is as though he set up various possibilities around me and then waited silently to see what I would do. (…) His Last Judgment is taking place now, continuously, always – and yet it is always the last: nothing that has happened can ever un-happen, everything remains in the “memory of Being” – and I too remain there – condemned to be with myself till the end of time – just as I am and just as I make myself.“

Václav Havel:
Letters to Olga – essays written in prison, letter, August 7, 1980

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