Otakar Švec
Otakar Švec (23 November 1892 – 3 March 1955[1]) was a Czech sculptor best known for his colossal granite Monument to Stalin in Prague, Czech Republic.
A pupil of Josef Václav Myslbek and Jan Štursa, Švec had produced the important 1924 Futurist sculpture Sunbeam Motorcycle, now in the National Gallery in Prague, and at least three major public monuments to Tomáš Masaryk, Jan Hus, and Franklin Delano Roosevelt. The first two were destroyed by the Germans during World War II.
Švec entered the competition for the Stalin Monument in 1949.[2] He assumed that it was politically fixed, and he hoped only for second prize. Švec won, and the political pressures of the job destroyed him. The sculpture was unveiled on May Day, 1955, but Švec had killed himself by kitchen gas three weeks earlier, following the example of his wife. This world's largest representation of Stalin, dominating the city, stood for only seven years before the political climate changed. It was brought down in October 1962 with 800 kilograms of dynamite.
References
- ↑ Date of death according to Szczygieł, Mariusz: Gottland. Reportagen. Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp, 2008, p.107 (based on Czech archival resources)
- ↑ Faltýnek, Vilém (26 April 2006). "Paradoxní osud sochaře Švece zaujal Martina Zeta" (in Czech). Radio Prague. Retrieved 1 May 2016.
Sources
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Otakar Švec. |
- Figuration/Abstraction: Strategies for Public Sculpture in Europe 1945-1968, by Charlotte Benton
- source on a recent show of Švec's work
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