Jan Saudek's Provocative World | opening exhibition of the Budapest Photo Festival

Jan Saudek, Photography’s Enfant Terrible

Hungary’s largest photography event, BUDAPEST PHOTO FESTIVAL, is opening the seventh edition of its event series on 31 March 2023 with an exceptional, even provocative exhibition in KUNSTHALLE BUDAPEST. The retrospective presenting baroquely sultry, hand-coloured sensual nudes and visually rich scenes by Jan Saudek, a rebel of contemporary Czech photography, has been realised in collaboration between the Photo Festival and Kunsthalle Budapest.

Jan Saudek became known worldwide in the 1990’s for his erotic photographs fusing photography with the world of painting, calling forth for their creation the atmosphere of an atelier from the dawn of photography, with deck floor and shabby walls, as well as aniline dye photographs.

He was born in 1935 and his way of looking at the world was greatly influenced by his horrendous experience of the Second World War. With his twin brother, they witnessed the nazi occupation of Prague and the monstrosity of the concentration camps. After the war, he studied at a graphic arts secondary school while already taking photographs. In the 1960’s, he worked with his medium format 6x6 Flexaret camera and decided to become a photographer under the influence of Edward Steichen’s book and exhibition, The Family of Man (1955). In 1969, he travelled to the United States, where he met Hugh Edwards, the curator of the Art Institute of Chicago who encouraged his artistic endeavours. His first foreign exhibition was organised in Bloomington, at the Indiana University.

Returning to Prague, surrounded by the dictatorial climate of the communist Czechoslovakia, he worked in secret in the cellar underneath his house, wary of making himself known to the authorities. Until the middle of the sixties, he made subtly arranged snapshots, his recurring subject being the collision between the innocence of childhood and disillusioned adulthood. One of his most well-known photographs from this period is Life (1966), where a half naked, muscular man is

hugging a newborn baby with touching gentleness. By the end of the decade, he started to arrange ever more complex scenes both in terms of form and substance, complete with costumes, props, invariably against the backdrop of his mouldy studio wall. His excessively ornate, grandiloquent photographs show the duality present in all of us, the good and the bad, the sublimity of the soul and the lewdness of the body, like the two faces of the god Janus. From the end of the 1970’s, mainly thanks to his foreign exhibitions and publications, he became well known, even trendy. In his works aspiring to grasp the authenticity of life, he represented ultimate extremes and feverish visions, explained partly by the traumas he had experienced and partly by his agitated love life. For Saudek, a body is a visual metaphor for life, a perfect physique can express beauty just as well as a shapeless or old one. His still frame scenes featuring overheated eroticism next to frivolous burlesques inspired by Czech humour can just as well be interpreted as paraphrases from art history. By the 1990’s, he had become a worldwide recognized photographer. Besides his more than 400 solo exhibitions, he has participated in major group exhibitions and his photographs can be found in the world’s prestigious collections. His works, at the beginning branded as clichéd and kitschy, have become iconic in photographic history.

 

For the length of the exhibition, distinguished artists and public figures will present Jan Saudek’s world as reflected by his works showcased at Budapest Kunsthalle, a world not devoid of contradictions.

 

curator: Zsuzsanna Tulipán, Műcsarnok

co-coordinator: Szilvia Mucsy, BPF

 

The interior of the exhibition also features photographs that are not recommended for under 18s. 

 

2023. April 1. - May 28.

Kunsthalle, Budapest

Tickets
2023. March 24. - June 25.
Previous exhibition

Centres of Gravity | Botond Polgár: Form is the limit of the body

2023. April 15. - July 16.
Next exhibition

SoulShapes. 2nd National Salon of Folk Art 2023