Aleš Veselý

Aleš Veselý (February 3, 1935 – December 14, 2015) was a Czech sculptor.[1] He was born in Cáslav. From 1952 to 1958, he studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in Prague. At the end of the 1950, he was part of the art movement known as the Czech Abstraction. More recently, he worked on monumental sculptures, often connected with a specific landscape. He sculpted in welded metal, exploring the tension of the masses and the activity of the elementary forces contained in the material.

Aleš Veselý, 2011

Grants

Awards

  • 1994 The Chicago Prize, John David Mooney Foundation, Chicago, Illinois
  • 1969 The Mathias Braun Award for the sculpture Kaddish at the Sculpture and City exhibition, Liberec
  • 1965 Critics Award for the sculpture Chair Usurper, 4eme Biennale de Paris

Public Space Sculptures

  • 1998-2001 Chamber of Light, Europos Parkas, Vilnius, iron, steel and boulders, 777 x 430 x 430 cm
  • 1999 Messenger, Sculpture Park, Wijk aan Zee, steel and boulders, 530 x 376 x 609 cm
  • 1996 Memento, sculpture from 1968 permanently located in Venray, stainless steel, h. 450 cm
  • 1995 Magen David, Jewish Memorial in Terezin, stainless steel, bronzed railway tracks, boulders, h. 560 cm
  • 1994 Doublebench, Faret Tachikawa, Tokyo, stainless steel, diorite, 240 x 240 x 70 cm
  • 1988 Testimony, sculpture from 1968, permanently located in the Olympic Park, Seoul, stainless steel, h. 280 cm
  • 1980 That One, welded sculpture in stainless steel in front of the Ed. Spranger School, Hamm, h. 12 m
  • 1979 Iron Report, town park, Bochum, complex of three iron sculptures, I. 750 x 900 x 220 cm, II. 330 x 360 x 180 cm, III. 280 x 220 x 110 cm)
  • 1973 Trumpet from Jericho, Nove Sedlo nearby Karlovy Vary, stainless steel, 210 x 390 x 230 cm
  • 1967-1968 Kaddish, (originally in Ostrava) since 1971 located in the outdoor studio of the artist, h. 710 cm
  • 1963 Indetermination of Circle and Straight Line, Rome, CSA, via Bissolati (was destroyed by the permission of the Czech Embassy in 1994)

References

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2015-12-22. Retrieved 2015-12-16.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)

Literature

  • Michal Schonberg, Walk Through That Gate! Conversations with Aleš Veselý, Torst: Prague, 2007, ISBN 80-7215-263-7
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