Jiří Balcar

Jiří Balcar (August 26, 1929 - August 28, 1968) was a Czech graphic artist, painter, illustrator, typographer and cartoonist. He was famous for designing movie posters and book covers.

Life

Jiří Balcar was born in the family of doctor Emilian Balcar in Kolín. He was one of two sons for whom their father had great expectations, and the family situation was very tense. In 1945 his father committed suicide, which hit the young Balcar hard.

He studied at the Academy of Arts, Architecture and Design in Prague, which was cancelled and Balcar had to move to the studio of František Muzika. He finished his studies in 1953 and at the end of his short life, he often travelled abroad, especially to the United States of America. He died in a car accident in Prague in 1968.

Work

Balcar's work began during high school when he worked with a dry needle technique. In the early 1950s, he began to incorporate typography into his works, which later became his typical style. The end of his work came after visits to foreign exhibitions, especially the World Exhibition in Brussels in 1958. He then turned to European trends and became one of the pioneers of the new wave of Czech abstract painting in the late 1950s. At the beginning of the 1960s, he created abstract paintings, graphics and drawings with typographic and handwritten signs as symbols of the unpredictability of everyday reality. The theme of a modern person participating in social life is an essential part of his work. In the following years Balcar reduces further to monochrome, dark images with pasty applied colour. In his prints, he reflected the impulses of American Pop Art and the new European figurations.

gollark: Surely vast conspiracies with access to resources beyond what we could dream of would *not* be going around genociding people in a ridiculously inefficient way.
gollark: Major population centres.
gollark: If some global conspiracy wanted to reduce the population lots they would be better off using nuclear weapons or something.
gollark: Especially given that the various vaccines use fairly different techologies.
gollark: I don't think it's *impossible* but it would probably be hard to do that.

References

    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.