- Alén Diviš
Infobox Artist
bgcolour =
name = Alén Diviš
imagesize = 250px
caption = "Solitude"
birthdate =1900-04-26
location = Blato uPoděbrady ,Bohemia ,Austrian Empire
deathdate =1956-11-15
deathplace =Prague ,Czechoslovakia
nationality = Czechoslovak
field =Painting Alén Diviš (
26 April ,1900 –15 November ,1956 ) was a Czech painter known for hismelancholic art. Having spent much of his life abroad, often working in solitude, he remained rather unknown during his life but has had a postmortem revival in the art world.Early Life and career
Diviš was born in Blato u
Poděbrady but in 1911, his the family moved toPrague .cite book |last=Skálová |first= Vanda |coauthors= Tomáš Pospiszyl |title= Alén Diviš: 1900-1956 |publisher= Nadace Karla Svolinského a Vlasty Kubáétové |location=Praha|year= 2005 |isbn= 8023943049 ] It was there that Diviš first attended painting lessons briefly attended the College of Applied Arts. In his early 20s, Diviš became intensely focused on art, particularly withcubism . In the summer of 1926, he moved toParis to devote himself fully to his art. In Paris, he attended lectures byFrantišek Kupka and explored cubism,expressionism , andclassicism . He made new friends in the French artistic community and maintained friendships with other Czechs there, such as composerBohuslav Martinů . He began to travel further abroad, making trips toSpain ,South Africa andthe Netherlands . The first exhibition of his work took place in 1932 at Van Leer gallery.Imprisonment
In 1939, in reaction to the
German occupation of Czechoslovakia , Diviš became increasingly political and, with otherexpatriate s, formed the House of Czechoslovak Culture.cite news
last = Mikule
first = Martin
title = The melancholic genius of Alen Divis
publisher = Radio Praha
date = 18-02-2005
url = http://www.radio.cz/en/article/63577
accessdate = 2008-06-11] Upon France's entry into theSecond World War , Diviš and other members of the organization were arrested and charged withespionage . The reason for the arrests is unclear; perhaps their "sympathies for communism" caused suspicion, or it may have been their uncommonly celebratory reaction to the outbreak of war (which they hoped would lead to the liberation of Czechoslovakia). Whatever the reason, Diviš would spend the next six months inLa Santé Prison , one of France's toughest. The sombre mood and the inscriptions and graffiti on the cell walls would inspire his later artistic vision. The charges of espionage were dropped, but Diviš would spend another year and a half in concentration andinternment camps in France,Morocco , andMartinique before his eventual release.New York
In the early 1940s, Diviš finally found asylum in New York where he continued his work until after the war. His art focused primarily on his time in prison, and used images of cell wall graffiti, dreams and dark hallucinations that came with isolation - a style which would later be termed "Art Brut" or
Outsider Art . He worked on parallel sets of painting, and also landscapes of South Africa, where he had travelled before the war. While in the Unite States, Diviš would established links with the local Czech community and was reunited with his friend Martinů. Although his worked gained some attention in New York, he was unable to arrange an exhibition of his work.Return to Czechoslovakia
In 1947, after the end of the Second War and the liberation of
Czechoslovakia , Diviš returned to his native country, more than two decades after he had first left for Paris. Upon his return, he achieved a brief period of success. His written memoirs of Santé were published in a weekly paper, and in February 1948, his recent work was exhibited in Prague. The same month, however, brought the Communist coup d'état which would marginalize artists of his type out of work. He spent the rest of the decade producing illustrations forKarel Jaromír Erben 's mid-19th century collection of ballads "Kytice ", but only "Svatební košile" (Wedding Shirt) was published (in 1952). He also produced a series of illustrations for short stories byEdgar Allan Poe .In the 1950s, under the harsh conditions of communism in Czechoslovakia, Diviš gave up seeking exposure for his work and focused on spiritual images, such as Christ's crucifixion and
bible stories , unlikely to be published By the time of his death, he and his art were almost entirely forgotten. Only his friends, such assculptor Hedvika Zaorálková , remembered him and preserved his work, which was rediscovered in the 1980s.References
Further reading
*Skálová, Vanda: "Alén Diviš (1900-1956)". Nadace Karla Svolinského a Vlasty Kubátové 2005. ISBN 80-239-4304-9
External links
* [http://www.radio.cz/en/article/63577 Biographical Article on Divis]
* [http://abart.artarchiv.cz/osoby.php?IDosoby=2338 Alén Diviš in the IS abART]
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