Název ISBN Sklad
Václav Radimský 9788087164815 0
Author Publisher Language Pages Published Width Height
Naděžda Blažíčková-Horová Arbor vitae CZ, FR 292 2011 25 cm 29 cm
Váha
1.9kg
900 Kč incl. VAT
Not in stock

In his time, Václav Radimský (1867–1946) was one of the distinctive and interesting personalities associated with Czech and French landscape painting. He was the first Czech painter in France influenced by Impressionism and he was the first who introduced this movement to the Czech milieu. We can divide Radimský’s artwork into two thematic and chronological periods....

In his time, Václav Radimský (1867–1946) was one of the distinctive and interesting personalities associated with Czech and French landscape painting. He was the first Czech painter in France influenced by Impressionism and he was the first who introduced this movement to the Czech milieu. We can divide Radimský’s artwork into two thematic and chronological periods. The first occurs from 1890–1918 approximately when he lived in Giverny near Vernon and the river Seine and the surrounding landscape became his permanent inspiration. At the time he was friends with Paul Cézanne and worked together with Claude Monet, among others. The second period is defined by Radimský’s return to Bohemia after the end of the First World War and lasts until his death. During this period he focused primarily on depicting the Elbe River and the landscape around Kolín.


This is the first monograph of the artist whose work has lately come to be highly appraised and it finally pays back the debt that the art historical record has long owed to the painter. In addition to essays by the main author Naděžda Blažíčková-Horová, the book also contains a study by Markéta Theinhardtová featuring the artist’s work in relation to modern French art. It also contains a list of Radimský’s paintings with almost five hundred reproductions in colour and has a detailed summary in French and English.

Author Naděžda Blažíčková-Horová
Publisher Arbor vitae
Language CZ, FR
Pages 292
Published 2011
Width 25 cm
Height 29 cm