Past exhibitions

Das Leben ist ein Kampfspiel Jan Wölfchen Vlček
22. 11. 2024 – 24. 1. 2025
After Time Polina Davydenko
10. 9. – 31. 10. 2024
What's Inside the World, Always Present, and Matter (Possibility Thereof)

That Dreams of Awakening
Tereza Jobová, Ruta Putramentaite
17. 5. – 5. 7. 2024
Veränderte Vergangenheit Karen Koltermann
15. 3. – 30. 4. 2024
Dairy protest Denisa Langrová
23. 9. – 30. 11. 2023
Partial drawing of a ring Comunite Fresca, Inge Kosková, Eva Brodská, Jaroslav J. Alt, Tomáš Džadoň, Zuzana Janečková, Lucie Králíková, Michaela Casková, Kryštof Netolický a Jahou Baul
20. 4. – 31. 7. 2023
In its own field Jakub Tajovský
10. 2. – 14. 4. 2023
Space between us Karíma Al-Mukhtarová and Nicole Wendel /D/
17. 11. 2022 – 20. 1. 2023
HERBARIUM Adam Vačkář
8. 9. – 28. 10. 2022
WIRKEN IM GLEICHEN Susanne Schär a Peter Spillmann /CH/
14. 4. – 31. 5. 2022
RAPTILE BRAIN Stanislav Karoli, Kateřina Nováková
27. 1. – 27. 3. 2022
TORTURING THE CATS Matej Chrenka, Elsa Rauerová, Matěj Skalický, Adam Kencki
16. 11. – 16. 12. 2021
MARIA IN PINK Tanja Hemm /D/
21. 8. – 30. 9. 2021
DISPOSITIONS Ondřej Filípek, Stella Geppert /D/
17. 7. – 18. 8. 2021
ACROSS Patrik Pelikán
1. 3. – 31. 5. 2021
ELVES LEAVING THE FOREST András Cséfalvay
22. 12. 2020 – 22. 1. 2021
CONTINUAL TRANSITIONS Daniel Hanzlík
20. 11. 2020 – 22. 1. 2021
HIDDEN IN PLAIN SIGHT Jiří Žák
14. 8. – 24. 9. 2020
MORPHOLOGY Eliáš Dolejší – Marie Jarošincová – Roswitha Maul – Petra Skořepová – Tomáš Voves
25. 5. – 25. 7. 2020
I KNOW Pavel Humhal
30. 1. – 31. 3. 2020
FIGURAE Max Leiß
7. 11. – 28. 12. 2019
Matěj Lipavský, Václav Litvan, Vojtěch Skácel
18. 9. – 25. 10. 2019
RAUSCHEN | EFFERVESCENCE Christine Camenisch | Johannes Vetsch /CH/
27. 5. – 27. 7. 2019
PLACE OF APPROXIMATION, SPACE OF DISCONNECTION Daniela Krajčová, Peter Jánošík /SK/
4. 4. – 15. 5. 2019
DUST ON A SHELF Gabor Kristóf /HU/
14. 2. – 21. 3. 2019
EYES / AUGEN Fabian Ginsberg, Stefan Hayn /D/
8. 11. – 20. 12. 2018
THE FREELANCE DJ Sláva Sobotovičová /SK/, David Fesl /CZ/
21. 9. – 25. 10. 2018
LIQUID MOTHER LOVE Ester Geislerová /CZ/, Milan Mazúr /SK/
28. 5. – 27. 7. 2018
THERE ARE MORE THINGS Jaro Varga, Dorota Kenderová /SK/
12. 4. – 18. 5. 2018
NATURALISM Vladimír Véla, Jaromír Šimkůj
18. 1. – 22. 2. 2018
WILD MEADOWS Mark Ther
9. 11. – 20. 12. 2017
REKONSTRUKCE PRAVDY Philipp Gasser /CH/
21. 9. – 29. 10. 2017
'PATADATA1 /CZ, DE, UK/ Václav Girsa, Franziska Hufnagel, Andrea Lédlová, Brian Reffin Smith, Lukas Troberg
19. 5. – 19. 7. 2017
BLIND SPOTS David Možný
11. 4. – 11. 5. 2017
CNS Šárka Koudelová, Ondřej Basjuk
2. 3. – 31. 3. 2017
PARTICIP č. 197 Tomáš Vaněk
15. 12. 2016 – 27. 1. 2017
GROUND Silvia Klara Breitwieser /D/
3. 11. – 2. 12. 2016
NEW HORIZONS II. András Cséfalvay /SK/
15. 9. – 16. 10. 2016
DOOM Kryštof Kaplan
20. 5. – 30. 6. 2016
I-SANCTUARY Irina Birger /NL/
7. 4. – 14. 5. 2016
ČUJKI Lenka Černotová
18. 2. – 18. 3. 2016
FURTHER AND HIGHER Daniel Vlček
25. 11. – 10. 12. 2015
UVOLNĚNÝ POHYB Ben Brix /D/
22. 10. – 20. 11. 2015
PER MAN ENT FÓR ENT PER FOR MAN'S Per man ent fór ent per for man`s
15. 8. – 25. 9. 2015
Games in the globe Adéla Součková, Matěj Smetana
25. 6. – 31. 7. 2015
PALLIATIVE Iede Reckman /NL/
5. 5. – 5. 5. 2015
TOO MUCH, TOO SOON Katarína Hládeková, Ondřej Homola
19. 3. – 24. 4. 2015
TERRIBLE GRAPES AND BAD WINE Jiří Kovanda, Markéta Othová
5. 2. – 11. 3. 2015
ANAGRAMM Matthias Hesselbacher /D/
13. 11. – 19. 12. 2014
RAHMEN UND RAHMENBESCHRÄNKUNGEN Eva Koťátková /CZ/, Josef Hofer /AT/
18. 9. – 31. 10. 2014
MARSEILLE Pierre-Gilles Chaussonnet /F/
1. 9. – 10. 10. 2014
IF BEAUTY KILLS Blanka Jakubčíková
10. 7. – 15. 8. 2014
INTERTWINED Antoinette Nausikaa /NL/
14. 3. – 30. 4. 2014
CLASH Pavel Hošek
13. 2. – 12. 3. 2014
Still Life Petr Willert
3. 12. – 20. 12. 2013
WHATEVER Jan Šerých
17. 9. – 18. 10. 2013
SELF PORTRAITS Patricie Fexová
9. 7. – 8. 8. 2013
CONVERTER Carola Ernst /D/
16. 5. – 28. 6. 2013
FRAGMENTS AND EVENTS Zbyněk Sedlecký
14. 3. – 2. 5. 2013
SOMETHING Jan Ambrůz
18. 1. – 28. 2. 2013
I'M TELLING YOU IT'S TRUE, BUT Václav Girsa
18. 10. 2012 – 31. 1. 2013
MODUS OPERANDI Petr Bařinka, Pavel Strnad
23. 7. – 31. 8. 2012
Zlín#32 Petr Stanický
22. 5. – 22. 5. 2012
TERMOVISION Matej Fabian /SK/
2. 2. – 21. 3. 2012
Portfolio 2 Jiří Petrbok
14. 12. 2011 – 31. 1. 2012
MÍSTNÍ MUZEUM Dominik Lang
8. 11. – 2. 12. 2011
MEDITATION Jaroslav Čevora
1. 9. – 14. 10. 2011
BARVY COLOURS FARBEN COLORI Lenka Vítková, Jiří Valoch
12. 7. – 28. 8. 2011
POZITIVY Zbigniew Libera /PL/
3. 5. – 3. 7. 2011
SPÍŠ TIŠE Zdeněk Gajdoš
23. 2. – 8. 4. 2011
NENÍ NÁVRATU Pavel Forman
25. 12. 2010 – 21. 1. 2011
SVĚT BEZ MÍSTA Habima Fuchs, Erwin Kneihsl, Markus Selg /D/
9. 9. – 22. 10. 2010
ANDREW´S HONEYMOON IN INDIA / ANDREWOVA SVATEBNÍ CESTA V INDII Andrew Gilbert /GB/
6. 5. – 4. 6. 2010
KW "FAMILY" Igor Korpaczewski
25. 3. – 30. 4. 2010
ROZHOVOR PŘES STĚNU Eva Koťátková
11. 2. – 19. 3. 2010
HLAVYVHLAVĚ Radim Hanke
10. 12. 2009 – 29. 1. 2010
MASKER1 Jakub Matuška
5. 11. – 4. 12. 2009
LABYRINTY Petr Kunčík
30. 9. – 30. 10. 2009
BEZČASIE Juliana Mrvová /SK/
4. 6. – 10. 7. 2009
PARTICIP 91 Tomáš Vaněk
23. 4. – 30. 5. 2009
PEPITO Tereza Velíková
26. 3. – 18. 4. 2009
MANDARINKY Jiří Kovanda
5. 2. – 20. 3. 2009
LESKYMOIDY Milan Houser
11. 12. 2008 – 31. 1. 2009
AIRSTRIKES Lubomír Jarcovják
6. 11. – 6. 12. 2008
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Past exhibition

FRAGMENTS AND EVENTS

Zbyněk Sedlecký
14. 3. – 2. 5. 2013
  • Curator of the exhibition: Martin Fišr

Exhibition annotation

Fragments and events

Zbyněk Sedlecký (1976) is one of the successful graduates of the Studio of Painting I at the Academy of Fine Arts in Prague, where Jiří Sopko and Igor Korpaczewski work.  There is no point in discussing which of these painter-teachers is closer to his work, nor which of his classmates his paintings are more similar to. Even by the standards of the most important art college in our country, there are quite a lot of really outstanding personalities of our painting who passed through this studio, and Sedlecký is certainly not lost among them. However, he already has a firm place within the Czech art scene. 
Zbyněk Sedlecký is devoted only to painting. In his work, there are no escapes to other media. The most traditional is enough for him to express himself. Even within painting, he does not engage in any boundless experimentation. On the other hand, despite his gradually, one could say even cautiously, evolving and usually very recognizable handwriting, it does not seem that he has fallen into a mannerism or that he is only endlessly rubbing and alienating it. He is not one of those painters for whom a clear handwriting is an important mark and often the culmination of their efforts. 
Sedlecký is a very skilled painter. It doesn't matter whether we are looking at paintings in a sketchbook or three-meter canvases, his paintings are accompanied by lightness (as the opposite of tiredness) not as a synonym of ease. The painter's quick shorthand and expression, controlled not only by painter's tape, is complemented by a restrained muted colour palette. On the one hand, the author does not abandon his equal interest in painting as such and the subject on the other. Pure abstraction is practically absent in his work.   
The theme of Sedlecky's paintings, in fact his other hallmark, is architecture, at least in recent years. Perhaps a more accurate term would be urban landscape. It is always about existing buildings or entire spaces of large cities. The artist makes no secret of the fact that he uses photographs taken directly by him as a basis.  
As far as architecture is concerned, it doesn't really matter where it comes from. In our country, in Europe and basically all over the urbanized world, of course not only in the richer northern hemisphere, there is a huge number of similar buildings, urban complexes, cityscapes and undoubtedly quite a few places with a similarly dehumanized atmosphere. But the theme of the paintings is not globalisation. Although the receding modernity and its masculine universality has unified the character of most cities. Sedlecký goes even further in this unification and successfully strips the places of most of their local contexts, their connections with a region, a country, a continent. It also supports the confusion by not specializing even more specifically on a certain type of building - neither generous skyscrapers nor monotonous prefabricated buildings from Czech housing estates predominate. The author deliberately does not give us easy clues to the location. Everyone can occasionally come across places, corners that, even in an ordinary Western European city, will remind them of the atmosphere of the Palace of Culture in Prague or, for example, a Sofia housing estate. In Zbyněk Sedlecky's paintings we are all as little at home as in the concrete jungles of administrative or commercial centres soon after the last office has closed. Looking at the paintings, we experience déjà vu of walking around foreign cities, especially the parts of them that lie off the tourist radar. 
Monolithic buildings made of concrete, their strict geometric grid and the artist's painterly, rather expressive handwriting are symbiotically complementary in the paintings. The artist's need for painterliness is given clear boundaries. In the same way, the paintings themselves are given a solid framework by the presence of architecture. Sedlecky's paintings are not only about architecture. The artist works like an archaeologist of modernity, who uncovers only the dusty, not yet completely obscured layers. 
His urban landscapes are accompanied by an ambiguous and often unsettling atmosphere. This is also the case with In Front Of, a series exhibited at the Kabinet T. gallery since the end of last year. The vague plot takes place in front of a somewhat familiar building. It could just as easily be a larger bank as a gallery. We have the opportunity to compare five different perspectives. Some of them seem to differ by mere seconds. 
In the foreground we are interested in a figure with a backpack.  The shots are probably taken in a hurry and we don't know if we are more interested in the architecture or just the backpack carriers. As the number of views of the same scene increases, our view of the anonymous observer in particular changes. From the ordinary tourist who experiences his holiday at home looking at photos, to the voyeur, to the professional stalker. The monumental formats give the scenes a somewhat oppressive subtext. It's as if it's the eye of an anonymous Big Brother.

The second part of the exhibition, consisting of a free cycle of paintings of sculptures in public space (2011-2012), also remains in the city. Once again, the theme of the archaeology of modernity is played out here, the uncovering of the ultimate success and at the same time the surrender of the artistic avant-gardes of the twentieth century. This is not Tatlin's Tower of the Third International, but rather decor in the extreme. As are the geometric patterns convincingly evoking constructivism on mugs and other tableware. If the paintings from this series lack a certain urgency of content of the five In Front Of, we can be all the more carried away here by pure painting. It is in the secondary treatment of the artifacts that cultivate the open spaces near many a concrete monolith that the artist probably comes closest to abstract art. 

Martin Fišr