Alena Matejka Explained

Alena Matejka (also Alena Matějková; born 26 January 1966) is a Czech sculptor and glass designer. She also works with other materials, often in combination.

Education

Matejka was born in Jindřichův Hradec; she studied at the Secondary School of Glassmaking in Kamenický Šenov from 1981 until 1985. She was a student of Professor Vladimir Kopecky at the Academy of Arts, Architecture and Design in Prague (AAAD) between 1989 and 1997. In 1995 she studied for two months at the Glasgow School of Art, in the Ceramic Department. From 2000 to 2005 she studied for a PhD, again at the AAAD.[1] [2]

Work

Matejka creates small and large sculptures from stone, marble, glass and ice. She creates small sculptures which float on water, but also builds huge installations such as the one in the underground Baroque casemates in Vyšehrad. Gorlice is a major installation in the underground hall in the old castle of Vyšehrad, consisting of a central colonnade of stone, with multiple stops, each with a different sculpture symbolising the choices one faces in life.

While in Scotland in 1995, she developed an interest in studying ancient tombs and their ornamentation, and also visited old settlements. Later, she made a series of kettles from glass. This has fragments from her journey in Scotland, inspired by the landscape, the people, and the old Scottish culture. The kettles were given chassis, wheels and fictional royal names.

In 2007, she created a bath tub made out of a single block of red granite from Sweden, entitled I sink, therefore I am, a pun on René Descartes' statement, I think, therefore I am. On the outside of the tub is a longer quote by Descartes.[3]

She received first prize in international competitions in both Murano, Italy (1996) and Ebeltoft, Denmark (1997) for her sculptures in stone and glass.[4]

Projects

She has been involved in several projects, often in collaboration with her husband Lars Widenfalk, a sculptor who works mainly with stone; usually marble and granite, but also with other materials such as glass.

Artlantis is one of these projects, themed around the myth of Atlantis, and consisting of eight glass water containers. In four of these containers Matejka placed four granite houses, of varying sizes and architectural styles. Over the houses, hanging in the water, are small sculptures shaped like flowers, boats, doll heads and three hundred glass beads. These are all made of a special glass that reflects light in a distinctive way. Matejka's contribution was more the dreamy, fantasies and thoughts. Lars Widenfalk chose a more concrete or archaeological approach, with its granite sculptures of humans with live fish in the water containers.[5]

Bed of Roses is made of ice and roses under the stay in Luleå Winter Biennial. A large "bed" (ice block) in transparent ice is placed inside a housing. Several red roses are frozen inside the bed. The ice is the symbol of eternity, while roses symbolise life and love.[6]

Another project was Magic Carpet, consisting of large flying carpets made of glass. The two heaviest glass carpets weigh 300 kg each.[7] [8]

Publications

Catalogue and exhibition

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://glassresearch.sunderland.ac.uk/research/artists-in-residence/alenamatejkova/ Sylva Petrova, Research Professor and Director of Institute for International Research in Glass asks Alena 10 questions.
  2. Web site: Alena Matejka. Art Residence Prague. 5 April 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170406201016/http://www.artresidenceprague.com/new/alena-matejka/#. 2017-04-06. dead.
  3. Web site: Alena Matějka Sculptures . Artist Alena Matějka . 24 May 2021 . en.
  4. Dwinger, Jonna: Varieret ung glaskunst, Dansk kunsthåndværker blandt prismodtagerne ved Young Glass 97, Politikken 8 June 1997, Danmark
  5. http://www.matejkova.com/projects/artlantis/index.php Artlantis Project – www.matejkova.com
  6. http://www.matejkova.com/projects/ice/index.php Project Bed of Roses – www.matejkova.com
  7. http://www.matejkova.com/sculptures/glass/carpets/index.php Magic Carpet – www.matejkova.com
  8. Record as Artist Produces World's Largest Kiln-formed Glass Piece, The Northern Echo 7 February 2004, Sunderland, UK, 9