Milan Knížák | |
Birth Date: | 1940 4, df=yes |
Birth Place: | Plzeň, Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia |
Nationality: | Czech |
Field: | Performances, sculpture, visual art, aesthetics, art philosophy |
Training: | Academy of Fine Arts, Prague |
Awards: | Recipient of the Medal of Merit Czech Republic – 28 October 2010 |
Milan Knížák (in Czech ˈmɪlan ˈkɲiːʒaːk/; born 19 April 1940) is a Czech performance artist,[1] sculptor, noise musician,[2] installation artist, political dissident, graphic artist, art theorist and pedagogue of art associated with Fluxus.[3]
Milan Knizak is the son of the painter, musician and teacher of mathematics[4] Karel Knížák from Doubravka u Plzně, nowadays part of the town Plzeň, and Julia Knížáková. The parents taught in Jarov (1932–1934)[5] and later in Blovice close to Pilsen. Milan Knížák was born in Plzeň on 19 April 1940. In 1945,[6] after the expulsion of Germans from Czechoslovakia[7] the family moved to the Mariánské Lázně, a spa town in the former Sudetenland, close to the German border. There, his father played violin in a spa orchestra and Milan attended primary school, where he was interested in music and literature. He also took piano, trumpet and guitar lessons.
Knížák started painting at fourteen in Mariánské Lázně where his first exhibition was held in 1958.[8] He attended secondary/high-school (Gymnasium in Planá u Mariánských Lázní) and graduated in 1957.[9] On several occasions young Knížák visited the studio of the painter Vladimír Modrý (1907–1976). Later Knížák wrote in his diary[10] about the movie Fantastic Voyage and how its fantastic scenes reminded him of the paintings of Modrý.[11] During the period of mid-1957 to 1958 he attended the Pedagogical University in Prague, majoring in art education and Russian language. In 1958 he dropped out and became an assistant worker at Prague's exhibition grounds. He later passed the exams at the Academy of Fine Arts in Prague, but soon abandoned his studies there. He then studied mathematical analysis at the Faculty of Mathematics and Physics, Charles University for one year.
At the beginning of the 1960s, he created his first activity – happenings, ceremonies, installations and various environments on the busy or calm streets or in courtyards of Prague.
Together with his friends he founded a group of contemporary art called Actual Art. Sometime around 1966 the word "art" was dropped from the name and group was called poor AKTUAL. Already known and also documented are their actions in the part of old Prague called New World, such as Demonstration of One (1964). Some of AKTUAL's songs were remastered by unofficial musical group The Plastic People of the Universe, which members became, somewhat against their will, dissidents during political process in the autumn of the year 1976.
Knížák was a member of Fluxus, an international (anti-)artistic community of music, actions, poetry, objects and events. Knížák was director of Fluxus East from the year 1965. He is known for organising and performing the first happenings and noise music concerts in Czechoslovakia: e.g. A Walk around Novy Svět (The part of old Prague called New World) and the Demonstration for Oneself (both 1964). Later he had contacts with the first contact mediated Czech philosopher Jindřich Chalupecký. Knížák was promoted to Director Fluxus East by director George Maciunas about 1965. In the countries of former Eastern Bloc there were managed these activities: The Fluxus Festivals in Vilnius (1966), Prague (1966), Budapest (1969), and Poznań (1977). Knížák was also visited by American beatnik poet Allen Ginsberg and conceptual art artist Joseph Kosuth.
George Maciunas invited Knížák to the United States in 1965 and he participated in Fluxus events there. He realized his Lying Ceremony in New Brunswick and the Difficult Ceremony in New York City. Maciunas prepared the publication of Knížák's Collected Works as a Fluxus Edition.
In October 1966, Knížák organised the first Fluxus concert in Czechoslovakia in Prague in which he appeared together with Ben Vautier, Jeff Berner, Alison Knowles, Serge Oldenbourg and Dick Higgins.
Knížák returned to Czechoslovakia in 1970. His works were exhibited in the galleries in the East bloc, f.e. Kraków in Poland, Budapest in Hungary, but also in capitalistic Austria. In 1979 he received a fellowship from the DAAD to West Berlin, where he meet artist Wolf Vostell and Czech poet in emigration Jiří Kolář. In West Berlin he worked as a designer on an avant-garde film and created the automobile cycle of collages for Volkswagen.
During the communist era Knížák was under police surveillance and was called an Enemy of the State. He was arrested during an event with the music band The Plastic People of the Universe.
In 1998 Knížák unsuccessfully ran for the Senate as an independent, supported by the ODS/. In 2010 he was awarded the Medal of Merit by the Czech Republic.[12] Knížák was director of the Czech National Gallery in Prague between 1999 and 2011.
Milan Knížák is a professor of intermedia at the Academy of Fine Arts in Prague since 1990.[13] His pupils have included Jana Šindelová.[14]