Miroslav Štěpánek (artist) explained

Miroslav Štěpánek
Birth Date:2 December 1923
Birth Place:Libčice nad Vltavou
Death Date:28 November 2005 (aged 81)
Death Place:Prague
Nationality:Czech
Alma Mater:Theatre Faculty of the Academy of Performing Arts in Prague

Miroslav Štěpánek (2 December 1923 – 28 November 2005) was a Czech artist,[1] director,[2] screenwriter, set designer, illustrator, graphic designer,[3] animator, and sculptor. He was known for his contributions to Czech animated film and Czech, British and Japanese puppet film, cartoon animation and theatre during the 20th century.

Early life and education

Štěpánek was born in Libčice nad Vltavou. He graduated at the Grammar school of Antonín Dvořák in Kralupy nad Vltavou.

In 1950 he graduated from DAMU, department of theatre design in Prague. He studied also under the painter and graphic artist František Tichý. He studied at the Philosophical Faculty of Charles University in Prague, department of Art History, but did not graduate.

Career

Štěpánek worked for the Prague theatres, drawing and creating puppet animations in the 1950s. In 1962 he created a puppet animation for the short film Small but Mine (Malé ale moje), and special effects with stretchable puppets for the film 40 Granddads (Čtyřicet dědečků)

Throughout the 1970s Štěpánek worked at Krátký Film Praha studio, creating many film projects with Břetislav Pojar and Jiří Šalamoun.[4] His contribution to these films was uncredited until 2002, when he won the Andrej Stankovič Prize for best Czech film annual achievement for this work.

One of the better known works from this time is an animated series about two bears, Hey Mister, Let's Play!,[5] for which Štěpánek was the primary creative artist, working with animator Boris Masník.[6] His colleague Břetislav Pojar directed the first three episodes; later episodes were directed by Štěpánek with long distance telephone collaboration from Canada by Pojar, who returned in time to direct the final two episodes. Other projects in which he was involved are the politically charged What the Warm Didn't Know (Co žížala nevěděla) and Appletree Virgin (Jabloňová panna).

Štěpánek maintained a workshop under the Týn in Prague, while commuting to his work at the studio Bratři v triku for many years. He was the author and director of the short film The Shooting Gallery (C.K. Střelnice) in 1969, for the studio Krátký Film[7] [8] among others, it was awarded the Chicago Silver Hugo and was sold for American university distribution.

Štěpánek's meticulous working style at times slowed down production at the studio. In the mid-1970s, work on the serialized adaptation of Jiří Trnka's book The Garden (Zahrada), again with Pojar's direction and Štěpánek's puppets and art, stalled because of the complex set and technical equipment, and only five episodes were filmed, although the authors had contracts for additional episodes. Pojar and Štěpánek worked together on a film production of The Garden, which was left unfinished after changes were made by the studio administration. Between 1977 and 1979 the three made films about Dášeňka for the children's program Večerníček, on Czechoslovak Television.

After this Štěpánek ended his work with Pojar, partly over disagreement about the credits for the series Hey Mister, Let's Play!.

Štěpánek made animated films with other directors, including Václav Bedřich and Jiří Brdečka. The Czech art historian Jiří Šetlik in a review of Brdečka's film Revange (Pomsta, 1968) praised Štěpánek's art direction as well as the story, camerawork and editing.

With cartoonist Václav Bedřich, Štěpánek created an adaptation of the feature parodies made by director Oldřich Lipský. These included three films about the fate of Kamenáč Bill and the series Deadly Scent (Smrticí vůně) by Bedřich.

The Italian production company Corona Cinematografica Roma in collaboration with Krátký Film in 1973 co-produced a Czech folk fairy-tale. Štěpánek chose Erben's Jabloňová panna and in the workshops of the Krátký studio created Trnka-esque gothic-style puppets and scenery, to illustrate the climate of Czechoslovakia under the occupying forces.

Štěpánek worked for two years at the studio Krátký Film on the film project The Pied Piper, with more than sixty puppets, and many backgrounds. Although the German co-producer of the project TV 2000 Film- und Fernsehproduktions contracted for Štěpánek's work, the post-1968 management of the studio did not allow him to complete this project; the film was completed using other puppets by Jiří Barta.

Štěpánek subsequently mounted a few smaller exhibits, including one at the Mladá Fronta Gallery in 1985 and at the Castle in Roztoky u Prahy in 1988.

During the first half of the 1990s Štěpánek entered into a legal battle with Krátký Film concerning the films made jointly by Štěpánek and Pojar; among other things he requested a correction of the credit titles in the filmed copies of the serial about bears; in the original television cycle and in the later serial of the same name directed by Jana Hádková, Štěpánek's name was rarely mentioned. Subsequently, a version of Hey Mister, Let's Play! giving Štěpánek credit as creative artist and director was circulated in both Czech cinema and television channels. Eventually, after intervention by the organization for the protection of authors, the masters of the serial Pojďte pane budeme si hrát TV tapes were corrected.

In June 2005 Štěpánek received the "Andrej "Nikolaj" Stankovič Prize". for cinematography for his lifelong work and contribution to the Czech film industry. In 2005 the Summer Film School at Uherské Hradiště, Czech Republic, presented retrospectives showing films by Pojar and Štěpánek, and printed supplementary information about both authors in its catalogue.

Štěpánek died on 28 November 2005, in Prague. His films are still being shown both at festivals and in cinemas.[9] Film historian Zdena Škapová wrote, "In the sixties two names in Czech animated film are above all others – Miroslav Štěpánek and Jan Švankmajer."[10]

Filmography

As director

As designer

Awards (selected)

Notes and References

  1. Book: Jan Poš. Howard Beckerman. Jeffrey Wechsler. Krátký Film: The Art of Czechoslovak Animation. 1991. Jane Voorhees Zimmerli Art Museum, Rutgers. 16.
  2. Book: Czechoslovak Life. 1968. Orbis. 20.
  3. Book: Maurice Horn

    . Maurice Horn. Maurice Horn. Contemporary Graphic Artists: A Biographical, Bibliographical, and Critical Guide to Current Illustrators, Animators, Cartoonists, Designers, and Other Graphic Artists. 1986. Gale Research Co.. 201. 9780810321908.

  4. http://www.radio.cz/fr/rubrique/faits/le-cinema-danimation-tcheque-a-lhonneur-aussi-du-festival-de-la-rochelle "Le cinéma d’animation tchèque à l’honneur aussi du Festival de La Rochelle Guillaume Narguet"
  5. "MIROSLAV ŠTĚPÁNEK", Reflex, 2007, issue 33
  6. Book: Panorama of Czech Fine Arts. 1989. Published in the Panorama Publishing House by the Union of Czech Artists and the Czech Fine Arts Fund. 130.
  7. Book: Landers Film Reviews. 1972. Landers Associates. 32.
  8. Book: Film yearbook. 2006. NFA. 169.
  9. http://www.mzv.cz/phnompenh/en/culture_and_education/czech_animated_films_at_6th_cambodian.html "Czech animated films at 6th Cambodian International Film Festival (CIFF)"
  10. Catalogue of the exhibition Artists of the Animated Films (Výtvarníci animovaného filmu, Prague, Mánes, 1988
  11. http://www.radio.cz/fr/rubrique/faits/le-cinema-danimation-tcheque-a-lhonneur-aussi-du-festival-de-la-rochelle "Le cinéma d’animation tchèque à l’honneur aussi du Festival de La Rochelle Guillaume Narguet"