Jan Mikulka
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Jan Mikulka (born 4 April 1980) is a Czech painter. He is known for his still-life painting and figurative and portrait work. In 2011 he won the Visitors's Choice ''BP Portrait Award'' in the
National Portrait Gallery National Portrait Gallery may refer to: *National Portrait Gallery (Australia), in Canberra *National Portrait Gallery (Sweden), in Mariefred *National Portrait Gallery (United States), in Washington, D.C. *National Portrait Gallery, London, with s ...
competition. He has twice succeeded in the international competition announced by the Royal Society of Portrait Painters in London, a showcase of contemporary portraiture. In 2013, he won the first prize for a self-portrait (''SELF Portrait Prize'', 2013), and in 2016 ''The Changing Faces Prize'', also awarded by the Royal Society of Portrait Painters.


Life

Mikulka was born on 4 April 1980 in Prague. During his second year of high school, he took up ceramics and attended afternoon figure drawing classes at the School of Arts and Crafts, taught by sculptor Vojtěch Adamec. He decided not to continue his studies at the high school and passed the entrance examination for the subject of woodcarving and wood shaping at the Higher Vocational School of Arts and Crafts in Prague (1996-2000). From there, he was admitted to the
Academy of Fine Arts in Prague The Academy of Fine Arts, Prague ( cs, Akademie výtvarných umění v Praze; AVU) is an art college in Prague, Czech Republic. Founded in 1799, it is the oldest art college in the country. The school offers twelve master's degree programs and one ...
in 2000, to the Studio of Classical Painting Techniques of Prof. Zdeněk Beran at the
Academy of Fine Arts in Prague The Academy of Fine Arts, Prague ( cs, Akademie výtvarných umění v Praze; AVU) is an art college in Prague, Czech Republic. Founded in 1799, it is the oldest art college in the country. The school offers twelve master's degree programs and one ...
, from which he graduated in 2006. As a student at the Academy, he presented his works at the ''Portrait 2000'' exhibition in Klatovy and at the ''International Biennial of Contemporary Art'' in Prague (2004, 2005). Since 2012 he has been exhibiting independently. After graduation, he devoted himself to portraiture and computer graphics. In 2011, he was selected from 2,500 entries for an international competition in London and won the ''BP Portrait Award'', and in 2013 he was the first recipient of the newly announced ''SELF Prize'' for Self-Portraiture, awarded by The Royal Society of Portrait Painters in London and associated with a £20,000 reward. He won in a competition of 946 works by 635 painters from many countries.Mikulka intended to paint a large realistic portrait, but he could not find a suitable model, so he decided to paint himself. ''"Mikulka's Self Portrait amazes with its technical perfection and power of expression. "You feel that you are standing in front of the artist, watching him concentrate on his likeness – his eyes hooded yet determined, his lips pressed together through concentration.'' (Charlotte Mullins, editor of Art Quarterly) In 2015, he received an award at the ''Figurativas'' exhibition at the ''Museo Europeo de Arte Moderno'' in Barcelona. In 2016 he received ''The Changing Faces Foundation'' award at the Royal Society of Portrait Painters annual exhibition in London for his painting ''In the Park''. In 2019, he was again among the five prize-winning painters in the ''Figurativas'' competition (10th International Painting and Sculpture Competition of the Arts and Artists Foundation) in Barcelona for his portrait ''Sebastian''. His paintings are represented in the collection of the National Gallery in Prague, ''The Changing Faces Foundation'', ''Museo Europeo de Arte Moderno'' and in private collections. He is represented by the Cermak Eisenkraft Gallery in Prague. Mikulka has achieved acclaim in international competitions and is one of the few Czech painters to receive commissions from high-ranking customers from Great Britain to the Gulf. His paintings are laborious and take several months to complete, which is why they rarely appear on the open market..


Work


Portraits and figurative painting

Jan Mikulka has been working in portraiture since his high school studies and first exhibited before his admission to the Academy in 2000. Prof.
Zdeněk Beran Zdeněk Beran' (7 March 1937 – 7 November 2014) was a Czech painter, author of objects and installations, professor and vice-rector of Academy of Fine Arts, Prague. Life Zdeněk Beran attended the Václav Hollar Art School in Prague Vinohra ...
's studio was characterized by a perfect mastery of the technique of oil glaze painting and, simultaneously, by competitiveness. Mikulka consciously follows the heritage of classical painting from the Renaissance to 19th century academic painting, but his realistic portraits are very contemporary. In doing so, he distances himself from photorealistic paintings with a smooth finish and from static and nondescript contentless images. He does not use the high resolution typical of magazine photography and does not put emphasis on
illusionistic painting Illusionism in art history means either the artistic tradition in which artists create a work of art that appears to share the physical space with the viewer"Illusionism," ''Grove Art Online''. Oxford University Press, ccessed 17 March 2008 or ...
. The
mimesis Mimesis (; grc, μίμησις, ''mīmēsis'') is a term used in literary criticism and philosophy that carries a wide range of meanings, including ''imitatio'', imitation, nonsensuous similarity, receptivity, representation, mimicry, the act ...
of his painting does not mean a copy or exact imitation of an existing subject, but an attempt to approach the hidden essence of the subject, which includes the factor of time. According to the gallerist Pavel Feigl - ''"Mikulka can express the psychology of man, he can capture man in his complexity, as a human being charged with feelings and spiritual vibration"''. Portrait painting also carries the inevitable presence of the artist as a "mirror of reality." This sense of self-reflexive gaze deepens the painter's intuitive sense of self and of the perception of the model, creating their interdependence. This is to a large extent also true for one's own reflection in the mirror when painting a self-portrait (''Self-Portrait'', 2013). If the photographic portrait is a capture of an immediate moment, the painterly portrait offers a unique continuity of perceptual self-absorption during the creative process. Mark Gisbourne appreciates, that ''"unlike most contemporary self-portraiture, Mikulka's work does not seek to stylize or evoke symbolic associations, idealization, or psychological probing, but rather evokes a sense of distant and impenetrable introspection that provokes uncertainty in the viewer"''.Mark Gisbourne, 2019, s. 45 Mikulka's commissioned portraits usually depict people from a frontal perspective. If a natural setting is used in the background, it is stripped of unnecessary descriptiveness and serves only to emphasize the subject's presence. The muted
penumbra The umbra, penumbra and antumbra are three distinct parts of a shadow, created by any light source after impinging on an opaque object. Assuming no diffraction, for a collimated beam (such as a point source) of light, only the umbra is cast. Th ...
effect of the background also works to model the skin complexion (''Sebastian'', 2015, ''In the Park'', 2015). In the more formal official portraits, his painting is to some extent more akin to a photographic quality, although even here presented as a subjective interpretation of reality. Jan Mikulka, Jacob, 2011.jpg, Jan Mikulka, ''Jacob'', 2011 Jan Mikulka, Sebastian, 2015.jpg, Jan Mikulka, ''Sebastian'', 2015 Jan Mikulka, In the Park, 2015.jpg, Jan Mikulka, ''In the Park'', 2015 Jan Mikulka, Antonia and Lavinia, oil on canvas, 90 x 120 cm, 2017.jpg, Jan Mikulka, ''Antonia and Lavinia'', 2017 Mikulka's realistically rendered portraits or the dressed women in the bathtub (''In the Bathtub'', 2013) sometimes appear cold and uninvolved. His nudes also refer more to restrained and idealising paintings such as Velásquez's ''Venus with a Mirror'' or
Cabanel Alexandre Cabanel (; 28 September 1823 – 23 January 1889) was a French painter. He painted historical, classical and religious subjects in the academic style. He was also well known as a portrait painter. According to ''Diccionario Encicloped ...
's eroticism-free ''Birth of Venus''. Mikulka's nudes remain faithful to the tradition of depicting the naked female body as an ideal of beauty, but they do not make eye contact with the viewer, evoking an intimate vulnerability and connotations that are more literary. The formally perfect depiction of shallow flowing water brings a dynamic element to the image. His ''Blue Nude'' (2017), depicting the female body as seen from beneath the water level, subverts the usual conventions and adds tangibility and physical immediacy to the female figure. Jan Mikulka, Bathtub, 2013.jpg, Jan Mikulka, ''In the Bathtub'', 2013 Jan Mikulka, Nude in a Stream, 2016.jpg, Jan Mikulka, ''Nude in a Stream I'', 2016 Jan Mikulka, Nude in a Stream 2, 2017.jpg, Jan Mikulka, ''Nude in a Stream II'', 2017 In his post-graduation years, Mikulka experimented with painting on the edge of abstraction, attempting to capture the movement and swirling of water and the optical distortion of the reflection of the surroundings on the restless surface (''Water'', 2008-2011). His work, which can be classified in the broader category of genre scenes, is characterized by a variety of subject matter and art. In 2011-2013, he used a smoke optical effect, a foggy atmosphere (''Forest Scenery'', 2012) and blurring of the scene. Whether it was then an influence of Gerhard Richter´s painting or an attempt to break free from the binding canon of
realist painting Realism in the arts is generally the attempt to represent subject matter truthfully, without artificiality and avoiding speculative and supernatural elements. The term is often used interchangeably with naturalism, although these terms are ...
is not relevant. Unusual in its subject matter, harmonious vibrancy of colour, and the process of painting itself, is ''The Game'' from 2012, which depicts out-of-focus figures engaged in an unspecified outdoor game. Similarly, some scenes from domestic life (''Pairs'', 2013) or situations with an obvious existential subtext (''Jacob 4'', 2012) are difficult to classify.


Still lifes

Mikulka's
still life A still life (plural: still lifes) is a work of art depicting mostly wikt:inanimate, inanimate subject matter, typically commonplace objects which are either natural (food, flowers, dead animals, plants, rocks, shells, etc.) or artificiality, m ...
s are partly assembled from common everyday objects, sometimes with paradoxical details referring to the contemporary desacralized consumerist way of life. He plays with the viewer's perception of reality and the illusion of space. His ''Still Life with Apples'', rendered in an old-master manner of painting, in which tension is created by the shriveled fruit and the supermarket bag, is also a metaphor for decay. Mikulka's ''Still Life with Tangerines'' (2016) plays with the illusion of an inverted reflection on a glass support. In ''Still Life with Pomegranates'' (2017-2018), Mikulka uses purely painterly means to create a complex visual matrix of relationships between the depicted objects, linking them in an imaginary or intuitively understood space in which more distant objects appear out of focus, bordering on abstraction. The two versions of ''Still Life with Limes'' (2016-2017) and ''Still Life from an Antique Room'' (2018) are a clear reference to the older masters, and their consistent triangular composition alludes to the painter's certain predilection for visual symmetry. Here, too, the empirically perceived space is defined only by the wall in the background and a perspectival compression that focuses the viewer's attention on the objects in the middle ground. The carafe and olives are considered objects with symbolic meaning in traditional religious iconography. Jan Mikulka, Still Life with Apples, 2011.jpg, Jan Mikulka, ''Still Life with Apples'', 2011 Jan Mikulka, Still Life in Antique Room, 2018.jpg, Jan Mikulka, ''Still Life in Antique Room'', 2018 Jan Mikulka, Still Life with Pomegranate, 2017.jpg, Jan Mikulka, ''Still Life with Pomegranate'', 2017 Jan Mikulka, Still Life with Pomegranate and Elephant, 2018.jpg, Jan Mikulka, ''Still Life with Pomegranate and Elephant'', 2018 A specific type of
still life A still life (plural: still lifes) is a work of art depicting mostly wikt:inanimate, inanimate subject matter, typically commonplace objects which are either natural (food, flowers, dead animals, plants, rocks, shells, etc.) or artificiality, m ...
painting is floral painting, which emerges as a distinct genre from the sixteenth century onwards and has its peak in the seventeenth century. Mikulka's two ''Still lifes with lilies'' (2015, 2016) are primarily examples of masterful realistic painting. They probably have nothing to do with the traditional religious symbolism of lilies, which since the Middle Ages have pointed to the immaculate conception of the Virgin Mary. The painter plays with translucency and mirroring the surroundings in the glass vase, referring rather to the inspiration of van Eyck's
Arnolfini Portrait ''The Arnolfini Portrait'' (or ''The Arnolfini Wedding'', ''The Arnolfini Marriage'', the ''Portrait of Giovanni Arnolfini and his Wife'', or other titles) is a 1434 oil painting on oak panel by the Early Netherlandish painter Jan van Eyck. It fo ...
, and emphasizing sensual presence through absence. Jan Mikulka, Still Life with Lilies, 2017.jpg, Jan Mikulka, ''Lilies'', 2017 Jan Mikulka, Still Life with Lilies 2, 2018.jpg, Jan Mikulka, ''Lilies'' 2, 2018


Motion capture

Mikulka's most recent work is characterised by a shift away from his earlier elusiveness and impenetrability towards a clearer expression through straightforward realism. This is particularly true of his paintings, in which he attempts to capture and freeze the movement of the human figure in an almost photographic manner (''Arrow'', 2014, triptych ''Ballet Girl'', 2018-2019). His realistic approach to painting is nothing more or less than a search for the real, for a creative unity between the mind and the insights mediated by active perception.


Award-winning works

* 2011 ''James'', BP Portrait Award (Price of visitors), Royal Society of Portrait Painters * 2013 ''Self Portrait'', winner of SELF portrait prize, Royal Society of Portrait Painters * 2015 ''In the Park'', Honorable mention, Museo Europeo de Arte Moderno, Barcelona * 2016 ''In the Park'', winner of The Changing Faces Prize, Royal Society of Portrait Painters * 2019 ''Sebastian'', award at Figurativas competition (10th International Painting and Sculpture Competition of the Arts and Artists Foundation) in Barcelona


Exhibitions (selection)


Solo

* 2012 Jan Mikulka, Moments, Anderle Gallery, Prague * 2013 Jan Mikulka, Obrazy / Paintings, Kulturní dům Dobříš * 2019 Yigal Ozeri, Jan Mikulka, In Pursuit of the Real, Cermak Eisenkraft Gallery, Prague * 2020 An Attempt at Maximum Approximation - KE 3171 096, Museum of Art Olomouc * 2022 Pavel Baňka – Mezi fotografií a malbou & Jan Mikulka – Mezi malbou a fotografií, Topičův salon, Prague


Collective (selection)

* 2000 Portrait of the Year 2000, Gallery At the White Unicorn, Klatovy * 2001 Ateliers of the Academy of Fine Arts / Painting School of Professor Zdeněk Beran, Wortner House of the Aleš Gallery of South Bohemia, České Budějovice * 2004/ 2005 International Biennial of Contemporary Art, Prague Town Hall, National Gallery in Prague * 2006 Graduates of AVU 2006, Trade Fair Palace, National Gallery in Prague * 2011 National Portrait Gallery, London, Wolverhampton Art Gallery, Aberdeen Art Gallery, UK * 2012 Contemporary Czech and Slovak Painting, National Gallery in Prague * 2013 Et Cetera, Instituto Italiano di Cultura, Prague * 2013 Royal Society Of Portrait Painters Annual Exhibition, Mall Galleries, London, UK * 2013 The Threadneedle Prize, Mall Galleries, London, UK * 2014 Royal Society Of Portrait Painters Annual Exhibition, Mall Galleries, London, UK * 2015 Et Cetera, MAXXI Museum, Rome, Italy * 2015 BP Portrait Awards 2015, National Portrait Gallery, London, UK * 2015 Figurativas 15, MEAM Museum, Barcelona, Spain * 2016 Royal Society Of Portrait Painters Annual Exhibition, Mall Galleries, London, Scottish National Portrait Gallery, Edinburgh, Ulster Museum, Belfast, UK * 2016 Summer Salon Show, Rarity Gallery, Mykonos, Greece * 2017 Junge Prager, Junge Berliner, Czech center, Berlin, Smetana Q Gallery, Prague * 2018 Art Fair Art Paris, Grand Palais, Cermak Eisenkraft Gallery, Paris * 2018 Royal Society Of Portrait Painters Annual Exhibition, Mall Galleries, London * 2020 Vanitas, DOX Prague * 2023 ENDLESS POOLS: Jan Mikulka, Michal Ožibko, Zdeněk Trs, Vladimír Véla, Adolf Loos Apartment and Gallery, Prague * 2024 Forms of Mimesis ( Tomáš Kubík, Jan Mikulka, Dušan Mravec, Leoš Suchan, Martin Velíšek), Gallery of Česká spořitelna


References


Sources

* Mark Gisbourne, Dominique Nahas, Tomáš Zapletal: ''Yigal Ozeri, Jan Mikulka, In Pursuit of the Real'', Cermak Eisenkraft Gallery, Prague 2019 * Barbora Kundračíková (ed.), Fascination with the Real – Hyperrealism in Czech Painting, Museum of Art Olomouc 2017, ISBN 9788088103219 * Alena Benešová, Jiří Pátek, Element F.: Photography and Art in the Second Half of the 20th Century, Moravian Gallery in Brno 2012, ISBN 978-80-7027-256-5 * Milan Knížák, Tomáš Vlček, 909: Umění přelomu tisíciletí ze sbírek Národní galerie v Praze 1990–2009 / Art from the Turn of the Millennium in the National Gallery in Prague Collections 1990-2009, Prague 2009 * Zdeněk Beran, Pavel Holas, Jan Kříž, Defenestration: exhibition of graduates and students of the AVU studio of Prof. Zdeněk Beran, New Town Hall, Dobel s.r.o. Prague 2008 * Zdeněk Beran, Graduates of AVU 2006, 42 p., Academy of Fine Arts, Prague 2006, ISBN 80-239-7170-0 * Ivan Hartmann (ed.), International Biennale of Contemporary Art 2005: A Second Sight, 828 p., National Gallery in Prague 2005, ISBN 80-7035-301-5 * Vlastimil Tetiva, Ateliery AVU: Malířská škola profesora Zdeňka Berana / The Painting School of Professor Zdeněk Beran, Alšova jihočeská galerie v Hluboké nad Vltavou 2001, ISBN 80-85857-51-0 * Helena Hrdličková et al., Portrét roku 2000 / The Portrait of the Year, Galerie Klatovy / Klenová, 2000, ISBN 80-85628-56-2


External links

*
Royal Society of Portrait Painters: JAN MIKULKA 'SELF PORTRAIT

Worldwide hyperrealism database - list of artists, exhibitions, reviews and theoretical texts: Europe: Jan Mikulka

Jan Mikulka in the abART information system

Arthouse Hejtmánek: Jan Mikulka

Feigl Gallery: Jan Mikulka
{{DEFAULTSORT:Mikulka, Jan 1980 births Living people Czech painters Artists from Prague