Dagmar Hochova »
The Power of Sympathy
Exhibition: 20 Jun – 29 Jun 2018
12 Star Gallery at the Europe House
32 Smith Square
SW1P 3EU London
+44 (0)20-7973 1992
ec.europa.eu/unitedkingdom/events/12-star-gallery_en
Mon-Fri 10-18
The first UK exhibition of the work of leading Czech photographer Dagmar Hochova (1926 – 2012) known for her humanist and documentary approach. Hochova’s powerful black and white images of ordinary people from 1960s to 1980s are complemented by unique images documenting the crucial events of recent Czech history including the 1968 Prague Spring and the 1989 Velvet Revolution building a complex picture of life in Czechoslovakia under communism while presenting everyday reality as something unusual and extraordinary. Full of energy and humour and with her engaged and critical attitude towards society, Hochova’s photographs surpass the work of her contemporaries and provide a strong testimony to the era and its people.
Dagmar Hochova (1926 – 2012) studied photography in Prague under avant-garde photographer Jaromir Funke and then worked as a freelance photographer for various Czech newspapers and magazines. During the communist regime, she was primarily known as a photographer of children. However, her work went far beyond this subject capturing people on the edge of society, the elderly, war veterans, rejected artists and intellectuals, all those who didn´t conform with the public image of a developed and trouble-free socialist society. The photo series such as St Matthew’s Fair, Children, Pairs, Holidays and Celebrations on which she worked from the 1950s onwards became famous when they were published after the 1989 Velvet Revolution. In 2000, she was awarded the Medal of Merit for outstanding contribution to the arts.