
Untitled
<p>Frantisek Drtikol’s training as a studio photographer, just after 1900, included three years at the Institute for Photography in Munich, where apprentices were schooled in Art Nouveau precepts as well as photographic technique. An aesthetic sensibility on the border between art and design marked his career, though this shifted in later years (as seen in this work) toward the angular patterns of Art Deco. Drtikol’s studio business in downtown Prague traded on his artistic cachet; he and his assistants made conventional portraits for the domestic market, while sending daring nude studies to amateur exhibitions around the globe. The artist’s melodramatic stagings of progressively leaner female models concentrate fears and fantasies surrounding the athletic “New Woman,” a media construction of the 1920s. His mix of figures and abstract props also marks an original contribution to the imagery of expressive dance, which became a craze throughout central Europe at this time.</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 1929
- Medium
- Gum bichromate print
- Dimensions
- Image/paper/mount: 29.1 × 23.3 cm (11 1/2 × 9 3/16 in.)
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Artist
- Frantisek Drtikol
Artist

Printmaking
František Drtikol was a Czech photographer and printmaker whose modernist studio portraits and nudes, created primarily between 1910 and 1935, were distinguished by geometric abstraction, dramatic chiaroscuro, and carefully constructed compositions. Working in Prague, he combined straight photography with hand-applied pigment and graphic techniques to create highly stylized images that moved beyond documentary realism toward a formalist aesthetic. His later work incorporated photomontage and experimental processes. Drtikol's practice bridged Czech avant-garde movements and European modernism, establishing him as a pioneering figure in interwar art photography.
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Record
Verified by WattsOS- Artist
- Frantisek Drtikol
- Year
- 1929
- Medium
- Gum bichromate print
- Dimensions
- Image/paper/mount: 29.1 × 23.3 cm (11 1/2 × 9 3/16 in.)
- Watts ID
- WW-1929-105471
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified

