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Zátiší s kančí hlavou by Emil Filla
Zátiší Na Stole by Emil Filla
Orfeova Smrt by Emil Filla
Žena v křesle s knihou by Emil Filla
Žena S Vějířem by Emil Filla
1882–1953 · Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia[2]

Emil Filla

On 1 September 1939[2], the day Germany invaded Poland, the Gestapo arrested Emil Filla in Prague. He was held at Dachau and then Buchenwald for six years. He survived. On his return he was given the first major post-war exhibition at the Mánes gallery, and went on to teach at the Prague Academy of Arts, Architecture and Design until his death in 1953[2]. The arc of his life spanned both the heroism and the horror of Central European modernism.

Held in 4 museumsWikipedia8 sources

Portrait of Emil Filla

Biography

Filla was born in 1882[2] in Chropyně, Moravia, and studied at the Prague Academy of Fine Arts from 1903[2]. By 1907 he had absorbed Expressionism through contact with Edvard Munch's work and produced "Reader of Dostoevsky", a dark psychological portrait that announced him as one of the most serious young painters in Bohemia. The Osma (The Eight) group, which he co-founded, briefly oriented Czech avant-garde art around Fauvism and German Expressionism before Filla encountered Cubism[2] in Paris around 1910.

Cubism[2] redirected everything. Filla engaged with Picasso and Braque directly, producing paintings such as "Salome" (1911[2]) and "Bathers" (1912) that stand among the earliest Cubist works made outside France. Through the 1930s he incorporated Surrealist currents into his painting, and the darkness of that decade entered his imagery: the cycle "Boje a zápasy" (Fights and Struggles), made after his release from Buchenwald, was a direct response to the violence he had witnessed.

Filla also wrote extensively on art theory and was a committed internationalist, drawing connections between Czech culture and the broader European avant-garde at a time when those connections required courage to maintain. He is the central figure in any serious account of Czech Cubism[2].

Timeline

  1. 1882Born in Chropyně, Moravia.
  2. 1903Began studies at the Prague Academy of Fine Arts.
  3. 1907Absorbed Expressionism and created "Reader of Dostoevsky", a psychological portrait.
  4. 1907Co-founded the Osma (The Eight) group.
  5. 1910Encountered Cubism in Paris.
  6. 1911Produced the painting "Salome".
  7. 1912Produced the painting "Bathers".
  8. 1930Incorporated Surrealist elements into his painting.
  9. 1939Arrested by the Gestapo in Prague on 1 September.
  10. 1945Released from Buchenwald and created the cycle "Boje a zápasy" (Fights and Struggles).
  11. 1953Died in Prague. He was teaching at the Prague Academy of Arts, Architecture and Design.

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Frequently Asked Questions

  • What is Emil Filla known for?
    Emil Filla is known as a central figure in Czech Cubism[2]. He also wrote extensively on art theory and promoted connections between Czech culture and the broader European avant-garde.
  • What is Emil Filla's most famous work?
    It is difficult to name one single work as Emil Filla's 'most famous'. He produced paintings and sculpture in a Cubo-Expressionist style, as well as many book illustrations and essays. He was a member of the group Osma (The Eight), and he helped to found the Group of Fine Artists. Filla is known for incorporating aspects of Cubism[2] into his paintings, such as fragmentation of form and multiple perspectives. He was also interested in incorporating subject matter that reflected modern life and political concerns. He was involved in the Czech avant-garde movement in the early 20th century and was interned in the Buchenwald concentration camp during the Second World War. After the war, he continued to create art and teach at the Academy of Arts, Architecture and Design in Prague.
  • What should I know about Emil Filla's prints?
    Emil Filla (1882[2]-1953[2]) was a Czech Cubist painter, sculptor, and graphic artist, active in the early 20th century. Prints, as a medium, have a long history, dating back to ancient Egypt and China. They became widespread in Europe after paper became readily available in the 14th century. Woodcuts served purposes ranging from book illustration to religious icons. Handmade prints were the primary method for image reproduction until the advent of photography in the mid-19th century. During the late 19th century, prints gained recognition as a significant artistic medium. Artists began signing and numbering their prints to distinguish original works from reproductions, and to control quality and edition sizes. This allowed artists to reach a wider audience due to the greater quantities and lower costs associated with printmaking. Dealers such as Julius Meier-Graefe, Ambroise Vollard, and Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler recognised the value of prints and encouraged painters and sculptors to explore the medium.
  • What style or movement did Emil Filla belong to?
    Emil Filla was associated with Cubism[2], an influential art movement that began circa 1907[2]-08. Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque started it. Cubism rejected traditional representational art; it influenced many subsequent movements. Cubists abandoned conventions, such as creating illusions of depth from fixed viewpoints using linear perspective. Instead, they depicted subjects from multiple viewpoints. Each Cubist had their own style; however, their works often appear fragmented, composed of angles, planes, and geometric shapes. The name of the movement derives from this quality. Guillaume Apollinaire, a French writer and theorist, summarised Cubism in 1913 as the art of depicting new wholes with formal elements derived from conception rather than visual reality. Picasso stated that Cubism deals primarily with forms, and that drawing, design, and colour are understood as in all other schools.
  • What techniques or materials did Emil Filla use?
    The techniques used by an artist involve both material and intellectual elements. Technique includes resourcefulness, the ability to utilise certain means, to foresee effects, and a feeling for compatibility. The problem of surface treatment in painting has existed for a long time. Renaissance artists exploited their materials and tools to create realistic illusions. They aimed to bring to life colour and contour, plane and line, and their directional values. The Impressionists rediscovered colour and light as essential components in painting. They sought to bring colours to their elementary intensity, fusing them into light through the juxtaposition of pure-colour values or by breaking tones. Some artists have experimented with new materials such as plastics, including oil on rhodoid and Plexiglas. They have tried industrial lacquers and oil pigments on transparent sheets. To prevent colours from peeling, they scratched fine lines into the plastic, filling them with oil paint. They also painted on both sides of the sheets to create spatial relationships using receding and advancing colours. A specific brush technique was needed for these new materials, leading to unexpected textures.
  • What was Emil Filla known for?
    Emil Filla (1882[2]-1953[2]) is known as a prominent Czech Cubist painter and sculptor. Cubism[2], which emerged around 1907[2]-1908[2] with Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque, rejected traditional artistic representation. Instead of using linear perspective to create illusions of depth, Cubists depicted subjects from multiple viewpoints simultaneously. Filla adopted this approach, dissecting forms and presenting them across the canvas. Cubist works appear fragmented, composed of angles and geometric shapes. The first phase of Cubism, called Analytic Cubism, involved analysing the structure of forms. Artists like Braque and Picasso used subdued colours to focus attention on form. Later Cubism evolved into Synthetic Cubism, which incorporated brighter colours, simpler shapes, and collage elements. Filla's work contributed to the development and dissemination of Cubism in central Europe.
  • When did Emil Filla live and work?
    Emil Filla was born on 4 April 1882[2] in Chropyne, Moravia. He died on 7 October 1953[2] in Prague. Filla was a Czech Cubist painter, sculptor, and graphic artist. In September 1886[2], Jean Arp was born. In 1891, Giacomo Balla began studies at the Belli Arti. In 1897, Frantisek Kupka took a short trip to London. In 1899, Kupka rented a small studio at 84, boulevard Rochechouart. In 1900, Kupka exhibited at the Paris World's Fair in the section reserved for Austrian artists. Max Beckmann was born in 1884. Filla's artistic career spanned much of the first half of the 20th century, a period of significant change and development in European art. He was involved with groups of other artists and exhibited regularly.
  • Where can I see Emil Filla's work?
    To see Emil Filla's work, you could visit the Narodni Galerie in Prague. Other museums with Art Deco collections include the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA), and the Minneapolis Institute of Arts. You can also find collections at the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto; the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts in Richmond, Virginia; and the Wolfsonian at Florida International University in Miami Beach. European museums with relevant holdings are the Victoria & Albert Museum and the Geffrye Museum in London; the National Museums of Scotland in Edinburgh; the Bauhaus Archive in Berlin; the MAK Austrian Museum of Applied Art in Vienna; and the Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe in Hamburg.
  • Where was Emil Filla from?
    Emil Filla was from Bohemia, in what is now the Czech Republic. He was born in 1882[2] in Chropyne, a small town in Moravia. At the time, this area was part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Filla's Czech identity was important to him, and he was involved in Czech cultural and political life throughout his career. He studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in Prague, the capital of Bohemia, from 1903[2] to 1906. Prague was a centre for Czech nationalism and artistic innovation. As a young artist, Filla was influenced by the Expressionist movement, which originated in Germany. However, he adapted this style to reflect his own Czech identity and concerns. He was a member of the Osma (The Eight) group of Czech artists, who sought to modernise Czech art and connect it with wider European trends.
  • Who did Emil Filla influence?
    It is difficult to identify specific artists directly influenced by Emil Filla. The art world has become pluralistic, making it harder for any single artist or movement to dominate. Some observers have noted a move away from the dominance of Picasso, with younger artists seeking their own idioms. They respect their elders, but feel compelled to explore new areas of pictorial expression. The Czech Cubist painter Filla was associated with German Expressionists like Emil Nolde, from whom Jan Müller inherited certain expressive devices. Müller readopted literary subject matter and realigned it with the formal exigencies of contemporary art. This re-emphasised an aspect of painting that had all but disappeared. In Finland, the Free Art School in Helsinki opened the way for an understanding of new problems in painting. A new generation of artists emerged, but a small gallery called Cheap Thrills served as a platform for artists who fell outside the categories Finnish exhibitions could accept.
  • Who influenced Emil Filla?
    Emil Filla's artistic development involved several influences. László Moholy-Nagy noted the importance of Rembrandt's drawings, particularly their emotional force and psychological depth. Moholy-Nagy also admired Vincent van Gogh's drawings, learning from their analytical nature and texture. He realised line drawings should express three-dimensional quality through line alone, and that a picture's quality comes from faithful use of the medium in new visual relationships, rather than illusionistic naturalism. Frantisek Kupka, a contemporary, was influenced by Josef Manes, whose work promoted Czech culture. Manes's style, characterised by melodical line and symbolic interpretation of nature, resonated with Kupka. Mikulás Ales, a follower of Manes, further influenced Kupka with his decorative talent and integration of figures into ornamental space. Kupka greatly admired Ales's work and his synthesis of music and the pictorial. Kupka's exposure to Czech folk art, particularly at the Jubilee Exhibition in Prague in 1891[2], also shaped his artistic direction.
  • Who was Emil Filla?
    Emil Filla (1882[2]-1953[2]) was a Czech Cubist painter, sculptor, and graphic artist. He is considered a significant figure in the development of modern art in Bohemia. Filla was a member of the group Osma (The Eight) and later became a leading member of the Tvrdošíjní (The Stubborn Ones). These groups sought to advance expression and challenge academic traditions. His work often explored themes of social justice and human suffering, particularly during the interwar period. He was influenced by Cubism[2], Expressionism, and other avant-garde movements. During the Nazi occupation of Czechoslovakia, Filla was arrested by the Gestapo and imprisoned in Buchenwald and Dachau concentration camps. This experience profoundly affected him and his later work. After the Second World War, he returned to Prague and became a professor at the Academy of Fine Arts. He continued to create art and write about art theory until his death in 1953[2]. Filla's artistic output includes paintings, drawings, sculptures, and book illustrations.

Sources

Editorial draws on the following primary and tertiary references for Emil Filla.

  1. [1] wikidata Wikidata: Q687335 Used for: identifiers.
  2. [2] wikipedia Wikipedia: Emil Filla Used for: biography, birth dates, death dates, identifiers, movement attribution, nationality.
  3. [3] book guggenheim-frantisekkupka00kupk Used for: biography.
  4. [4] book guggenheim-guggenheimintern1964allo Used for: biography, stylistic analysis.
  5. [5] book guggenheim-handboo00pegg Used for: biography.
  6. [6] book guggenheim-onehundredpainti00thom Used for: biography, stylistic analysis.
  7. [7] book guggenheim-solomonrguggenhe1948reba Used for: biography.
  8. [8] book guggenheim-twopri00weis Used for: stylistic analysis.

Editorial overseen by Solis Prints. Sources verified 2026-07-15. Click a source for details, or hover over [N] in the page above to preview.

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