Jindřich
Štreit (born 5 September 1946 in Vsetín) is a Czech
photographer and pedagogue known for his documentary photography. He
concentrates on documenting the rural life and people of Czech
villages. He is considered one of the most important exponents of
Czech documentary photography.
Biography
Štreit
began taking photographs in 1964, during his studies at the
Pedagogical Faculty of Palacký University in Olomouc. Following his
graduation he worked as a teacher in Rýmařov; later he became
director of the school in Sovinec and Jiříkov. In addition to his
profession, Štreit actively participated in public life. As a local
chronicler he documented the everyday events and life of Czech
villages under the communist regime. The photography theorist Antonín
Dufek identified him as "a continuer of the tradition of old
village teachers, propagators of culture and progress".
Since
the 1980s, Jindřich Štreit has regularly organized exhibitions,
concerts and theatrical performances at the Sovinec Castle. The
photographer is sometimes nicknamed 'Jindra from Sovinec'.
In
the late 1970s, Štreit's approach to photography began to change. He
studied at the Institut výtvarné fotografie (Institute of Art
Photography) in Brno, led by K. O. Hrubý and Antonín Hinšt. He
graduated from the Institute with a cycle of theatrical photography.
At the same time he continued expanding his cycle of everyday life of
the villages in the foothills of the Jeseníky Mountains.
Additionally, he helped organize cultural life in the region; he
participated in organizing exhibitions and concerts.
In
1981, during the general elections in the former Czechoslovakia,
Štreit documented the official course of the elections. In some of
his photographs made during the meetings of the local authorities,
the portrait of the President of Czechoslovakia appeared on
photographs in very "unlikely and absurd places". A year
later, in June 1982, Štreit agreed to display his works at the
exhibition Setkání (The Meeting) organized in Prague by the graphic
artist Alena Kučerová. After several hours, the exhibition was
banned by the state police and Štreit was arrested and accused of
defamation of the President and the country. He was sentenced to ten
months' imprisonment with a suspended sentence of two years. As a
consequence, he lost his job and was forced to earn a living at a
state farm in Rýžoviště. He was banned from taking photographs,
but he never respected the ban and returned to photography
immediately after his release from the prison. The photography
theorist Anna Fárová managed to include his works in the exhibition
9 + 9, visited by Henri Cartier-Bresson, who documented Štreit's
installation and published his photos in the French newspaper Le
Monde.
In
1989, after the Velvet Revolution and subsequent democratization of
Czech society, Štreit was rehabilitated and allowed to take
photographs without limitations. In 2009, he was named Professor of
Applied Arts by the President of the Czech Republic Václav Klaus. As
of 2010, Štreit works as a teacher at the Institut tvůrčí
fotografie (Institute of Creative Photography of Silesian University
in Opava).
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