Josef
Koudelka (b. January 10, 1938) is a Czech photographer.
Josef Koudelka was
born in 1938 in Boskovice, Moravia. He began photographing his family
and the surroundings with a 6 x 6 Bakelite camera. He studied at the
Czech Technical University in Prague (CVUT) between 1956 and 1961,
receiving a Degree in Engineering in 1961. He staged his first
photographic exhibition the same year. Later he worked as an
aeronautical engineer in Prague and Bratislava.
He began taking
commissions from theatre magazines, and regularly photographed stage
productions at Prague's Theatre Behind the Gate on a Rolleiflex
camera. In 1967, Koudelka decided to give up his career in
engineering for full-time work as a photographer.
He had returned
from a project photographing gypsies in Romania just two days before
the Soviet invasion, in August 1968. He witnessed and recorded the
military forces of the Warsaw Pact as they invaded Prague and crushed
the Czech reforms. Koudelka's negatives were smuggled out of Prague
into the hands of the Magnum agency, and published anonymously in The
Sunday Times Magazine under the initials P. P. (Prague Photographer)
for fear of reprisal to him and his family.
His pictures of the
events became dramatic international symbols. In 1969 the "anonymous
Czech photographer" was awarded the Overseas Press Club's Robert
Capa Gold Medal for photographs requiring exceptional courage.
With Magnum to
recommend him to the British authorities, Koudelka applied for a
three-month working visa and fled to England in 1970, where he
applied for political asylum and stayed for more than a decade. In
1971 he joined Magnum Photos. A nomad at heart, he continued to
wander around Europe with his camera and little else.
Throughout the
1970s and 1980s, Koudelka sustained his work through numerous grants
and awards, and continued to exhibit and publish major projects like
Gypsies (1975) and Exiles (1988). Since 1986, he has worked with a
panoramic camera and issued a compilation of these photographs in his
book Chaos in 1999. Koudelka has had more than a dozen books of his
work published, including most recently in 2006 the retrospective
volume Koudelka.
Koudelka has won
awards such as the Prix Nadar (1978), a Grand Prix National de la
Photographie (1989), a Grand Prix Cartier-Bresson (1991), and the
Hasselblad Foundation International Award in Photography (1992).
Significant exhibitions of his work have been held at the Museum of
Modern Art and the International Center of Photography, New York; the
Hayward Gallery, London; the Stedelijk Museum of Modern Art,
Amsterdam; and the Palais de Tokyo, Paris.
He and his work
received support and acknowledgment from his friend the French
photographer, Henri Cartier-Bresson. He was also supported by the
Czech art historian Anna Farova.
In 1987 Koudelka
became a French citizen, and was able to return to Czechoslovakia for
the first time in 1991. He then produced Black Triangle, documenting
his country's wasted landscape.
Koudelka resides in
France and Prague and is continuing his work documenting the European
landscape. He has two daughters and a son.
Koudelka's early
work significantly shaped his later photography, and its emphasis on
social and cultural rituals as well as death. He soon moved on to a
more personal, in depth photographic study of the Gypsies of
Slovakia, and later Romania. This work was exhibited in Prague in
1967. Throughout his career, Koudelka has been praised for his
ability to capture the presence of the human spirit amidst dark
landscapes. Desolation, waste, departure, despair and alienation are
common themes in his work. His characters sometimes seem to come out
of fairytales. Still, some see hope within his work — the endurance
of human endeavor, in spite of its fragility. His later work focuses
on the landscape removed of human subjects.
"My photographs are
primarily about contradictions; the simultaneous and infinite
coexistence of beauty mingling with destruction, of love with hatred.
The endless capacity for contradiction has defined humanity's
existence, and is forced into stark relief in war." Josef
Koudelka.





















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