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Follow on Google News | New photo-book on Czech Leica photography in the period 1928-1954Josef Jindřich Šechtl: Photographer's Diary 1928-1954 immerses the reader in the distinctive vision of Josef Jindřich Šechtl. Šechtl succeeded in using his 35mm Leica to capture the fleeting nature of private and public social events.
Šechtl had a keen eye for the often unnoticed and overlooked, while selecting subject matter to reflect the changing tides of historical destiny sweeping across his world. Living in the South Bohemian town of Tábor, Šechtl has been overlooked by historians due to their tendency to concentrate on practitioners from major urban areas. Šechtl & Voseček Museum of Photography has been assembling and disseminating the photographs of the Šechtl family and those of their contemporaries over five generations, and Photographer's Diary 1928-1954 at long last brings Josef Jindřich Šechtl’s work to the public's attention. An introductory essay by Josef Moucha situates Šechtl in the wider context of world photography. As well as people with a passion for photography, the book will have special appeal for those with an interest in political and social history, and in particular how this history is mediated through images. To preview the book please contact Jan Hubička, honza@sechtl- http://sechtl- Book launch Thursday 5pm, 14 March 2013 at the Municipal Town Hall gallery, Žižkovo náměstí 1, Tábor, Czech Republic. Monday 7pm, 25 March 2013 at Leica Gallery Prague, Skolská 28, Prague 1. (At 6pm before this event there will be a press conference, to which all journalists and interested parties are invited.) Mgr. Josef Moucha (1956*, Hradec Králové) Photographer, critic and theoretician of photography, author and exhibition curator Josef Moucha studied print, television and film journalism at Charles University, Prague (1975–1980) Josef Jindřich Šechtl (1877*, Tábor – 1954†, Tábor) Josef Jindřich Šechtl was a Czech photographer who specialized in documentary photography and portraiture. Josef Jindřich Šechtl was born into the family of early Czech photographer Ignác Šechtl, who ran a photographic studio in Tábor, a town in South Bohemia. After finishing school in Tábor, Josef Jindřich became interested in chemigraphy (a method of printing photographs) Since photographs from Šechtl & Voseček studio do not usually bear a personal signature, it is not always clear which photographs of the period 1897–1911 were taken by Josef Jindřich Šechtl and which by his father Ignác Šechtl. Josef Jindřich’s influence on the work of the studio is, however, apparent. The studio started to publish photo-essays on historically significant events. Josef Jindřich became a partner in Šechtl & Voseček in 1904 and increasingly took over its direction until the death of his father in 1911. Under his lead the studio prospered. In 1906 he opened an affiliated studio in Pelhřimov, and in the same year Šechtl & Voseček was represented at the Imperial Austrian Exhibition in London. In 1907 he established a modern studio, largest in Bohemia outside Prague, on the main street of Tábor. Soon after his father's death in 1911 Josef Jindřich married Anna Stocká, and their daughter Ludmila was born in 1912. Together they cultivated friendships with local artists, especially with sculptor Jan Vítìzslav Dušek. During the First World War Josef Jindřich was not conscripted and the studio continued business as usual. Soon after the war Josef Šechtl became a member of the Union of Photographers of the Czechoslovak Republic. In 1925 he opened a new studio in Pelhřimov, designed by architect Karel Chochola. Anna gave birth to their son Josef Ferdinand Ignác Šechtl in 1925, but only half a year later Anna died, which was a blow from which Josef Jindřich never really recovered, even though he was to remarry the following year. In 1928 Josef Jindřich bought a Leica camera (which had only gone into production in 1925) and started recording life on 35mm film; he was thus a pioneer of Leica photography in the Czech lands. His Leica photography covers one of the most important developments in the Czech history: from economic crisis of the late 1920s, through the Second World War, to liberation and the advent of Communism. The remainder of Josef Jindřich's story is told in the introductory text of the newly published book Josef Jindřich Šechtl: Photographer's Diary 1928-1954, and of course through all the pictures he took. Šechtl & Voseček Museum of Photography has digitized all the 35 mm film that survives, amounting to more than 8500 photographs, many of which can be viewed via the museum's website. Over the course of Josef Jindřich's life photography had changed from being a job that could be taken up and practised quite freely into a regulated craft. This happened first for portrait photography in 1911, and in 1926 it was declared a craft entirely, requiring apprenticeship and a permit for its practice. In 1948, the new Communist government socialized all services, including photographic studios. Šechtl & Voseček studio was made into a syndicate and nationalized in 1951 and, as a former tradesman, Josef Jindřich Šechtl was granted a small pension in 1954, the year of his death. http://sechtl- http://sechtl- End
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