25 May 2013, 8th station

Naděžda’sIt has become a tradition that the opening of Kristek Thaya Glyptotheque is always in May. Each time it occurs at a different station, and each time some symbolic act is assigned to it. In 2013, it was a musical-drama experiment. Musicians, singers and actors met to breathe life into the chapel at Jan's Castle with the sculpture The Birth and Simultaneously Damnation of the Sphere. The musical improvisation developed from Naděžda’s Chord, which is a discordant harmony of tones that Lubo Kristek heard in his head as a memory of his mother Naděžda. The chord was so persistent that Kristek had to start working with it. He wrote it down in musical notation and started to prepare a sculptural representation of the chord. He also recorded the visual impression in the picture Naděžda’s Chord in the Landscape (1996) with a bandaged conductor under whose baton the animated chord rises from a piano. Naděžda’s Chord appeared in musical form in 2010 in the happening Love in circulo vitioso in finito secundi milenii (in the German town of Landsberg and then in Brno), in an arrangement for symphony orchestra by the composer Miloš Štědroň (born 1942). Here the figure with the baton appears again. In this happening, the symphony orchestra was conducted by a naked female conductor, who led it to a harmonic culmination at the end – a transition to a melodious minor chord.

For Kristek, dissonance is an inspiration, a source of stimuli, the start of creativity. In the creative process it achieves harmony in the end, but for him it is closed. As a result, he then seeks other discordant stimuli and uncharted paths. For Kristek, creation is a constantly open and living process.

Naděžda’s Chord in the happening.The Surreal Cacophony in 2013 was a continuation of the experiments with Naděžda’s Chord. To the accompaniment of a drum solo from the character Death, who observes everything from the crown of a tree, a whirl of figures came alive around the chapel (the woman-man with pink sack of temptation, the triple-breasted ballerina of Venus-like figure, the secret hobgoblin, the fairy dressed in colanders, the two-headed tree creature knitting an endless scarf like fate which silently passes, etc.) and then unveiled the chapel. Lubo Kristek stepped out of it with his own image in front of his face, and a girl with a recorder came out of it and unmasked him. But under Kristek’s mask the same thing appeared, because he had masked himself with his own identity. Then from the forest, the recorder player lured musicians, who gradually came to the chapel and joined in with the collective harmony. This time, the creator of the chord himself became the conductor and strengthened the harmony until Death came down to the ground. The glyptotheque’s season had been opened.

The opening this year was part of the year-long project Kristek Thaya Glyptotheque – Cultural and Tourist Destination(1). After the happening, there was a christening (using drops of water from the Black Thaya) of the new publication Lubo Kristek: Happening Creation in the Thaya Valley, the godfather of which was the excellent Czechoslovak harpist Miloslav Vildner (born 1933). Visitors could also view an exhibition by the photographer Lubomír Urbánek (born 1949) focussing on the creation of this pilgrims’ way.

Text: Iveta K. Pavlovičová, Barbora Půtová

Iveta K. Pavlovičová (born 1974) is a Czech theatre studies specialist and director of the Research Institute for Communication in Arts in Brno.
She has long been engaged in the postmodern theatre and its sources. She is the author of scientific-research projects supported by the Grant Agency of the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Fund for Development of Universities, Czech Literary Fund and the European Union (European Fund for Regional Development), as well as theatre projects supported by the Ministry of Culture of the Czech Republic and the Czech-German Fund for the Future. She participated in the 3rd and 4th International Symposium of Theatre Anthropology at the Janáček Academy of Music and Performing arts Brno (JAMU), where she lectured in the years 2003–2004. She also gave a lecture at the Masaryk University Institute of Anthropology in Brno. Since 2009, she has worked on the forming of an exhibition programme at the Baroque Palace of Riegersburg.
She published the article Modely v nás a možnost jejich změny (Our Inner Models and the Possibility to Change Them) in the magazine Vesmír (2/2005) and a teaching video programme for high schools. She is the author of the textbook Tělo, znak a rytmus (Body, Sign and Rhythm) for JAMU and the book Divadlo Neslyšících a nové cesty (Theatre of the Deaf and the New Ways, 2002) that was published as part of a publication project supported by the Grant Agency of the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic.

Barbora Půtová (born 1985) is a Czech anthropologist and art historian lecturing at the Faculty of Arts, Charles University in Prague.
She deals with history of culture, artwork and cultural heritage. Other fields of her expert interest include historical anthropology, visual anthropology and anthropology of art.
She has published dozens of articles and experts studies as well as several expert monographs such as Pravěké umění (Prehistoric Art, co-authors Jean Clottes and Václav Soukup, 2011), Félicien Rops: enfant terrible dekadence (Félicien Rops: Enfant Terrible of Decadence, 2013), Kristkova podyjská glyptotéka (Kristek Thaya Glyptoheque, co-author Iveta K. Pavlovičová, 2013), The Genesis of Creativity and the Origin of the Human Mind (co-edited by Václav Soukup, 2015) or Královská cesta: všední i sváteční život v proměnách času (The Royal Route: Ordinary and Festive Life Over the Course of Time, 2016).
In her monograph Félicien Rops she offers the first comprehensive view of the life and work of one of the most prominent representatives of decadence and symbolism; in her last book Královská cesta (The Royal Route) she writes about the creation, development, meaning and historical changes of the Royal Route in Prague. In her book Skalní umění (Rock Art, 2015), she published the results of her field research of Palaeolithic art that she carried out at archaeological sites in France and Portugal.
At presents she is carrying out research of African rock art in the High Atlas Mountains of Morocco.

The project was supported by the European Union from the European Regional Development Fund.