20th Century Art: A Different Perspective

20th Century Art: A Different Perspective

View full screen - View 1 of Lot 6. Blob (Architectural Model for the National Library, Prague; unique piece).

Property from a Private European Collection

Jan Kaplický

Blob (Architectural Model for the National Library, Prague; unique piece)

Lot Closed

November 11, 02:06 PM GMT

Estimate

24,000 - 32,000 GBP

Lot Details

Description

Property from a Private European Collection 

Jan Kaplický

Czech, 1937 - 2009

Blob (Architectural Model for the National Library, Prague; unique piece)


with the artist's foundation label

mixed media in perspex box

plexiglas box: 36 by 67 by 56.5cm., 14 by 26 by 22in.

Private collection, Prague (inherited from the artist)

Conceived in 2006, this is a unique piece.

Jan Kaplický was a pioneering Czech architect who emigrated to London following the Soviet invasion of Prague in 1968. He created some of Britain’s most remarkable modern buildings – including the media center at Lord’s cricket grounds (1994) and the Selfridges department store at the Bullring, Birmingham (1999). A futuristic dreamer, architect of dazzling and inspirational visions, and a brilliant artist and designer, Kaplický was always ahead of his time. Indeed, many of his project were so utopian, technically advanced and challenging that only few were actually constructed. Nevertheless, Kaplický was a visionary architect who managed to move the development of architecture forward just by the strength of his ideas.


Kaplický started his career in Denys Lasdun’s studio, then worked for Renzo Piano and Richard Roger’ studio, participated in the creation of the Centre Pompidou in Paris, and cooperated with Norman Foster, before establishing his own practice in 1979 with David Nixon, Future Systems studio. Future Systems was initially conceived as a ‘think tank’ and part of the British hi-tech movement, a style of architecture that celebrated technology and innovation. Kaplický and Nixon set out to explore architectural ideas far beyond the construction abilities of the time. In 1989 they were joined by Amanda Levete, whose practical approach enabled them to start realizing their ambitious projects. Although only a handful of buildings were realized during their time together, each one stands as an iconic landmark, boldly standing out in their context.


Kaplický died in 2009. At the time, he was working on a controversial design for the new Czech National Library in Prague, Blob, for which the current work is the model. Kaplický’s building designs were often characterized by their organic shapes, which led to the moniker ‘Blobitecture’. Officially named The Eye Above Prague, the eight-story building was designed to house ten million volumes. Although it won the city contest in 2007, its futuristic appearance was met with criticism from both the public and politicians, and the building has yet to be constructed.