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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Josef_SudekJosef Sudek - Wikipedia

    During the First World War he was drafted into the Austro-Hungarian Army in 1915 and served on the Italian Front until he was wounded in the right arm in 1916 which led to the limb being amputated at the shoulder. After the war he studied photography for two years in Prague under Jaromír Funke.

  2. May 6, 2015 · Sudek was a quiet man but truly indomitable, overcoming both physical hardship and war to produce his images. Born in 1896 in Kolin in Bohemia, his father apprenticed him at a young age to a bookbinder. But before he could become one he was drafted in 1915 into the Hungarian army and sent to fight in Italy.

  3. Jun 23, 2023 · In the 1920s Sudek’s work was mostly pictorial. His desire to achieve mastery led him to study and be thoughtful on his images and the quality of the work presented, elevating photography to a...

  4. Jan 13, 2017 · There’s a distinct painterly quality in Josef Sudek’s work. His subject matter, both the still lifes and the cityscapes, is close to the art of painting. Sudek took up photography in the years when the medium was struggling to find its own voice.

  5. Josef Sudek was a Czech photographer best known for his poetic black-and-white images of Prague and intimate still lifes taken in and around his studio. Born in 1896 in Kolín, Czech Republic, Sudek apprenticed as a bookbinder, but after being drafted into the Austro-Hungarian army during World War I he was severely wounded and lost his right arm.

  6. Josef Sudek (1896–1976) remains the most widely published Czech photographer. He was so unmistakeably original that it would be an exercise in futility to look for creative parallels in his contemporaries.

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  8. He was a member of the Prague Club for Amateur Photographers from 1920-24, and studied photography at the State School of Graphic Arts in Prague from 1922 to 1924. His early work was influenced by that of Clarence White, who espoused a Pictorialist approach to light and form.

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