Jiří Sozanský is one of those artists whose work immediately resonates with the pulse of the times in which they live. He entered the Czech art scene in the mid-1970s, at the height of normalisation and creative unfreedom. His entire artistic output was committed to opposing all forms of violence, despotism and ideological dictatorship that trampled on human rights and human dignity. He is known as a non-conformist artist and a man of distinct opinions and attitudes, expressing himself through large-scale multimedia projects tied to a specific place. Sozansky's paintings advocating the victims of mass violence have predecessors in the
Horrors of War series by
Francisco Goya and
Guernica by
Pablo Picasso, his sculptures express a deep connection with the existentialism of
Alberto Giacometti.
Early work During his training for the exams at the
Academy of Fine Arts in Prague, Jiří Sozanský was engaged in drawing and painting portraits, and while working for the
Geological survey he painted landscapes. Already during his studies and then until 1979 he devoted himself to graphic art. In 1968–1973 he created a series of prints with biblical themes, drawings and paintings from the surrounding of the
Kladno steelworks and the Most region. During his visits to the basement apartment of Mr. Švacha, who was a model in the sculpture studio of the
Academy of Fine Arts, the series of graphic prints
Job and
Basement were created. Sozanský depicts socially compelling and relevant content, seen against the broader context of human existence. The human being is depicted naked, alone and without props, as close to pathos as to the misery of humanity. Sozansky's reflection on old age, suffering, loneliness and pain is a timely parallel to the story of the
Old Testament Book of Job. From 1970 he modelled sculptures in the studio of
Olbram Zoubek. The model for the sculpture with a deeply humanistic message
Silent Lament was Mr. Švacha. A series of frottage paintings were made from the sculpture, and the entire
Basement series became the basis for scenographic models depicting a man in extreme situation. He concluded his travels to the
Theresienstadt Ghetto, which he undertook from 1973, with his first solo exhibition of paintings, drawings and sculptures in 1976. From 1975 came the series of large-scale tempera drawings
Prophets and ink drawings of the series
Old Men. Sozansky's sculptures
Memento and
Silent Lament became part of the collection of the
Terezín Memorial. In the series
Basement (1979), the human figure gets lost in the maze of a house and recalls the trauma of the
normalisation era, which Marie Langrová described as wandering from wall to wall. In 1979–1980, drawings of the series
Organism of the City and in 2006–2010, reconstructed models of extreme situations were created, where small human figures serve as the scale of sculptural architectures (
Models of Extreme Situations, 1979–2006,
Skeletons, 1984–2009,
Homage to Jan Palach, 2008,
Mater Mortis, 2010) Jiří Sozanský, Terezín, 1978.jpg|
Small Fortress, 1978 Jiří Sozanský, Terezín, Modely mezních situací (1979-1980).jpg|
Models of extreme situations, Small Fortress (1979–1980) Jiří Sozanský, Terezín, Kammer, 1980.jpg|
Kammer, Small Fortress 1980 Jiří Sozanský, Terezín, Pevnost (2021) III.jpg|
Small Fortress (2021) Jiří Sozanský, Terezín, Pevnost (2021) VII.jpg|
Small Fortress (2021)
1980–1985 Sozansky's activities in Small Fortress culminated in 1980 with a
private symposium, which was attended by
Zdeněk Beran, Ivan Bukovský,
Oldřich Kulhánek, Lubomír Janečka, Petr Kovář and Ivan Dolejšek. The works created inside the Small Fortress were exhibited directly in the prison cells and in the corridor of the solitary confinement cells in the IV. yard. The exhibition was banned shortly afterwards when officials realized that it was not just a commemoration of
the Holocaust, but an obvious reminder of the fascist practices of the new totalitarianism. In 1979–1980, he created a series of drawings,
Project IV. Yard, which confront the silhouettes of human figures with the cold geometry of space. For the reconstruction, Sozanský invited young actors, who performed during the opening and later repeated staging completely naked just for photo documentation. From 1980 onwards, his drawing series
Days and Years of My Mother was created, where he set the portraits in an impersonal architecture suggested only by lines. The series was created continuously and ended with his mother's death in 1989. From 1981 he worked in
Most on the series
The Trial and
Anatomy of an Industrial Landscape and in 1982 he created drawings and installations on the theme of
Escape together with Jiří Novák. Architect Jiří Borl, who draw plans and perspectives, was a co-author of the resulting large-scale drawings. most of all resemble variants of the torture instrument from
Kafka's short story
In the Penal Colony. Jiří Sozanský, Proces (Most 1981) I.jpg|
The Trial (Most 1981) Jiří Sozanský, Proces (Most 1981) IV.jpg|
The Trial (Most 1981) Jiří Sozanský, Proces (Most 1981) V.jpg|
The Trial (Most 1981) Jiří Sozanský, Únik (Most 1982) II.jpg|
Escape (Most 1982) Jiří Sozanský, Únik (Most 1982) I.jpg|
Escape (Most 1982) Jiří Sozanský, Hornická šatna (1982-1983) II.jpg|''Miners' changing room'' (1982–1983) Jiří Sozanský, akce Přežít (1984).jpg|
action Survive (1984) Jiří Sozanský, Obětování (performance 1992) I.jpg|
Sacrifice (performance 1992) Jiří Sozanský, Obětování (performance 1992) II.jpg|
Sacrifice (performance 1992) Jiří Sozanský, Obětování (Barok a dnešek, 1992) III.jpg|
Sacrifice (exhibition
Baroque and today, 1992) At the turn of 1983–1984, reading a
samizdat edition of
Orwell´s
novel 1984, inspired him to start a project in the setting of the interior of the burnt-out
Trade Fair Palace. Thanks to arch. Miroslav Masák and the company SIAL, which reconstructed the building for the purposes of the
National Gallery, he was able to realize his plans there for several months. The project included live performances, photographs, paintings, reinforcing iron cages and sculptural objects (the events
Survive,
There and Back,
Massacre,
Human Couple). Thanks to the collaboration of
Evald Schorm, the cameraman
Jaroslav Kučera and editor
Jiří Brožek, as well as several
Laterna magika actors participated in the film. Everything took place under
conspirative conditions, and Sozanský eventually stopped the entire project so as not to endanger the others involved. The results of the art project were exhibited as late as 2014 under the title
1984 - The Year of Orwell at the
Trade Fair Palace. The distinctive pathos and expressive, almost baroque overflow created a suitable setting for the subsequent performance by the French actor
Dominique Collignon-Maurin on the theme
Man Job, which is captured on video. In 1988, Sozanský exhibited his large-scale paintings of groups of naked human bodies in dramatic situations jointly with plaster objects by
Hugo Demartini at the Lidový dům (People's House) in
Vysočany. In the same year, he participated in the unofficial show of previously banned artists
Forum 88 in the Prague Marketplace (environment
Closed, Sozanský organized the event together with
Theodor Pištěk). In 1988 he also exhibited in the
National Pavilion at the
Venice Biennale and in 1989 at the Spring Salon in
Paris at the
Grand Palais. Jiří Sozanský, Zápas (1981-1987).jpg|
Wrestling (1981–1987) Jiří Sozanský, Zápas (1981-1987) II.jpg|
Wrestling (1981–1987) Jiří Sozanský, Zápas (1981-1987) III.jpg|
Wrestling (1981–1987) Jiří Sozanský, Bojiště (1988-1989).jpg|
Battlefield (1988–1989) Jiří Sozanský, Zápas (1987) I.jpg|
Wrestling (1987) Jiří Sozanský, Zápas (1987) II.jpg|
Wrestling (1987) Jiří Sozanský, Dům č. 50, Člověk Job (1987) I.jpg|
House No. 50, Man Job (1987) Jiří Sozanský, Apokalypsa (1993), Kassel.jpg|
Apokalypse (1993), Kassel Jiří Sozanský, Hodina vlků (kresba 1994).jpg|
Hour of the Wolves (drawing 1994) Jiří Sozanský, Oběť (2023) II.jpg|
Sacrifice (2023)
1990s In 1990, Sozanský together with the prisoners created a memorial to the victims of totalitarianism in
Valdice prison, consisting of concrete torsos of human figures with partially exposed iron construction and reinforced concrete blocks. The prisoners engraved it with the names of their fellow prisoners who had been tortured by the guards. Photodocumentation of the work, together with prisoners' testimonies, was published in a book. The statues installed in the prison's walking yard interfered with normal functioning and in 2007 had to be removed and taken to the
Vojna Memorial in the former communist
concentration camp and
uranium mines near
Příbram. Sozanský created a new bronze
Memorial to Political Prisoners in front of Valdice prison at the request of the Ministries of Culture and Justice, which was unveiled in 2009. Jiří Sozanský, věznice Valdice (1990) IX.jpg|Jiří Sozanský, Valdice prison yard (1990) Jiří Sozanský, věznice Valdice (1990) II.jpg|Jiří Sozanský, Valdice prison yard (1990) Jiří Sozanský, věznice Valdice (1990) V.jpg|Jiří Sozanský, Valdice prison yard (1990) Jiří Sozanský, věznice Valdice (1990) VI.jpg|Jiří Sozanský, Valdice prison yard (1990) Jiří Sozanský, věznice Valdice (1990) I.jpg|Jiří Sozanský, Valdice prison yard (1990) After returning from
Sarajevo, he exhibited his photographic records, collages and drawings in New synagogue in
Libeň, Prague. The exhibition
City under Siege included a performance by the theatre group
HAMADA. During his trips to
Sarajevo, the burnt down
University Library, designed by the Czech architect Vítek, became a focal point for Sozanský. He held an exhibition of his paintings on the theme
The Struggle of Angels at this site. The total area of the
Forum populi canvases, assembled into a single unit, was 12 x 7 metres. The statics of the library walls were disturbed and the whole installation collapsed in January 1996. In 1996, Sozanský participated in the
Tribute to Sarajevo with his installation in
Grbavica (Sarajevo), a performance by a theatre group (
Attempted Resurrection, September 1996) and the launching of burning straw bales on the bridge over the
Miljacka river to symbolise the expulsion of the evil spirit of war The final exhibition
Art in Extreme Situation, which presented Sozansky's works on the Sarajevo mission, was held in 1977 at
Le Clos des Arts in
Brussels The city of
Sarajevo itself, together with the testimony of refugees from the territories occupied by
Serbian paramilitary forces, became the inspiration for a series of paintings on the theme of
Apocalypse. Jiří Sozanský, Forum populi, Sarajevo 1995 (III).jpg|
Forum populi, Sarajevo 1995 Jiří Sozanský, Pocta Sarajevu 1996.jpg|
Hommage to Sarajevo 1996 Jiří Sozanský, Pokus o zmrtýchvstání, Sarajevo 1996 (II).jpg|
Attempted Resurrection, Sarajevo 1996 Jiří Sozanský, Odplavení zla, Sarajevo 1996.jpg|
The sweeping away of evil, Sarajevo 1996 Jiří Sozanský, koláž, Brusel 1997 (II).jpg|
Collage, Brussels 1997 The previous paintings are loosely related to the graphic cycles
Beasts (1999),
Refugees (2000),
Hunt (2000) and large-scale etchings of the series
Stone and Bone (2001), inspired by the poetry of
Jan Zahradníček.
2000–2010 Accidentally discovered
samizdat edition of poem
Znamení moci (Signs of Power) by Jan Zahradníček provided Sozanský with a new source of inspiration for works dealing with the spiritual legacy of prisoners of
communist and
Nazi concentration camps. Since 2000, he has used fragments of the texts as an equal part of his pictorial collages, drawings and paintings. In 2003 Sozanský responded to the disastrous
flood of Prague in 2002, which completely devastated part of
the Karlín district, with an installation of large-scale paintings that combined
Samuel Beckett texts (
Stories and Texts for Nothing) with photographs, painting and assemblage, on and around the
Negrelli Viaduct (the
Exodus,
Animation of Cruelty,
Battlefield,
Incident,
Struggle of Angels,
Apocalypse,
Flood series). The project included performances by the ensembles
Teatr Novogo Fronta,
Boxart,
Palaestra, etc., on Beckett's texts in the devastated interior of the
Musical Theatre Karlín, scripted and set-designed by J. Sozansky. On the occasion of the 60th anniversary of the end of
World War II and the 10th anniversary of the end of
ethnic conflicts in the former
Yugoslavia, Sozanský exhibited a series
From Dust and Ashes (2005) in
Old Town Hall, which loosely followed the previous
Meeting with Beckett and
Homage to Jan Zahradníček - Stone and Bone. In 2007 he expanded this series to include works inspired by Willy Mahler's diary, which was used by
Arnošt Goldflam in 1996 as the basis for the play
Sweet Theresienstadt at the Archa Theatre. In 2006, Sozanský presented the sculpture
Apocalyptic Horseman as part of the Year with
Jewish Culture at the
Libeň New Synagogue, which was later transferred to the garden of
Troja Palace. From the memorial to the victims of totalitarianism, originally created in 1990 in the Valdice Prison, which was deinstalled and partially destroyed in 2007, the torsos of human figures were transported to the former communist
concentration camp Vojna in the
Příbram District. In 2009–2010, the sculptures were restored, supplemented with a ladder with a bronze statue and a concrete pedestal, and the
Memorial to the Victims of Communism thus acquired a definitive form. Sozanský elaborated his personal life experience with the communist regime in 2009 in a sculpture entitled
The Sixty-Ninth, where he incorporated a posthumous mask of
Jan Palach. Together with the sculptures
The Grand Inquisitor and
The Allies, it is placed in the foyer of the High Court in Prague. In the conference room of the
High court in
Prague, a composed evening took place, which included a part of Aleš Březina's opera
Tomorrow will be... with
Soňa Červená. Sozansky's active preoccupation with
boxing and a number of his organised performances of struggling naked human figures have been reflected in his drawings and paintings since the 1980s (
Working with the Body, Mánes 2000). The anatomy of the human body and movement is based on the Renaissance and Baroque masters, but after his visit to
Rome in 2009, the inspiration of
classical antiquity can also be seen in his work. The first such work is the larger-than-life sculpture
The Guardian (2008) for the
Supreme Audit Office, as well as drawings - studies of human bodies and paintings inspired by
Colosseum public spectacles presented as part of the project
Sevřeni v těle (The Caught in the Flesh) (
Colosseum. Winners and Losers, Mánes, Prague 2008). In 2010, Sozansky revisited
concentration camp in Auschwitz to take new photographic documentation in an attempt to bring closure to this theme in his work. The result was a series of large-scale paintings with the dominant motif of the railroad tracks and prison buildings, where the presence of people resembles only a clutter of abstract colour patches. He also used photographs from
Auschwitz for photo collages combining these images with recordings of performances of naked actors, dogs, texts, paintings and colourful images from the
slaughterhouse in the cycles
Kafilerie (Rendering) and
Scavengers (2010–2015). For other cycles of photographic collages, the
Karlín and post-flood images were the basis for
Sutiny (The Rubble) and
Ghetto (2010–2015). Jiří Sozanský, Štvanice, fotokoláž, tuš, akryl 90 x 150 cm, 2010.jpg|
Hunt, photocollage, ink, acrylic 90 x 150 cm, 2010 Jiří Sozanský, Popraviště 2014 Fotokoláž 50 x 130 cm.jpg|
Execution Grounds, photocollage 50 x 130 cm, 2014 Jiří Sozanský, Sutiny (2010-2015) I.jpg|
The Rubble (2010–2015) Jiří Sozanský, Sutiny (2010-2015) II.jpg|
The Rubble (2010–2015) Sozanský's project
The Twenty-Seventh Day (2010) reflects on the 60th anniversary of the staged
show trials of the 1950s and directly refers to the date of the execution of
Milada Horáková,
Jan Buchal,
Záviš Kalandra and
Oldřich Pecl on 27 June 1950. Sozanský exhibited expressive photo-collages and contemplative drawings at the
Straka Academy and installed three sculptures created for the project at the High Court in Prague. His next sculpture,
Mater Mortis, placed on a plinth in front of the Office of the
Government of the Czech Republic, is a deliberate reminder, in its brutality and sensual aggression, of the two regimes that sentenced
Horáková to death, as well as of the contemporary hysteria of women's labour collectives, who cried out for the heaviest sentence for her. In cooperation with the
Mene Tekel festival, the paintings and sculptures of the
Twenty-seventh Day project were exhibited at
Karolinum (2011). On the 20th anniversary of the
end of the communist regime,
Symposion Civic Association realized Jiří Sozanský's project
Closed at the
Municipal House, focusing on important personalities of Czech culture who fell victim to
communist rule (
Záviš Kalandra,
Jan Zahradníček,
Ivan Martin Jirous). The project included an exhibition
Homage to Magor, which consisted of graphic sheets with excerpts of texts by Ivan M. Jirous – Magor.
2011–2024 In 2011 Sozanský exhibited his project
Metropolis as a personal tribute to
Prague. The series consisted of large-format oil paintings of Prague monuments, some early works and sculptures: the biblical sculpture
Crucifixion and an original representation of
St. Vitus Cathedral. The 2012 Olympic year was commemorated by a group of sporting artists around Jiří Sozanský with a joint exhibition
Ekecheiria - a tribute to the Olympic tradition at the
City of Prague Museum. Sozanský exhibited large-scale drawings celebrating the beauty of the body, paintings and sculptural studies of wrestlers. In collaboration with
Meda Mládková and architect David Vávra, thematic exhibitions
Skeletons (2010),
The Zone (2013),
Homage to Jan Palach (2014) were organized at
Museum Kampa. In 2014, Sozanský presented his project
1984 – The Year of Orwell for the first time in public at
Trade Fair Palace. The entire project was created 30 years earlier in 1984 in a situation when the
communist regime drove independent culture underground and artists lived with the feeling of permanent threat from the authorities and a network of confidents they did not know at the time. The architecture of the burnt-out building expressed well the dehumanizing conditions of the normalization regime ("execution ground of conscience") and, as a monumental cage, it suited well the intention to create a film documentary describing various existential situations there. From the basic script from 1983 to 1984, sketches and photo documentation of the actions (
Survive,
Escapes,
The Hunt, Mechanisms of Power,
There and Back,
Massacre,
The Human Couple) have survived. To these, Sozanský added works from the series
Fragments of Memory and paintings and sculptures inspired by the architecture of the building (
Skeleton,
Ashes), photo collages against the background of the burnt-out interior of the building (
Mater mortis,
The Hunt,
The Incident), paintings combining architecture with the figure (
Hangmen,
Torso,
Execution,
The Grand Inquisitor,
The Big Bitch,
Pillories). Jiří Sozanský, Skelet 2010 Olejomalba 200 x 300 cm.jpg|Skeleton (oil) 200 x 300 cm, 2010 Jiří Sozanský, Skelet 2012 Kresba, tužka, akryl 160 x 240 cm.jpg|Skeleton (drawing, pencil, acryl) 160 x 240 cm, 2012 Jiří Sozanský, Skelet 2013 Olejomalba 210 x 340 cm.jpg|Skeleton (oil) 210 x 340 cm, 2013 Jiří Sozanský, Z cyklu Viselci 2013 - 2014 Kresba, akryl 160 x 240 cm.jpg|From the cycle
Hanged Men (drawing, acryl) 160 x 240 cm, 2013–2014 In 2014–2015, he returned to the theme of
Auschwitz once more and, based on photographic documentation, large-scale paintings of prison brick barracks and their interiors were created. The scheme of the extermination process, which is represented by a plaster model in the
Auschwitz museum, was reflected by Sozanský in a series of drawings of naked bodies in the backdrop of the
Auschwitz camp and bronze sculptures, where small figures give scale to the monstrous architecture (exhibited in Gallery of the Central Bohemian Region in 2015 under the title
Extreme Situations). Sozanský attempted to come to terms with the death of
Jan Palach, which marked his entire generation, with the 2015 exhibition
1969 - The Year of the Break at the
New Building of the National Museum and the Regional Museum in
Litomyšl, a publication with texts by a number of personalities, and a video interview with
Olbram Zoubek, who took off Jan Palach's postmortem mask. Sozanský treats the sacrifice of Jan Palach and
Jan Zajíc with reverence, and his "residual record" of physical presence can be compared to the suffering symbolism of
The Shroud of Turin or the human shadow carved into the stone steps by the atomic blast in
Hiroshima. On the theme of Jan Palach, the
National Theatre organized the performance
Ice Age 2015 with a screening of Jiří Sozanský's works. Jiří Sozanský, triptych Jan Palach (2019), Karolinum.jpg|Jiří Sozanský and
triptych Jan Palach - Ascension (2019),
Karolinum Jiří Sozanský, triptych Jan Palach (2019), Karolinum III.jpg|
triptych Jan Palach - Ascension (2019),
Karolinum Jiří Sozanský, triptych Jan Palach (2019), GASK.jpg|
triptych Jan Palach - Ascension (2019),
Gallery of the Central Bohemian Region in
Kutná Hora In 2018, the Gallery of the Central Bohemian Region (GASK) organized the balance exhibition
Signum Actus / Place of the Act, which included Sozanský's works with similar themes, from the early graphic series
Job (1972) to large-format paintings dedicated to
Palach and
Zajíc (cycles
16. 1. 1969,
Place - dedicated to the concepts of the Palach memorial in his birthplace in
Všetaty,
Memorials,
Locus actionis dedicated to
Jan Zajíc). Sozanský's triptych
Ascension, inspired by the sacrifice of Jan Palach and containing his
death mask, was permanently installed in permanent exposition of GASK and in the corridor of
Karolinum in 2019. Sozanský's project
House of Fear (2018) in
Segovia in Spain borrows its title from a poem written by
Jan Zahradníček during his imprisonment in
Pankrác Prison. In addition to Zahradníček, the exhibition also commemorated
Ivan Martin Jirous,
Milada Horáková and
Záviš Kalandra in the form of sculptures, photo collages and acrylic paintings and drawings combined with texts. A separate part of the exhibition were photo collages with authentic testimonies of Valdice prisoners from 1990. Sozanský had been in contact with
Václav Havel since 1984, but it was only after 2011, when he intensely felt the physical changes associated with old age, that he decided to create his portraits. The drawings, in which he incorporated Havel's texts, were based on photographic portraits by Alan Pajer and
Oldřich Škácha. For the 30th anniversary of the fall of communism, Sozanský prepared the balance exhibition
Amnesia (2019–2020) at the
Municipal House in
Prague, where he commemorates important victims and prisoners of
Nazism (
K. Čapek,
E. Filla), the 1950s (Zahradníček, Horáková, Kalandra,
J. Stránský), the victims of the Soviet occupation (Palach, Zajíc) and the prisoners of the communist regime during normalization (Jirous,
Gruntorád, Havel) as individuals who found themselves in extreme situation and represent a moral model that should not be forgotten. The theme of the exhibition was also related to his personal frustration with a society that has lost its original
ethos of 1989 and has returned with its indifference to moral values to the stereotypes of behaviour that persisted from the normalization era. The portraits of Václav Havel were accompanied by texts and a separate display of a kind of reliquary with police portraits from investigation files and various prison personal possessions. Portraits of V. Havel were exhibited in 2012 at the
Palace of Europe in Strasbourg, then at the Military History Institute Prague. Jiří Sozanský - Amnézie, Obecní dům (2019) I.jpg|
Jiří Sozanský – Amnesia,
Municipal House (2019) Jiří Sozanský - Amnézie, Obecní dům (2019) VII.jpg|
Amnesia,
Municipal House (2019) Jiří Sozanský, Václav Havel - věznice Ostrava (2019).jpg|
Václav Havel – Ostrava prison (2019) Jiří Sozanský, Václav Havel - věznice Praha (2019) III.jpg|
Václav Havel – Prague prison (2019) Jiří Sozanský, Václav Havel (2019) III.jpg|
Václav Havel (2019) In 2023, a bronze monument to the victims of the
Soviet invasion of 1968, created by Jiří Sozanský, was unveiled at the Military Historical Institute in Prague. It bears the names of a total of 137 victims who died as a result of the invasion by the end of 1968. The monument will be installed as part of the reconstruction of
Wenceslas Square between the old and new buildings of the
National Museum. In 2024, Sozansky presented its second part, dedicated to the victims of the 1969 protests against the Soviet occupation. The complete memorial is temporarily located on the Vltava embankment in the vicinity of the
Museum Kampa. Jiří Sozanský's autobiographical account from 2021, entitled
Post Scriptum, presents his life story and comments on his own work.
Work by technique •
Graphic cycles': Basement, Job, Pilgrim, Wrestling, From Dust and Ashes •
Cycles of drawings, paintings and collages: The Organism of the city, Days and Years of My Mother, Anatomy of an Industrial Landscape, The Body, On the Edge of the city, Skin, Incident, Escapes, Battlefield, The Fall, Metropolis, Hanged Men, Apocalypse, Kafileria, Scavengers, Rubble, Ghetto •
Video Projects': Escape ("Most 82"), Panic, House No. 50 ( Individual Eating, Family Psychotherapy, Convalescents, Bedroom, Attributes of Love, Mirror of Solitude, Visitors, Incident, Big Laundry), Fortress (Terezín), Containers, Closed, Report from 3. Ward, Homage to Jan Zahradníček, Karlín Zone A, From Dust and Ashes, Confined in the Body, The Twenty-Seventh Day, Skeletons, 1984 - The Year of Orwell, Extreme Situations, The Zone, Homage to Jan Palach, Amnesia
Sculptures in public space Jiří Sozanský, Apokalyptický jezdec (2006).jpg|Apokalyptic Horseman (2006), damaged Jiří Sozanský, Strážce (2008) II.jpg|The Guardian (2008) Jiří Sozanský, Strážce (2008) V.jpg|The Guardian (2008), detail Jiří Sozanský, Mater Mortis (2010).jpg|Mater Mortis (2010)
Monuments and memorials Jiří Sozanský, Memento mori II, 1992.jpg|
Memento mori, Richard Crematorium, Litoměřice 1992 (damaged by vandals and deinstalled in 2018) Tábor Vojna, plastika s žebříkem.jpg|
Memorial to the victims of communism, former labour camp Vojna near Příbram uranium mines (2010) Památník politických vězňů ve Valdicích.jpg|
Monument to political prisoners in Valdice (2017) Pomník obětem okupace z roku 1968 a obětí protestů v roce 20250818 173626.jpg|Monument to the victims of the 1968 occupation and the 1969 protests (2024)
Collections •
National Gallery Prague •
Moravian Gallery in Brno •
Terezín Memorial •
Museum Kampa •
Centre Georges Pompidou Paris •
Musée d'art et d'histoire de Saint-Denis,
Paris •
Musée d'art moderne de la Ville de Paris •
Helsinki City Museum •
National Gallery of Bosnia and Herzegovina,
Sarajevo • Aleš South Bohemian Gallery in Hluboká nad Vltavou • Regional Gallery Liberec • Gallery of Central Bohemian Region in Kutná Hora (formerly Czech Museum of Fine Arts in Prague) • Regional Gallery of the Highlands in Jihlava • Gallery of Modern Art in Hradec Králové • Museum of Art Olomouc • Benedikt Rejt Gallery Louny • North Bohemian Art Gallery in Litoměřice • Gallery of Modern Art in Roudnice nad Labem • Art Gallery Karlovy Vary • Gallery Klatovy / Klenová • private collections at home and abroad
Exhibitions (selection) • 1976
Jiří Sozanský, Terezín Memorial • 1985
Jiří Sozanský: Drawings, Regional Gallery Liberec • 1986/1987
Jiří Sozanský, Opatov Gallery, Prague, Na perch Gallery, Brno, Small Scene, České Budějovice • 1987
Jiří Sozanský: House No. 50, Gallery 55, Kladno • 1988
Jiří Sozanský: Graphic Cycles, Microbiological Institute of the Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences, Prague • 1989
Jiří Sozanský: 1970-1989, People's House in Vysočany, Prague • 1990
Jiří Sozanský: Report from Ward 3,
Valdice Prison • 1991
Jiří Sozanský: Paintings, Nová síň Gallery, Prague • 1991
Jiří Sozanský: Drawings, Litera Gallery, Prague • 1993
Jiří Sozanský: The Theme of the Bible (1st exhibition of the series
The Big Theme), Galerie Litera, Prague • 1994
Jiří Sozanský: From Dust and Ashes, Military History Museum, Prague • 1994
Jiří Sozanský: Graphics, University Gallery, Plzeň • 1995
Jiří Sozanský: Forum Populi, Vyšehrad, Gorlice, Prague • 1996
Jiří Sozanský: Sarajevo, Litera Gallery, Prague • 1996
Jiří Sozanský: Exodus, Vyšehrad, Gorlice, Prague • 1996
Jiří Sozanský: Homage to Sarajevo, Part I, Gallery of Czech Culture, Český Krumlov • 1999
Jiří Sozanský: Toward the sources of inspiration, drawing and graphic works by Jiří Sozanský, E Gallery, Žirovnice, Šternberský Palace, Prague • 1999
Jiří Sozanský: Drawings, gouaches, prints,
Millennium Gallery, Prague • 1999
Jiří Sozanský: The Theme of the Bible, Litera Gallery, Prague • 2001
Jiří Sozanský: Stone and Bone, Symposion, Prague • 2001
Jiří Sozanský: Drawings & prints,
Millennium Gallery, Praha • 2001
Jiří Sozanský: Homage to Jan Zahradníček, Hollar Gallery, Prague • 2005
Jiří Sozanský: Zone, Mánes Exhibition Hall, Prague • 2005
Jiří Sozanský: Theme of Job, North Bohemian Gallery of Fine Arts in Litoměřice • 2005
Jiří Sozanský: From Dust and Ashes - Collages, Prints,
Old Town Hall, Prague • 2006
Jiří Sozanský: Graphics, Magna Gallery, Ostrava • 2009
Jiří Sozanský: Rubble,
Municipal House, Prague • 2009
Jiří Sozanský, Museum of the Police of the Czech Republic, Prague • 2010
Jiří Sozanský: Skeletons,
Museum Kampa, Prague • 2010
Jiří Sozanský: Day Twenty Seven, Museum of the Police of the Czech Republic, Prague • 2011
Jiří Sozanský: Metropolis, Prague City Museum • 2014
Jiří Sozanský: 1984 - The Year of Orwell,
National Gallery Prague • 2015
Jiří Sozanský: Extreme situations, Gallery of the Central Bohemian Region in Kutná Hora • 2016
Jiří Sozanský: 1969 The Year of the Break,
New Building of the National Museum, Prague • 2018
Jiří Sozanský: House of Fear / La casa miedo, former Segovia Prison, Spain • 2019,
Jiri Sozansky: Amnesia,
Municipal House, Prague
Collective For details see abART: Jiří Sozanský: Collective Exhibitions ==Decorations==