Tyrš did not study art or art history but he received proper education from Robert von Zimmermann, visiting art galleries in Germany, France, Italy and England and reading art history books (
Johann Joachim Winckelmann,
Gotthold Ephraim Lessing,
Friedrich Schiller,
Arthur Schopenhauer,
Hippolyte Taine,
Herbert Spencer,
Henry Thomas Buckle,
Karl Schnaase,
Gustav Friedrich Waagen,
Franz Theodor Kugler,
Anton Heinrich Springer,
Johannes Overbeck and
Giovanni Morelli). His first book on
aesthetics was
Hod olympický (Olympic Feast, 1868), an ode to Greek arts and sports. In his next book
O zákonech kompozice v umění výtvarném (The Law of Composition in Art, 1873) he distinguishes
three kinds of art work: 1. more content than form, 2. balanced, 3. more form than content. His study
O zákonu konvergence při tvoření uměleckém (The Law of Convergence in Creating Art, 1880) argues that both form and content should be submitted to the artist's idea. The idea is influenced by external conditions which he described in his other important books
O slohu gotickém (
Gothic Style, 1881),
Láokoón, dílo z doby římské (
Laocoön, Masterpiece from the Roman Times, 1873),
Phidias, Myron, Polyklet (1879) and the unfinished
Raffael Santi a díla jeho (
Raffael Santi and his work, 1873, published 1933). Tyrš saw an
ideal type of Czechslavic men and women in the paintings of
Josef Mánes while in contrast, he did not think highly of the work of
Mikoláš Aleš. His life interest and greatest monograph focused on the life and work of
Jaroslav Čermák (1879). Among the world's painters he admired
Eugène Delacroix. Tyrš's work on Láokoón was denied by the professors at Philosophical Faculty of
Charles-Ferdinand University in Prague in 1879 and so he applied for the title of
docent at
Czech Technical University in Prague. On appeal, he succeeded and became a teacher at the university. When Charles-Ferdinand University split into Czech and German universities, Tyrš was appointed docent (1882) and then
professor (1883) of art history at Philosophical Faculty of the Czech university. His first lectures focused on the art of Orient. He signed a contract on writing
The History of Art for
Jan Otto but died at the start of the work. Tyrš was a member of a jury to assess projects for the
Prague National Theatre building. ==Sports and the Sokol movement==