Drawings and prints Nepraš's first humorous drawings were created in 1956 during compulsory lectures on
Marxism–Leninism at the
Academy, originally as a play and response to drawings by
Bedřich Dlouhý, and later to cartoons by
Saul Steinberg. The drawings were also source for his later sculptural work. The drawings of human figures from the late 1950s reflect an absurd, dehumanised and alienated world where horror and terror as well as comedy and humour grow from the same base (
Funeral of a Clown, 1957). Some were inspired by reading - illustrations for
The Trial by Franz Kafka (1959) or the poems of
Edgar Allan Poe ('
Berenice, 1960), music (
The Midnight Tone, 1959) or social atmosphere (
Puppet Theatre,
Labyrinths of the World, 1956–1961), and gradually evolved into a specific kind of black humour with existential overtones (
Little Brutality, 1959). Nepraš himself states that
"he recorded cruelty and brutality unconsciously and unintentionally with the aim to show what is not nice about reality, not wanting to moralize". Kafka's
The Castle accurately captured the atmosphere of the 1950s and influenced Nepraš's feelings, thinking and philosophy of life for a long time. In his correspondence,
Rudolf Komorous began to use the term
strangeness as an aesthetic principle, and the other members of the
Šmidra group identified with him. Karel-Nepraš,-Nepříjemná-situace-(1969),-lept-59-x-70-cm.jpg|
Unpleasant situation (1969), etching 59 x 70 cm Karel Nepraš, Pěšinka z katalogu Lidských neštěstí (1973).jpg|
Parting from the catalogue of Human misfortunes (1973) Karel Nepraš, Muž s vrtačkou (1973).jpg|
Man with drilling machine (1973) Karel Nepraš, Není to hezké, ale je to proti nafackování, 1979-1981.jpg|''It's not pretty, but it's against slapping'' (1979–1981) Karel Nepraš, In front of the dog buzz (1984).jpg|
In front of the dog kennel (1984) Karel Nepraš, Ovoce, zelenina (1989).jpg|
Fruits, vegetables (1989) Karel Nepraš, Breastfeeding (1975).jpg|
Brest-feeding (1975) Karel Nepraš, Ptáček II (1992).jpg|
Birdie II (1992) Karel Nepraš, Souboj (1992), litografie.jpg|
Match (1992), lithograph Karel Nepraš, Prsa na jiný způsob (ca. 1997).jpg|
Breasts in a different way () After a short non-figurative period (1960), Nepraš's subsequent drawings were created in parallel with his sculptural work and preceded the expressive figures and heads with bare bodily structures. Nepraš found inspiration in anatomical illustrations, but did not draw on them directly. He selectively and with metaphorical exaggeration emphasised ears, nasal cavities and dental canals, or tendons, blood vessels and nerves. The drawings reflected absurd plots and gradually reached a greater complexity of meaning (variants of
Dialogues,
Everything is in a Ball, the catalogue
Cycle of Human Misfortunes, 1960s–1980s), in connection with a conference on
Franz Kafka in
Liblice. In it, Kosík develops the metaphor of modern society as an absurd
Great Mechanism in which man finds himself helpless in a network of bureaucratic machinery and in a perpetuated alienated reality. Nepraš's graphic works (
Unpleasant Situation, 1969) and sculptures from the second half of the 1960s illustrate this feeling by involving various gears and moving parts. A specific personal testimony to the vicissitudes of life are Nepraš's New Year's cards, which in their radicality strike at the core of reality. By the end of the 1960s, their humour had already been replaced by nausea, loneliness, threat, manipulation, oppression and poisoning reality. Some cycles of drawings were published in books in the 1960s (
Totenklagen,
Funeral Songs, 1966) and in the 1980s in
South Bohemian Gallery in
Hluboká nad Vltavou or in
samizdat (
Trigon publishing house). At the end of the 1980s he illustrated
Ladislav Klíma's
The Sufferings of Prince Sternenhoch (Paseka, 1990). During the 1990s he made illustrations for new editions of books by Franz Kafka. In addition to drawings, Karel Nepraš also created numerous prints, mostly using the
etching and
lithography techniques ('
An Unpleasant Situation,
Berenice,
Birdie).
Ceramics and porcelain Ceramic figures of humans and animals (
Dog Angel as Monument,
Dog Mother and Child as Fountain, 1961) or stylized female torsos date from the late 1950s and early 1960s. Nepraš also used ceramics for structural relief, but in the early 1960s he preferred to work with metal. Some smaller ceramic sculptures were made in parallel with other work into the 1980s. In 1971, at the ceramic symposium in
Hradec Králové, Karel Nepraš created a large assemblage of majolica elements,
The Great Fountain (South Bohemian Gallery in Hluboká collection). From the 1980s comes the series of head-fountains made of stoneware pipes, cast iron and plumbing material. Later, he switched to welded sculptures inspired by F. Kafka (
Portrait of Gregor Samsa 1964, variants of
Castle, 1963, 1967) with vegetal motifs or literary elements. Karel Nepraš, Stojící I (1959).jpg|
Woman with Exposed Interior (1959) Karel Nepraš, Stojící II (1959).jpg|
Standing II (1959) Karel Nepraš, Luneta (1963).jpg|
Lunette (1963) Karel Nepraš, Malý reliéf (1963), NGP.jpg|
Small relief (1963),
National Gallery Prague Karel Nepraš, Galvanický reliéf (1964).jpg|
Galvanized relief (1964) Karel Nepraš, Portrét Řehoře Samsy (1964).jpg|
Portrait of Gregor Samsa (1964) Karel Nepraš, Zámek III (1967).jpg|
Castle III (1967), Aleš South Bohemian Gallery, Hluboká nad Vltavou Karel Nepraš, Hyena (před r. 1964).jpg|
Hyena (before 1964) In 1964, Karel Nepraš made headpieces out of wires, textiles and red lacquer for a forthcoming puppet ballet based on
Edgar Allan Poe and libretto by
Jan Koblasa, with music by
Rudolf Komorous (
The Mask of the Red Death), where the movement of the puppets was to be replaced by variable lighting. The figural type was already fixed in the drawings, but the necessary stylization in the construction of the sculpture also meant a shift in meaning.
Šmidra group had its own mythology with
Moroa, the sister of
Demona from the novel by
Ladislav Klíma, who combines angelic feminine fragility with afterlife horror. In Nepraš's attractive horror conception, his three versions of
Moroa (1965–1967) are skinless anatomical monsters, assembled from wires covered with fabric and painted with white, pink or red lacquer. Moroa II (1966), kovová konstrukce, textil, lak, v. 176 cm.jpg|
Moroa II (1966), metal structure, textile, lacquer, h. 176 cm Karel Nepraš, Sedící (1966) II.jpg|
Sitting (1966) Karel Nepraš, Šviháček - Moroa III (1967) I.jpg|
Swell - Moroa III (1967) Karel Nepraš, Moroa zvana Berkciáda (1965), Šviháček - Moroa III (1967).jpg|
Moroa Called Berkciade (1965),
Swell - Moroa III (1967) Karel Nepraš, Sedící, Moroa I a III (1965-1967).jpg|
Sitting, Moroa I and III (1965–1967) In the second half of the 1960s Nepraš created a drawing and three sculptural versions of Dialogue (
Dialogue, 1965,
Dialogue II, 1967) of which
The Great Dialogue (1966) became a major work of Czech modern sculpture and is on permanent display at the
National Gallery in Prague. Next came a large seven-figure sculpture
Family (1967–1969), made of welded metal parts and tubes wrapped in textile and partly using some tools (rakes, pitchforks). At that time Nepraš used only bright red nitrocellulose lacquer to finish the work, which unified the surface. Karel Nepraš, Hlava (1965).jpg|
Head (1965) Karel Nepraš, Dialog (1965) II.jpg|
Dialogue (1965) Karel Nepraš, Dialog II (1967).jpg|
Dialogue II (1967) Karel Nepraš, Velký dialog (1966).jpg|
The Great Dialogue (1966), National Gallery Prague Karel Nepraš, Rodina (1967-1969) (3).jpg|
Family (1967–1969) Nepraš gradually began to incorporate movable elements into his sculptures, at first only as non-functional cranks that did not move anything (
Head - Grinder, 1960s), but his version of
Dialogue from 1969 to 1970 already contains a horizontal cogged track on which a head moves between two torsos. He also tried to involve the audience (
Just keep rotating, 1967). In the 1970s, he created another series of distinctively red-coloured smaller sculptures made of wires and other metal elements, wrapped in textiles (
Red Head, 1975,
Head, 1977). Karel Nepraš, Hlava-mlýnek (60. léta).jpg|
Head - Grinder (1960s) Karel Nepraš, Račte točit (1967).jpg|
Just keep rotating (1967) Karel Nepraš, Račte točit (1967-1968).jpg|
Just keep rotating (1967–1968) Karel Nepraš, Červená hlava (70. léta).jpg|
Red Head (1970s) Karel Nepraš, Červená hlava (1975).jpg|
Red Head (1975) Karel Nepraš practised the technique of modelling and casting cast iron at the
Spatial forms sculpture symposium in
Ostrava in 1969, where he created his key work
Family Ready to Leave. Cranks, gears and chains became an integral part of Nepraš's sculptures. He has since used cast iron in its raw form as a basic element of his heads, figures, and assemblages with moving gears (
Bigger Rebukes Smaller 1969–1970) created through the mid-1970s. The increasing political oppression after the
Soviet occupation of Czechoslovakia also inspired two cast-iron sculptures conceived as presses:
Figures with Filling I and II (1969–1970) or red cast-iron sculptures of figures joined tightly together ('
Crowd, 1969-1970). The reinforcements and ribs of the cast-iron casts have their antecedents in Nepraš's drawings. Karel Nepraš, Větší domlouvá menšímu (1969-1970), Národní galerie Praha.jpg|'
Bigger Rebukes Smaller (1969-1970), Nátional Gallery Prague Karel Nepraš, Bez názvu (70. léta).jpg|
Untitled (1970s) Karel Nepraš, Figura s náplní I a II (1969-1970).jpg|
Figures with Filling I and II (1969-1970) Karel Nepraš, Zástup (1969-1970).jpg|
Crowd (1969-1970) Karel Nepraš, Přepadení králíkárny.jpg|
The Assault on the Rabbit Hutch (1972) Figures assembled from mechanisms and technical components are automata in which only their anthropometry is related to humans. But one can find in them a subtle humour in the details, and an absurd humour in the possible but meaningless applicability. Nepraš's humour attacks the intellect and releases tension. At the same time, the sculptor's conception of man as a mechanism without individuality is weakened by the artistic means used. The contrast between the drastic motif and its artistic travesty is strongly appealing. It excludes the tragedy and pathos of extreme situations and, as a bitter comedy, is closer to reality, which also mixes different genres. It finds its starting point in self-reflection and critical reckoning, which includes a methodical disregard for the self. Karel Nepraš, Hlava na noze (1966).jpg|
Head on foot (1966) Karel Nepraš, Žehlička (1968).jpg|
Iron - face (1968) Karel Nepraš, Busta (1969).jpg|
Bust (1969) Karel Nepraš, Hlava - rozhledna (1970-1971).jpg|
Head - watch tower (1970–1971) Karel Nepraš, Pokus o sebevraždu (1976-1977).jpg|
Suicide attempt (1976–1977)
Metal sculptures and assemblages (1970s–1990s) The sculptor later increasingly used prefabricated cast iron elements, pipes, screws, wheels and plumbing fittings to assemble objects (
Figural Sculpture with Screw, 1972, National Gallery in Prague,
An Attempt at Self-Portrait) or combines cast iron casts with tools (variations on the theme
Harvest, 1993/94), with stoneware, plumbing fittings and various banal objects such as
Head-fountains or
Portraits. In the late 1980s, Nepraš returned to the beginnings of his sculptural work, but the materials he used and the technique of joining them had changed. In addition to pipes, which only pretend to be functional, he used other plumbing materials and fittings. For his exhibition in the unofficial gallery at Opatov, he created a set of relief portraits in which, by carefully selecting the materials used, he attempted to characterize a few selected people from his surroundings (
Portrait of S.S, 1989). At the same time, he assembles individual sculptures into new contexts of meaning (variants of
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, 1988–1991), or creates conceptual environments (
The Lament Wall, 1990,
Bath for MV). In 1990, he participated in the
International Sculpture Symposium at
Lemberk Castle and created a spatial installation made of pipes and cast iron tubes resembling a giant animal skeleton. Karel Nepraš, Dialog V (1981) II.jpg|
Dialogue V (1981) Karel Nepraš, Lázeň pro M.V. nebo S.S. (1988).jpg|
Bath for M.V. or S.S. (1988) Karel Nepraš, Zeď nářků II (90. léta).jpg|
The Lament Wall II (1990s) Karel Nepraš, Tanečník (90. léta) (2).jpg|
Dancer (1990s) Karel Nepraš, Hlavy (90. léta).jpg|
Heads (1990s)
Electroporcelain and stoneware The ceramic object
Dialogue VIII - lightning rod was created during the symposium
Prostor Zlín in 1994. Since the mid-1990s, when Nepraš participated in the international ceramic symposium
Light, Shadow and Porcelain in
Louny, he has been working on a series of sculptures made of porcelain and stoneware. He learned to work with electroporcelain, which he used in smaller relief sculptures (
Drying Landscape, 1995,
Snow White and the 7 Dwarfs IV, 1995,
Manifestation at Temelín, 1995–1996,
Thurn-Taxis Ditch, 1995). In the 1990s, a series of busts was created as assemblages on a porcelain body in the shape of an inverted urinal or washbasin (
Porcelain Bust I, 1996,
Porcelain Bust II, 1998). After figurative objects-assemblages (
Breasts in a Different Way, 1996–1997,
Sitting, 1999), he created original variations parodying sanitary ware (the
Tender Toilet Bowls series, 1999). His work was playful and spontaneous, and his humour, sometimes bordering on the unbearable, was a serious and cruelly truthful statement.
Realizations in public space In 1962 Karel Nepraš participated in a commission for the Church of St. Peter and Paul in
Jedovnice, for which he designed the railings for the choir with the organ. Karel Nepraš has mastered the technique of modelling and casting in cast iron at the 1969
Sculpture Symposium of Spatial Forms in
Ostrava, where he created his principal work
Family Ready to Leave (1969) (uninstalled in 1974 and destroyed in the 1980s). The reconstructed sculptural group, created in 2011-2015 according to preserved Nepraš's designs, is exhibited permanently in Centre of Contemporary Art DOX, Prague. In the early 1970s, he also took interest in the design of a modern fountain for the castle park in Litomyšl. In the 1970s, Nepraš was forced to make a living as restorer for existential reasons. Thanks to the architect Pavel Kupka, he was at least able to create some realizations in architecture, for example on the facade of the Mourning Hall in Svitavy (1973). Karel Nepraš also used cast iron elements and steel in larger objects for public space (
Cameraman, 1988,
Bower and Springhouse, 1989, Home for the elderly in
Malešice). After the revival of the
Ostrava Symposium, Nepraš created the sculpture
Yogi in 1993, which was installed in the
Milada Horáková orchard in Ostrava. In 1993–1994 he started collaboration with the Regional Gallery in
Zlín and during symposium
Prostor Zlín (Space Zlín) has created large sculpture group
Dialogue VIII - Lighting conductor, which is installed since 1994 in front of
Alternative - Culture Institute Zlín. In front of the Tuscany Palace at
Hradčany Nepraš's stone columns are made in Baroque proportions of stylized busts of ladies wearing a neckcloth, thus forming the counterpart of the male guards of
Prague Castle. Nepraš's work is not only an accompanying decoration, but co-determines significantly the character of the place and brings the spirit of the present into
Baroque palaces. Nepraš's latest realization for public space is the
Monument to Jaroslav Hašek, which contains a merger of two classical ideas - an
equestrian statue and a
Herm. In the case of the monument, where the necessity of a realistic portrayal of the face could not be circumvented, Nepraš solved the need for free expression with a minor spitefulness in the style of his drawings and perched the bust of the writer on a plinth that runs through the body of the horse. The stylized sculpture of the horse was refreshed by a counter with beer trays and an unobtrusive quotation of his earlier sculptures composed of plumbing materials. Originally, the monument was to include a functional beer tap. The sculptor did not live to see the completion of the monument and therefore the bust of
Jaroslav Hašek and the horse's legs was created by the sculptor's daughter Karolína Neprašová in 2005. In 2008, another cast of the horse statue from the
Jaroslav Hašek monument was placed in the reconstructed
Nostic Palace (Ministry of Culture). The horse passes through the wall and while its rear part is located in the former stables, the head of the horse is visible in the dominant view from the palace courtyard. •
Cameraman, Barrandov, Prague (1989) •
Bower and Springhouse, Prague-
Malešice (1989) •
Figural Columns (27 executed nobles of Bohemia),
Liechtenstein Palace, Prague (1988–1993) •
Yogi, Ostrava (1993) •
Dialogue VIII - Lighting conductor, Zlín (1994) •
Stylized figural columns,
Fireplace, Tuscany Palace, Prague (1994–1998) •
Communication, OSJEP
Brno (1999) •
Monument of Jaroslav Hašek, Prokopovo square, Prague-
Žižkov (1995–2005) •
Horse statue,
Nostic Palace (Ministry of Culture) • Permanent exposition of sculptures in front of the Trade Palace,
National Gallery Prague (before 2020) Karel Nepraš, Rodina připravená k odjezdu (1969).jpg|
Family ready to leave (1969), second cast of sculpture, DOX, Prague Karel Nepraš, Šatičky (70. léta), litina.jpg|''Tailor's dummy - Gown'', Na Můstku street 4, Prague (1970s) Kovová plastika Kameraman u severního konce lávky přes Lamačovu ulici na Barrandově (Q63246651) 01.jpg|
Cameraman, 1989, Prague-
Barrandov Ostrava 273.jpg|
Yogi (1993), orchad of
Milada Horáková, Ostrava Zlín, Osvoboditelů, Dialog VIII (02).jpg|
Dialogue VIII - Lighting conductor,
Zlín (1994) Keramická plastika Zvěrokruh u domova seniorů v Řepínské ulici (Q64815460).jpg|
Ceramic sculpture zodiac at the home for the elderly in Řepínská Street, Prague Praha Veletržní palác expo.jpg|
Egypt-Giacometti-Nepraš, Trade palace, National Gallery Prague (before 2020) Karel Nepraš, Pomník Jaroslava Haška (2005).jpg|
Monument of Jaroslav Hašek (2005) Karel Nepraš, Pomník Jaroslava Haška (2005), detail.jpg|
Monument of Jaroslav Hašek (2005), detail Karel Nepraš, Socha koně v Nosticově paláci.jpg|
Horse(2008), Nostic Palace (Ministry of Culture)
Realizations in architecture Jedovnice varhany.jpg|
railings for the choir, Church of Sts. Peter and Paul,
Jedovnice (1963) Obřadní síň, Svitavy (Nepraš, arch. Kupka).jpg|facade of the Mourning Hall in
Svitavy (Nepraš, arch. Kupka, 1973) Karel Nepraš, Altán a prameník, 1989, Domov seniorů v Malešicích (5).jpg|
Bower and Springhouse, Home for the elderly in Prague-
Malešice (1989) Karel Nepraš, Malostranské náměstí 657.jpg|
Figural columns (27 executed nobles of Bohemia),
Liechtenstein Palace, Prague (1993–1995) Karel Nepraš, řada kamenných patníků před Toskánským palácem (1994-1998) III.jpg|
Stylized figural columns in front of the Tuscany palace, Prague (1994–1998)
Publications • Totenklagen / Funeral songs / Cants funèbres, Artia, enterprise for foreign trade, Prague 1966 • Puppenbusen (Satirische Zeichnungen), Heinrich Heine Verlag GMBH, Frankfurt 1969
Representation in collections •
National Gallery Prague •
Moravian Gallery in Brno •
Museum Kampa, Foundation of Jan and Meda Mládek •
National Gallery of Art,
Washington, D.C. •
Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. •
Musée d'art moderne de la Ville de Paris • Museum
Bochum •
Museum of Art, Łódź • Aleš South Bohemian Gallery in
Hluboká nad Vltavou • Gallery of the Central Bohemian Region (GASK) in
Kutná Hora (formerly Czech Museum of Fine Arts, Prague) • Benedikt Rejt Gallery,
Louny • Prague City Gallery • Gallery of Modern Art in
Hradec Králové • Gallery of Fine Arts in
Cheb • Gallery of Fine Arts in
Ostrava • Museum of Art
Olomouc • Regional Gallery in
Liberec • Museum of Art and Design
Benešov • private collections at home and abroad
Exhibitions Author's (selection) • 1960 Labyrinth of the World, cartoons, Rokoko theatre, Prague • 1963 Puppet theatre, cartoons, Paravan theatre, Prague • 1964 Sculptures, drawings, prints, Gallery at
Charles Square, Prague • 1969 Sculptures, Studium Generale,
Stuttgart • 1970 Račte točit / Just keep rotating,
Václav Špála Gallery, Prague • 1978 Karel Nepraš: Zeichnungen, plastiken, Sonnenring Galerie,
Münster • 1989 Karel Nepraš, Opatov Gallery, Prague • 1991 Kresby, grafika, ilustrace, kreslený humor a drobná plastika / Drawings, prints, illustrations, cartoons, small sculptures,
National Gallery Prague • 1991 Sculptures,
Old Town Hall, Prague • 1992/94 Sochy / Sculptures, Regional galleries in
Karlovy Vary,
Olomouc,
Ostrava • 1999 Nalakuj si sám / Paint it yourself, Gambit Gallery, Prague • 1999 Iron Story, Peron Gallery, Prague • 2000 Karel Nepraš, Centre tchèque
Paris • 2000 Karel Nepraš 1960 - 2000, Egon Schiele Art Centrum,
Český Krumlov • 2002 Karel Nepraš, Benedikt Rejt Gallery,
Louny • 2002 Sedící, stojící, kráčející / Sitting, standing, walking,
Queen Anne's Summer Palace (Belvedere), Prague • 2007 Karel Nepraš, House of Art,
Zlín • 2008 Karel Nepraš: Česká krajina / Czech landscape, Gallery of modern art in
Hradec Králové • 2012 Karel Nepraš, DOX, Centrum současného umění / Centre for Contemporary Art, Prague • 2016 Karel Nepraš: Family ready to leave, DOX, Centre for Contemporary Art, Prague • 2019 Karel Nepraš: Egypt—Giacometti—Nepraš, Museum of Art and Design,
Benešov Collective (selection from over 300) • 1954
1. Malmuzherciáda, Klub unitářů, Prague • 1957
Výstava na jeden den / Exhibition for single day, Střelecký ostrov, Prague • 1964
Výstava / Exhibition D, Nová síň Gallery, Prague • 1964
Socha / Sculpture 1964,
Liberec • 1965
Šmidras, Letohrádek Ostrov • 1965
Junge tschechische graphiker, 1. Teil,
Alpbach • 1965
Jeune Avant-garde Tchécoslovque, Galerie Lambert,
Paris • 1966
Tschechoslowakische Kunst der Gegenwart, Akademie der Künste,
Berlín • 1967 ''Mostra d'arte contemporanea Cecoslovacca'', Castello del Valentino,
Turin • 1967
Fantasijní aspekty současného českého umění / Fantasy Aspects of Contemporary Czech Art, Regional Gallery of Highlans, Jihlava,
Václav Špála Gallery, Prague • 1967
17 tsjechische kunstenaars, Galerie Orez,
The Hague • 1968
Die Logik der durchsichtigen Nacht, Kunstamt Wilmersdorf,
Berlín • 1968
Šmidrové / Šmidras,
Václav Špála Gallery, Prague, Regional Gallery,
Hradec Králové • 1969
22 grafici della Cecoslovacchia, Libreria Feltrinelli,
Florence • 1969
Sept jeunes peintres tchécoslovaques, Galerie Lambert,
Paris • 1969
Arte contemporanea in Cecoslovacchia, Galleria Nazionale d'Arte Moderna e Contemporanea (GNAM),
Rome • 1969
Nová figurace / New Figuration, Mánes, Prague • 1969
Socha a město / Sculpture and Town,
Liberec • 1970
Tschechische Skulptur des 20. Jahrhunderts: Von Myslbek bis zur Gegenwart, Schloß Charlottenburg - Orangerie,
Berlin • 1970
Artchemo,
Václav Špála Gallery, Prague • 1970
Karel Nepraš, Naděžda Plíšková, Malinův dům,
Havlíčkův Brod • 1980/81
Eleven Contemporary Artists from Prague,
New York University, University of Michigan,
Ann Arbor, Michigan • 1981 ''Netvořice '81'', House of
Bedřich Dlouhý, Netvořice • 1985
Karel Nepraš, Jan Steklík: Žena ve výtvarném umění / Woman in Art, ÚMCH, Prague • 1985
Barevná socha / Colourful sculpture, Gallery H,
Kostelec nad Černými lesy • 1987
Expressiv. Mitteleuropäische Kunst seit 1960,
Vienna • 1987
Grotesknost v českém výtvarném umění 20. století / Grotesqueness in 20th Century Czech Art,
Old Town Hall, Prague • 1988
Expressiv, Central European Art since 1960,
Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden,
Washington, D.C. • 1988
Jan and Meda Mladek Collection,
Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art,
Ithaca, New York • 1989
Úsměv, vtip a škleb / Smile, Joke and Grin,
Palace of Culture, Prague • 1990 ''Pocta umělců Jindřichovi Chalupeckému / Artists' Tribute to Jindřich Chalupecký'', Prague City Gallery • 1990
Neoficiální. Umění Československa 1968-1989 / Unofficial. Art of Czechoslovakia 1968-1989,
Moravian Gallery in Brno,
Regensburg • 1990
Polymorphie: Kunst als subversives Element Tschechoslowakei 1939-1990,
Martin-Gropius-Bau,
Berlin • 1990
Czech Art in the Velvet Revolution,
New York City • 1991
Tradition und Avantgarde in Prag,
Osnabrück,
Bonn • 1991
K.Š. Křižovnická škola čistého humoru bez vtipu / K.Š. Crusader school of pure humour without jokes, Prague,
Hradec Králové,
Olomouc • 1993
Šmidrové - Škola české grotesky - 12/15 / Šmidras - School of Czech Grotesque - 12/15, Gambit Gallery, Prague • 1993 /94
Mezinárodní sympozium prostorových forem / International Symposium of Spatial Forms,
Ostrava • 1993/94
Nová figurace / New Figuration,
Litoměřice,
Pardubice,
Brno,
Opava,
Jihlava • 1994
Ohniska znovuzrození: České umění 1956-1963 / Focal Points of Rebirth: Czech Art 1956-1963, Prague City Gallery • 1996
Umění zastaveného času / The Art when Time Stood Still, Prague,
Brno,
Cheb • 1997
Česká groteska / Czech Grotesque,
Stockholm,
Oslo,
Helsinki,
Bratislava,
Košice,
Warsaw • 1999
Sympozium železné plastiky 1998 / Symposium of Iron Sculpture 1998,
National Gallery Prague, House of Art,
Brno • 1999
Umění zrychleného času. Česká výtvarná scéna 1958 - 1968 / The art of accelerated time. Czech art scene 1958–1968, Prague,
Cheb • 2000
100 + 1 uměleckých děl z dvacátého století,
House of the Black Madonna, National Gallery Prague • 2001
Barevná socha / Colourful sculpture, North Bohemian Gallery in
Litoměřice • 2004/6
Šedesátá / The sixties, Zlatá husa Gallery, Prague, House of Art
Brno, Gallery of Art,
Karlovy Vary • 2004
Kupka - Nepraš: Setkání v architektuře / Kupka - Nepraš: Encounters in Architecture, Jaroslav Fragner Gallery, Prague • 2005
Šmidrové: Jednou Šmidrou, Šmidrou na věky / Šmidras: Once a Šmidra, always a Šmidra,
Bítov Castle,
Šternberk Gallery, Atrium, Prague • 2007
Karel Nepraš a přátelé / Karel Nepraš and friends, Alternativa,
Zlín • 2007
Soustředěný pohled. Grafika 60. let ze sbírek členských galerií Rady galerií České republiky / Focused view. Prints of the 1960s from the collections of the member galleries of the Council of Galleries of the Czech Republic, Regional Gallery
Liberec, Regional Gallery of Highlands
Jihlava • 2008
České a slovenské umění 60. let 20. století / Czech and Slovak Art of the 1960s, House of Art, Zlín, Gallery of Fine Arts in Ostrava • 2009
Kupka - Nepraš: Setkání v architektuře / / Kupka - Nepraš: Encounters in Architecture, Nostic Palace, Prague • 2010
New Sensitivity, National Art Museum of China,
Beijing • 2010
Roky ve dnech. České umění 1945-1957 / Years in days. Czech Art 1945-1957, Prague City Gallery • 2013 Křižovnická škola čistého humoru bez vtipu / Crusader school of pure humour without jokes, Brno Gallery CZ • 2015 Einfach phantastisch!, Barockschloss
Riegersburg • 2016 Šmidrové / Šmidras,
Museum Kampa - Jan and Meda Mládek Foundation, Prague • 2016 Křižovnická škola čistého humoru bez vtipu, Gallery of Modern Art,
Roudnice nad Labem • 2018 Jaro. Československá výtvarná scéna 1966–1968 / Spring. Czechoslovak art scene 1966–1968, Gallery of Modern Art,
Roudnice nad Labem • 2018 Anatomie skoku do prázdna: Rok 1968 a výtvarné umění v Československu / The Anatomy of a Leap into the Void: The Year 1968 and Art in Czechoslovakia, Exhibition Hall Masné krámy,
Plzeň • 2019 MEDA: Ambasadorka umění / MEDA: Ambassador of Art,
Museum Kampa – Jan and Meda Mládek Foundation, Prague • 2020 Odvrácená tvář humoru: Groteska, nadsázka an ironie v českém umění 2. poloviny 20. století ze sbírek GMU / The Reverse Face of Humour: Grotesque, Exaggeration and Irony in Czech Art of the Second Half of the 20th Century from the Collections of GMU, Gallery of Modern Art,
Roudnice nad Labem • 2022/2023 Výtvarný projekt Minisalon / Minisalon art project 15x15x5 cm, Nová síň Gallery, Prague, Umelka Gallery,
Bratislava • 2024 Zámek na zámku: Inspirace románem Franze Kafky Zámek ve výtvarném umění / The Castle at the Castle: Inspiration from Franz Kafka's novel The Castle in Fine Art,
Klenová Castle == Notes ==