In the spring of 1901 the governors of an old women's home in
Brno were lent reproductions of
Our Father, a cycle of paintings by the Polish artist
Józef Męcina-Krzesz depicting Russian peasants in situations illustrative of the
Lord's Prayer. They decided to stage a series of
tableaux vivants based on these paintings to be performed by a local theatre group as a fundraising venture, and they commissioned
Janáček to write "musical illustrations" for this entertainment. In May of that year he did so, setting the Lord's Prayer in Czech for mixed voice chorus, tenor, harmonium and/or piano. The piece received its first performance at the
National Theatre, Brno on 15 June 1901 under the title
Moravský Otče náš (A
Moravian Our Father), though Janáček later deleted the word
Moravský on the grounds that it described the composer rather than the work. In 1906 Janáček rescored the work, replacing the piano and harmonium with harp and organ; this revised version was performed in November of that year at the
Rudolfinum in Prague by the Czech Orchestral Music Society. The conductor at this performance was Adolf Piskáček, though Janáček had to take the last rehearsals, Piskáček being prevented by pressure of work. The work got mixed reviews and Janáček declared himself depressed by the performance, regretting the absence of the original
tableaux vivants. In October 1924
Our Father and three others of his cantatas were performed in an ill-attended concert in Brno by the Beseda Philharmonic Society as part of the public celebrations of Janáček's 70th birthday. == Criticism ==