Jan Štursa


Jan Štursa was a Czech sculptor, one of founders of modern Czech sculpture.

Birth and studies

Štursa was born in mountainous area of Vysočina Region. He studied masonry and sculpture in Hořice and worked as stone cutter. Later, he studied at the Academy of Arts in Prague under professor Josef Myslbek, a known sculptor. As a result of very rigorous criticism from Myslbek, Štursa destroyed most of his early works.

Themes and materials

Štursa was not influenced by Czech National Revival as the older sculptors but tried to find his own way. The female body was his frequent motif, for example in Before taking bath, 1906 or The Melancholy Girl, 1906 . A monumental couple of figures decorates the pylons of Hlávka Bridge in Prague. In addition to stone and bronze he also used plaster and wax. Later, he was influenced by cubism. Portrait painting was an important part of his works.

World War I

The tragedy of World War I affected Štursa's work. The most famous work of this period is The Wounded: , , .
The inspiration for the Burial in the Carpathians sculpture was a photograph from a Carpathian battlefield. The original group in Austrian uniforms was remade in 1920s into a memorial of victims of World War I and placed in the village Předměřice nad Jizerou, with copies in Místek and in Nové Město na Moravě.
During 1922–1924 Štursa served as Rector of the Academy of Arts. Štursa suffered from the effects of syphilis and in 1925, faced with increasing pain, he killed himself in his two weeks before his 45th birthday.
Štursa's nephew Jiri Štursa was the architect of Stalin's Monument.

Works