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Ecce Homo #1

Oldřich Kulhánek1994

USC Fisher Museum of Art

USC Fisher Museum of Art
Los Angeles, United States

"Ecce Homo #1" is part of a series of prints created during the 1990s. All possessing the same title, the pieces in the series contrast images of the old and the young. The title, Ecce Homo, translates from Latin to “Behold the Man” and refers to the words of Pontius Pilate when he presents Jesus Christ to a crowd of Jews prior to his crucifixion. In choosing Ecce Homo as the title of this series, Kulhánek asks the viewer to behold the life cycle of man while articulating that, “at the beginning is the starting point for the search for life, at the end it is the dull abyss of the final infinity.” Through the contrasting images of the piece, the viewer is reminded that the innocence at the beginning of life will eventually culminate to the burden of knowledge at the end.

[Emily Le, wall text in "Suppression, Subversion, and the Surreal: The Art of Czechoslovakian Resistance," USC Fisher Museum of Art, March 9 - May 10, 2019.]

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  • Title: Ecce Homo #1
  • Creator: Oldřich Kulhánek (Czech, 1940 – 2013)
  • Date Created: 1994
  • Physical Location: USC Fisher Museum of Art, Los Angeles, The Dr. Eugene Rogolsky Collection, 2015.13
  • Location Created: Prague, Czech Republic
  • Physical Dimensions: 65.1 cm x 50.2 cm (25 ⅝ x 19 ¾ in.)
  • Subject Keywords: Black and white, Portrait
  • Rights: Oldřich Kulhánek © Estate of Oldřich Kulhánek | Photography by Kelly Barrie, Panic Studio LA
  • Medium: Offset lithograph
USC Fisher Museum of Art

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