Roman Košťál - HIDDEN éditions | The Seven Silents #1
Dimensions: 34 x 45 cm
Medium: Sololit panel with canvas, charcoal, and ink
Year: 2024
Dimensions: 34 x 45 cm
Medium: Sololit panel with canvas, charcoal, and ink
Year: 2024
Dimensions: 34 x 45 cm
Medium: Sololit panel with canvas, charcoal, and ink
Year: 2024
In this painting, we encounter a modern-day apocalyptic Eve set against the backdrop of a burnt-out brothel that has transformed into a hell itself. A nude woman, posed with the femme fatale allure of Salome, dances with a lopsided back, but remains abandoned and in a Godot-like wait. The female figure embodies the grace of a Rodin sculpture in motion, the rawness of a lustful stripper, and the slyness of the demonic Lilith. Unfortunately, her dance partner never appears, leaving her in the grip of emptiness and solitude, crushing her like the edges of a hydraulic press. The red color evokes Mars, the planet of violence and rage, symbolizing the missing masculine principle – a memory of Roman’s late father, who will never return.
HIDDEN éditions | The Seven Silents
We are honored to present in HIDDEN Editions a unique and deeply personal series of paintings by Roman Košťál titled “The Seven Silents.” This collection was completed in the months following the death of his father, with each artwork exploring shadow plays of faded memories and the undercurrents of memory’s mycelial networks, touching upon themes of human loss and the search for universal meaning amidst painful life changes.
"This collection was completed in the months following the death of Roman’s father."
The title “The Seven Silents” refers to the silence left in the wake of his father’s passing, a silence of mourning itself. The number “7” alludes to the seven days in which God created the world, resting on the seventh, with death figuratively representing ultimate rest after life’s arduous journey. As Josef Čapek once reflected in his diaries, “To be dead is sweet, because more than sleep itself it is peace, solace, an end to pain and hardships; but this ultimate sweetness, the most that can be granted to a human being, the dead do not experience, do not feel.”
"The title “The Seven Silents” refers to the silence left in the wake of his father’s passing, a silence of mourning itself."
These paintings possess a transcendent, spiritual quality, reflecting the artist’s deep intuition and lyrical melancholy, which doesn’t dissolve into despair but rather celebrates the eternity of art in opposition to human life’s inevitable finitude. The black-and-white ghostly figures intermingle with scenes reminiscent of faded archival films, forming a dynamic collage of intense emotions and intimate nostalgia.
This series, created in the intimacy of the artist’s home rather than his studio at the Academy of Fine Arts in Prague, marks a departure from Roman’s previous work, making it both rare and surprising. It employs a new technique involving scalpel carving, where this aggressive material destruction paradoxically results in a sensitive and cohesive artistic expression. Compared to his earlier works, these pieces carry a metaphysical quality, with the glued canvas presenting a significantly softer drawing surface despite its rougher edges.
"This series, created in the intimacy of the artist’s home rather than his studio, marks a departure from Roman’s previous work, making it both rare and surprising."