Age, Biography and Wiki

Lubo Kristek was born on 8 May, 1943 in Brno, Czech Republic. Discover Lubo Kristek's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is He in this year and how He spends money? Also learn how He earned most of networth at the age of 80 years old?

Popular As N/A
Occupation N/A
Age 81 years old
Zodiac Sign Taurus
Born 8 May, 1943
Birthday 8 May
Birthplace Brno, Czech Republic
Nationality Czech Republic

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 8 May. He is a member of famous with the age 81 years old group.

Lubo Kristek Height, Weight & Measurements

At 81 years old, Lubo Kristek height not available right now. We will update Lubo Kristek's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.

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Dating & Relationship status

He is currently single. He is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about He's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, He has no children.

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Lubo Kristek Net Worth

His net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Lubo Kristek worth at the age of 81 years old? Lubo Kristek’s income source is mostly from being a successful . He is from Czech Republic. We have estimated Lubo Kristek's net worth , money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2023 $1 Million - $5 Million
Salary in 2023 Under Review
Net Worth in 2022 Pending
Salary in 2022 Under Review
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Source of Income

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Timeline

2015

In 2015–2017, the artist transformed his house in Brno into a monumental assemblage Kristek House.

2012

Kristek's work in various media is interconnected. His artwork in one media becomes a means of expression for an artwork in another media. For example, his sculpture Pyramidae-Klipteon became a prop for his happening Gate to a New Dimension (2012). Then, the artist used the scene from the happening in his oil painting Landscape of Senses with Supported Clouds (2013).

2008

The art historian Hartfrid Neunzert noted on Kristek's legacy in his foreword for the monography published by the Neues Stadtmuseum in 2008:

2007

In 2007–2010, Lubo Kristek presented an interactive assemblage Requiem for Mobile Telephones that originated in a series of his happenings. The audience gave up their mobile phones and participated in incorporating the phones in the assemblage. Kristek travelled with this happening series to the Czech Republic (Znojmo), Austria (Vienna), Germany (Landsberg am Lech) and Poland (Sucha Beskidzka) and the assemblage kept changing. The project was aimed against addiction to modern technologies.

2006

In 2006, Kristek created bronze sculpture The Seekers that was located on the confluence of the rivers Thaya and March. The sculpture was stolen in 2009; only a fragment left. Using the fragment, Kristek created a new metal sculpture for the place and called it The Seekers – Organic Forms. The sculpture was inaugurated in 2015.

2005

In 2005–06, he created a sculptural pilgrims' way dedicated to the river Thaya. It runs along the river Thaya through the Czech Republic, Austria and Slovakia. Kristek linked together the sculptures to inspire people to take a walk through the landscape. The route includes eleven stations, which were open by the series of ten happenings. The eleventh's station remains secret as a challenge for the pilgrim. Kristek said that the pilgrims' way "should also be a protection against the devastation of the parent riverbed. If a person experiences culture here, perhaps he will not behave so unkindly to nature." The project was under the auspices and was supported by the five regions of the three states it runs through.

2003

Kristek's artwork In the Prematurely Cloned Age of One Planet (2003) is dedicated to the ethical context of cloning. It was also a main motif of his happening Visio Sequentes or Concerning the Prematurely Cloned Age of a Planet that occurred in 2003 in Znojmo, Czech Republic.

This piece took place at the Znojmo Castle, Czech Republic in 2003. The artist dissolved the boundary between the auditorium and the stage. In the climax of the happening, he dispersed the artists, mentally disabled people, amongst the spectators. The spectators were quite shocked and looked around uncomfortably to find out who is who. Kristek forced them to wonder where the boundary is and whether it exists at all. His aim was to evoke a threshold situation, when the shocked spectator is shifted outside his stereotypes and has the possibility to re-evaluate them.

2002

Kristek's performances can often be interpreted as a critique of consumerism. At the climax of his happening in 2002 in Podhradí nad Dyjí, he crawled out of bowels of a cow carcass to read his manifest against the destructive and self-destructive tendencies of society.

1992

In 1992, he made a kinetic sculpture called Tree of the Wind Harp. This wind propelled musical artwork is located at the Pohansko Chateau, Czech Republic.

1991

Kristek's metal sculpture Monument to the Five Senses (1991) is part of the collection of the Neues Stadtmuseum, Landsberg am Lech. It is located in front of the museum since 1992.

1989

In 1989, after the Velvet Revolution, he returned to the Czech Republic. He settled in Podhradí nad Dyjí in a house where there is a gallery of his works today (Lubo Chateau). On the apex of the house, he located the sculpture Divine Ephemerality of Tone – a piano balancing on one leg. Writer Jaromír Tomeček unveiled the sculpture in 1994 and, on the basis of the artwork's title, he called the entire neighbouring area of the Thaya Kristek Valley of the Divine Ephemerality of Tone. Václav Jehlička wrote in this context in his foreword for the publication issued by the Neues Stadtmuseum, Landsberg am Lech in 2008:

1988

In 1988, Kristek created the bronze fountain The Drinking for the Theresianbad Greifenberg, Germany.

1987

The ballerina or the dancer is the central theme of Kristek's paintings and happenings. The development of symbol in time reflects the changes in postmodern society. In the painting Billiards for Life and the Ballerina (1987), she personifies the vitality in the world of constant metamorphosis. However, in the happening The Way of the Cross (2014), the ballerina consumes all that is left after the destruction. In the painting Peculiar Pole Vault (2016), the ballerina appears as Death.

1981

Kristek's 16-metre-high sculpture Tree of Knowledge (1981) that he made for the Ignaz-Kögler-Gymnasium (high school) in Landsberg am Lech rises up through three floors of the building. The Munich magazine Steinmetz + Bildhauer noted:

1980

In the 1980s, he made assemblages out of objects he found during his wanderings as in Barbed Wire of Christ (1983) created on the coast of Cantabria and Sea Horse (1986) made of material that was cast out by the sea on the Italian coast near Rome. His assemblage On the Landfill of Ages (1994) is made of industrial waste.

1978

His 1978 ceramic sculpture Birth and Simultaneously Damnation of the Sphere, is today located, as a public work of art, in a chapel at the John's Castle near Podivin, Czech Republic.

1977

In 1977, Kristek travelled through the west coast of the United States and Canada with his exhibition tour American Cycle 77.

In 1977, Kristek created a monumental altar painting for the sacral space, the cemetery chapel in Penzing, Germany. He called the 7 m high painting Transcendental Composition between Suffering and Hope.

1976

Kristek addressed the subject of hidden traps in modern society in his assemblage Soundproof Aesthetic of Luxuriety, which he created in 1976.

1975

The assemblage Metastation of Abandoned Tones was created in 1975–76. It is connected to Kristek's emigration from Czechoslovakia to Germany, for which he was sentenced, in absentia, to 1.5 years in prison and the confiscation of all his property in Czechoslovakia. Kristek included his coat and hat in which he was fleeing over the border in 1968 in the assemblage. The piece is exhibited at the Ruegers Palace, Riegersburg, Austria.

In 1975, Kristek went for a walk with a fox's skeleton on a leash on the colonnade in Landsberg am Lech and observed the reactions of the people. His aim was to study the crowd behavior and the death taboo.

1973

Kristek was influenced by Arno Lehmann who lived in Salzburg, where Kristek used to go to meet him. In 1973, after Lehmann's death, Kristek created the sculpture Soul shaped by flame. A sphere dominates the top as a symbol of artistic heritage that Kristek adopted from Lehmann.

1971

In 1971, he started the Kristek's Night Vernissages in his studio with garden in Landsberg am Lech. They served as a meeting point for sculptors, painters, musicians, poets, philosophers and also the visitors. The magazine Collage noted that artists from Germany, Canada, England and the USA gathered there in 1976. These experiments were at the interface between theatre, music, improvisation and ritual. Kristek studies the crowd behavior, explores the border between performer and audience, and also the death taboo in his happenings. The motifs of death, the illness of society and doom are counterbalanced by birth or rebirth, liberation from shackles and intergrowth of forms.

1970

He has created his specific vocabulary in paintings. As far back as the 1970s, one can find a road, which is mostly bordered by the arches of bridges and which rises up, in his paintings. He calls it "the heavenly highway". The oil painting The Heavenly Highway of Aunt Fränzi (1974–75), which is today part of Neues Stadtmuseum's collection, is an example of early use of this symbol.

1968

In 1968, Kristek emigrated to West Germany. He settled in Landsberg am Lech and lived there for almost three decades. That was also where he started the tradition of Kristek's Night Vernissages, from which his happenings evolved. From Landsberg, Kristek travelled to other places in Europe (Belgium, Luxembourg, Liechtenstein, the Netherlands, France, Italy, Spain, Republic of San Marino, Switzerland, Austria) to study and create.

1964

One of his early assemblages, called Vision – Burning of Christ (1964) belongs to his artworks shaped by flame. The burned Christ symbolizes "melting of faith" in Czechoslovakia at that time.

1960

In the 1960s, Kristek lived in a former soap factory, in Hustopeče, where he organised events incorporating music, visual art, poetry, theatre and improvisation. Testing of borders, experiments, and crossing the conventional frame is typical for his work. He follows the idea of a total work of art – Gesamtkunstwerk. At that time, he also experimented with using fire as a means of expression. He deliberately suppressed or sometimes annulled his artistic handwriting.

1943

Lubo Kristek (born 8 May 1943) is a sculptor, painter and performance artist of Czech origin, who lived in West Germany from 1968 until the 1990s. He specializes in critical assemblages and happenings, in which he incorporates multiple forms of media. He created sculptures for public space. He is the author of a three-state sculptural pilgrims' way. During his more than half-century long work in the field of performance art, he formulated his theory of "holographic perception".

1923

He was also influenced by the Austrian ethologist Eberhard Trumler (1923–1991), especially by the mechanisms of survival of the species. Kristek's existencial assemblage Expecting (1969) was created under this influence.