Zbyněk Sekal: A Private Matter

Jul 1 – Oct 4, 2026

The exhibition A Private Matter at the Museum of Modern Art not only presents a cross-section of Zbyněk Sekal's (1926–1998) work, but primarily attempts to open up his inner world to the viewer as a space of memory, anxiety, order, and silence. Alongside selected sculptures, assemblages, and boxes, his own words in the form of excerpts from diaries and personal thoughts enter the exhibition, creating intimate coordinates of the author's human presence. The exhibition is made possible by a donation to the Olomouc Museum of Art collection from the estate of the artist's wife, Christine Sekal.

Zbyněk Sekal's artistic work is imbued with deep personal experience and existential angst. He was an extraordinarily focused and solitary person, marked by war, imprisonment, and time spent in a concentration camp. He dealt with the experience of extreme chaos by needing to find order in the things around him and to create a new whole from their fragments. This principle permeates his entire oeuvre — from early sculptures in the 1950s, through hanging assemblages of found objects and used materials from the 1960s, to the complex and strictly composed boxes he intensively pursued from the 1980s.

Information about the exhibition

EXHIBITION: Zbyněk Sekal: A Private Matter. Insights into the Olomouc Museum of Art Collections

DATE: 01 07 – 04 10 2026

LOCATION: Museum of Modern Art, Gallery

CURATORS: Olga Š. Staníková, Klára Jeništová

TRANSLATION AND LANGUAGE EDITING: Zuzana Henešová

INSTALLATION: Vlastimil Sedláček, Filip Šindelář, Radka Žáková

SOUND REALIZATION: Kamil Zajíček, Petr Votoček

ELECTRICAL INSTALLATION: Dušan Sapara

GRAPHIC DESIGN: Kateřina Manková

EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMS: Denisa Tessenyi, David Hrbek

The exhibition was made possible by a donation to the Olomouc Museum of Art from the estate of the artist's wife, Christine Sekal.

QR code with a link to the audio guide for the Zbyněk Sekal exhibition A Private Matter. Scan the QR code and return to Zbyněk Sekal's thoughts in the Cabinet of Wonders application. Here you will find more excerpts from his diaries, the option to ask an AI guide. All in 11 languages.

Alongside his sculptural work, Sekal dedicated himself to drawing, collages, graphic design of book covers, and translations of demanding German philosophical and literary texts. At the same time, he formulated his own original texts and kept diaries, which today represent a unique key to understanding his thinking and artistic work. These diary entries become one of the important axes of this exhibition — not merely as a commentary on the work, but as its natural part. As the author's voice, which remains silent, yet urgent.

Besides existentialism, Sekal was strongly influenced by Art Informel, and although he remained a distinctive solitary figure, his work belonged to the broader circle of post-war European art, responding to the disintegration of certainties and the search for a new language after the war. The need to retreat from the outside world and the pressure of the contemporary regime led him to a certain form of internal emigration even before his actual departure after 1968 and subsequent settlement in Vienna. There he found his new studio, where he spent long hours in focused solitude, surrounded only by his works and an endless amount of material, and where he gradually built a protective micro-world over the years.

Sekal's work may seem quiet, sometimes even closed off. Yet — or precisely because of this — it has the ability to connect very personally. It does not impose an interpretation or offer unambiguous answers. Rather, it creates a space in which one can pause for a moment and enter a concentrated silence. Perhaps it is here that his work opens up the most: as a patient reassembly of the world from fragments, as an attempt to capture what would otherwise fall apart, and as a quiet, yet urgent testimony to human experience.

Olomouc Museum of Art
Source: muo.cz/vystavy/zbynek-sekal-soukroma-vec