Add to favourites

On stock 65 pcs

Easter 2023: Slovak Folk Woodcarving Issue number
787
Date of issue
24.02.2023
Face value
0.90 €
Sell price
0.90 €

The paths that lead artists to naive art are diverse, they can be direct or complex. However, what they have in common is that the artist has a spontaneous need to portray the world around them, their dreams and visions, regardless of the universally recognised means of artistic expression. Štefan Siváň senior (1906 – 1995) began his artistic career carving crib figures. They were part of the portable cribs he carried when, as a young man, he went carol-singing over the Christmas and New Year festivities in Slovakia, Moravia and Silesia.  He lived his whole life in the village of Babín, in the Horná Orava region. He gradually created a miscellaneous collection of art, both in terms of its topics and means of expression.  Today he is considered to be one of the most significant Slovak naive wood carvers and his works of art are also important within the European naive art scene.

     Siváň was a farmer and wheelwright. He worked with wood from his childhood.  Woodcarving distracted him from his everyday life in a demanding environment and brought him joy, as well as the ability to increase his income. Although his pieces of art follow the folk fine art tradition, the purity and authenticity of his untrained artistic expression allowed him to break away from its anonymity. He mainly depicted the motifs that surrounded him, with which he had a close relationship and knew well. Siváň intuitively shaped wood and turned it into figures of shepherds, farmers and animals. They gradually grew to be of monumental sizes. Besides carvings of subjects of different occupations, his favourite topics included motherhood and family. The folk tradition of the Orava region was completed with figures of musicians and thieves, in particular, Jánošik. Siváň also depicted religious scenes, especially those depicting Jesus Christ and the Virgin Mary. They were based on the iconography and morphology of folk woodcarving. There are several variants of his portrayal of Pieta in the collection in the Orava Gallery. They show the specific features of Siváň’s carving style – stylised block forms, naive spatial skills and those that depict anatomy, easiness and the poetics of expression. Their distinct nature also comes from Siváňʼs deep insight into a particular topic and his ability to communicate it as a simple man with an honest faith.

Dagmar Adamusová

Show less

Similar products

  • Page of 21
Easter 2019: Traditional Slovak Tinsmithing Issue number
679
Date of issue
15.03.2019
A Joint Issue with Azerbaijan: The Azerbaijani Mugham Issue number
802
Date of issue
02.10.2023
A Joint Issue with Azerbaijan: the Music of Terchová Issue number
801
Date of issue
02.10.2023
Christmas 2020: The Traditional Slovak Blueprint Issue number
728
Date of issue
13.11.2020
Christmas 2019: Traditional Slovak Tinsmithing Issue number
701
Date of issue
08.11.2019
Radvaň Fair Issue number
640
Date of issue
08.09.2017
Christmas 2013: Folk Motifs in the Work of Ľudovít Fulla Issue number
551
Date of issue
13.11.2013
Joint Issue with Korea: Lúčnica Art Ensamble Issue number
539
Date of issue
31.05.2013
Joint Issue with Korea: Pansori Epic Chant Issue number
540
Date of issue
31.05.2013
Christmas 2011: Folk Style Issue number
506
Date of issue
11.11.2011
Christmas 2007 – Christmas Tree Issue number
411
Date of issue
14.11.2007
Christmas 2006 - Caroller Issue number
387
Date of issue
10.11.2006
  • Page of 21