Prague Walk, Crawling Babies. Prague Public Art At Kampa Park. Walking Tour PRAGUE CZECH REPUBLIC
Video Taken on August 30, 2019
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Crawling Babies by David Cerny, Barcode Faces, Prague, Czech Republic
28-04-2019
Žižkov TV Tower and David Černý Babies - Prague
The Žižkov TV Tower is the tallest structure in the Czech Republic, towering 216 metres above the city of Prague. It was once voted the second ugliest building in the world. Video features photographs of the tower including the cute David Černý Babies, the views from the 93m observation level, plus some general video clips from our visit in July 2016.
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Exploring Prague Episode 4 – The giant crawling babies of Kampa Park
Exploring Prague. Episode 4 – the Crawling Babies at Kampa Park. These are extraordinary sculptures by David Černy. What I love about these is how people interact with the artworks, especially children, who delight in climbing on them.
David Černý’s giant baby sculptures Kampa island Prague
The Venice of Prague is the name of a part of the Lesser Town and the Kampa Island.
In the Gardens of the Kampa, surrounded on one side by the Vltava and on the other by an arm of the river, Čertovka.
When you walk through Prague's Kampa, you can not miss the giant toddlers with heads bizarre changed. The author is sculptor David Cerny.
Sculptor David Cerny Installed on the grounds of Kampa Museum giant bronze statues, crawling babies with scrambled faces , each weighing 800 kg.
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PRAGUE WITH KIDS 2017
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Žížkov Television Tower, Prague, Czech Republic - 15th December, 2012
The Žižkov Television Tower is a broadcasting transmitter tower built in Prague between 1985 and 1992. It was designed by the architect Václav Aulický and the structural engineer Jiří Kozák, and stands above the city's skyline from its position on top of a hill in the district of Žižkov, from which it takes its name. The Tower is the tallest structure in Prague.
The structure of the tower is unconventional, consisting of three concrete pillars with a metallic finish which support nine 'pods' and three decks for transmitting equipment. One of the three pillars extends considerably higher than the others, and this provides both the necessary height for some antennas, along with the structure's rocket and gantry appearance. In total, the tower stands 216 metres (709 feet) high.
Three of the pods, positioned directly beneath the decks at the top of the tower, are used for equipment related to the tower's primary function and are inaccessible to the public. The remaining six pods are open to visitors, the highest of which are observation rooms at 100 metres (328 feet), providing a panoramic view of Prague and the surrounding area. The lower three, approximately half-way up the length of the pillars at 63 metres (207 feet), house a recently refurbished restaurant and café bar. Elevators, equipped with speedometers, transport passengers to the different levels at a rate of 4 m/s. The tower weighs 11,800 tons and is also used as a meteorological observatory. It is a member of the World Federation of Great Towers.
The outside of the tower is decorated with crawling baby sculptures, designed by Czech artist and sculptor David Černý.
This video features views of the tower, as well as views from one of the tower's pods. Only one pod was open on the day of the visit due to the others being booked out for a conference.
Žižkov Television Tower, Prague, & Views Over Prague, Czech Republic - 14th October, 2013
This film features footage of, within and from the Žižkov Television Tower, which is located just outside of the city centre of Prague, the capital of the Czech Republic in the suburb of Žižkov. The tower is a unique transmitter built in Prague between 1985 and 1992. It stands high above the city's traditional skyline from its position on top of a hill. The tower is an example of high-tech architecture.
The tower is 216 metres high, and has a number of pods, some of which are for technical purposes as a TV transmitter, and some of which are for public / corporate use as observation decks and a bar. The outside of the tower is decorated with black crawling babies, designed as an art installation by Czech artist David Černy.
This film predominantly features views over the Prague skyline on a late Summer afternoon. Visibility is reasonable, although a little misty in places. This is a great attraction in Prague and worth a visit if you are going to the City. You will find it much less busy than many of Prague's attractions.
16 Sculptures That Scare and Amaze at the Same Time You Won't Believe Actually Exist
Sculpture is one of the most beautiful types of art. It fascinates and makes people think about the fragility of this world.
Bright Side has chosen the best sculptures from around the world that you’d never be able to resist gazing at. We couldn’t either!
16. The Bleeding Head, Worldwide
You can see The Bleeding Head sand sculpture by Guy Olivier Deveau on beaches around the world, as the artist often chooses to exhibit it at sand festivals. It does give us goose bumps!
15. The Death Kiss, Barcelona, Spain
The Death Kiss stands on the grave of a young man who died in the 1930s. The authorship is disputed to this day. There is a legend that this sculpture inspired Ingmar Bergman to create his famous movie The Seventh Seal.
14. Blue Mustang, Denver, USA
Blue Mustang, nicknamed Blucipher, is truly a dangerous piece of art. The stallion from hell killed its creator, Luis Jiménez — during its transportation, the head fell off and injured the sculptor’s leg artery.
13. Verity, Ilfracombe, UK
A 20-meter-tall statue of a pregnant woman by Damien Hirst overlooks the Bristol Channel. If you look at it from the left, there is nothing unique about it. Yet the right side of the statue has a twist to it: you can see open muscles and a fetus inside.
12. Victor’s Way Park, Co. Wicklow, Ireland
Victor Langheld decided to open a park after his spiritual visit to India. According to Langheld, the statues are supposed to make people think about life and our purpose in it.
11. Crawling Babies, Prague, Czech Republic
David Cerny’s statues of faceless giant babies not only crawl on Prague’s Television Tower but also in Kampa’s park.
10. The Cloak of Conscience, Salzburg, Austria
The sculpture The Cloak of Conscience, representing the Commander who killed Don Juan, sits at the south entrance to Salzburg Cathedral. The sculpture has twins all over different cities in Europe.
9. Upside-down statue of King Wenceslas riding a dead horse, Prague, Czech Republic
Yet another of David Cerny’s creations — a parody to the monument of St. Wenceslas in the heart of Prague. It was initially installed on the very same square where the original stands but was later transferred to the Lucerne shopping mall.
8. Hanging Boy, Ghent, Belgium
The sculptor of this gloomy and very strange piece of art hanging from one of the walls in Ghent is unknown. It gives us goose bumps just looking at it.
7. Statues in Staglieno Cemetery, Genoa, Italy
The Staglieno Cemetery in Genoa has existed since the middle of the 19th century, and the first burial took place in 1851. Since then, it is known to be a home for sculptures and statues.
6. La Recoleta Cemetery, Buenos Aires, Argentina
The famous Argentinian cemetery dates back to the first half of the 18th century. Many famous people of Argentina are buried there, along with some real pieces of art as statues installed there.
5. Man Hanging Out, Prague, Czech Republic
A statue dedicated to Sigmund Freud by David Cerny is hanging on a beam fixed to the roof of a house. It has become so popular that it toured Chicago and London. The funny part about it is that tourists believe it to be a sculpture of Vladimir Lenin.
4. Highgate Cemetery statues, London, UK
Highgate Cemetery is very famous in London. It is believed to be the place where vampires hung out in the 1800s. They say that one of the graves belongs to Jack the Ripper himself.
3. Père Lachaise Cemetery, Paris, France
The Cemetery of Père Lachaise, or the East Cemetery, is a resting place for famous people like Oscar Wilde, Honore de Balzac, and Frederic Chopin. The statues on the graves are so beautiful and mesmerizing that many tourists and Parisians come to visit it.
2. The St. Barthelemy Statue, Milan, Italy
If you look at this statue from afar you won’t notice anything weird about it. However, if you come closer, you will see that the cloak on the nude body is nothing but his own skin.
1. The Cimitero Monumentale (The Monumental Cemetery), Milan, Italy
Originally, only rich people could afford to rest at The Monumental Cemetery, erecting the most magnificent pieces of art as monuments on the graves. Today the cemetery works as a museum, where you can take a walk to see how the art of sculpture has evolved over the last century and a half.
Sculptures That Amaze, The Cimitero Monumentale, The St. Barthelemy Statue, Père Lachaise Cemetery, Highgate Cemetery statues, Man Hanging Out, La Recoleta Cemetery, Statues in Staglieno Cemetery, Hanging Boy, Upside-down statue of King Wenceslas riding a dead horse, The Cloak of Conscience, Crawling Babies, Victor’s Way Park, Verity, Blue Mustang, The Death Kiss, The Bleeding Head, let's go holiday,
Entropa: Finland with elephant, hippo
Here is how Finland is portrayed in the controversial art exhibit organized by the Czech Presidency of the European Union.
Entropa: Stereotypes are Barriers to be Demolished
Today, the Czech Republic unveiled a modern art installation called 'Entropa' in the atrium of
the Justus Lipsius builiding of the EU Council in Brussels. The installation will remain in its
stand-by mode until Thursday 15 January when it will 'start to live' in the full regime. On
that occasion a press conference will be held in the Justus Lipsius building in the presence of
Alexandr Vondra, the Deputy Prime Minister for EU Affairs of the Czech Republic, and Milena
Vicenová, the Permanent Representative of the Czech Republic to the European Union,
among others.
Entropa is the joint work of 27 artists, each one from a different Member State. Each object
depicts one Member State using common stereotypes or prejudices. The Presidency
commissioned the artists without any restrictions and they were free to create any object
they liked.
'Sculpture, and art more generally, can speak where words fail. In line with the Czech
Presidency motto a 'Europe without Barriers', we gave the 27 artists the same opportunity to
express themselves freely, as a proof that in today´s Europe there is no place for
censorship,' said Deputy Prime Minister Alexandr Vondra. 'In return we got an uncommon,
yet common piece of art. I am confident in Europe´s open mind and capacity to appreciate
such a project.'
'The freedom of art as an extension of the freedom of speech is the core value of
democracy,' said Milena Vicenová, the Permanent Representative of the Czech Republic to
the European Union. 'There are many barriers to integration and cooperation in Europe.
Stereotypes are such barriers. When we point out the stereotypes we begin demolishing
them. Making fun of prejudice destroys it most efficiently.'
The Czech Presidencys motto a 'Europe without Barriers' expresses the dedication to
remove remaining obstacles to cooperation between the EU Member States. In particular
obstacles to the free movement of goods, services, persons and capital. The Presidency
notes that other barriers also hamper a fruitful cooperation between the European nations.
The Czech government is renting Entropa until the 30 June 2009. The rental costs amount to
€50,000. Other expenses, such as production costs, were to be borne by the creator, the
Czech artist David Černý, born 15 December 1967 in Prague. His works can be seen in many
locations in Prague and elsewhere. He gained notoriety in 1991 by painting a Soviet tank
that served as a war memorial in central Prague pink. As the Monument to Soviet Tank
Crews was still a national cultural monument at that time, he was briefly arrested. Another
of Černý's conspicuous contributions to Prague is his 'Tower Babies', a series of cast figures
of crawling infants attached to Žižkov Television Tower.
It is a Presidency tradition to install a decoration in the Justus Lipsius building atrium for the
duration of the Presidency.
More on David Černý on davidcerny.cz
FIRST SNOW EXPERIENCE | Czech Republic
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Unique room with a view - the hotel with lofty amibitions
AP Television
Prague, Czech Republic - March 10, 2013
1. Wide of church spire in foreground and Zizkov radio tower in background
2. Pan from trees to radio tower
3. Tight of exterior of radio tower
4. Tight of crawling baby sculpture on side of tower
5. Wide of radio tower from below
AP Television
Prague, Czech Republic, March, 8th, 2013
6. Wide of hotel room
7. Wide tilt up of lounge
8. Wide pan of hotel room
9. Tight pan and tilt up of bed
10. Wide pan of windows showing view
11. SOUNDBITE (Czech) Lucie Cerna, Sales Manager of the One Room Hotel, Tower Park Prague:
A man has booked the room to propose to his fiancee. So, I think it will be used for special occasions. It won't be a common hotel. And it could be also used as a conference room not just as a hotel.
12. Pull from tight to wide of bathroom and TV as seen through glass wall
13. Tight tilt down of sink and media area
14. Wide tilt down of bath
15. Pull from mid to wide of hotel room
16. Wide of man in kitchen with steam all around him
17. Tight of man melting butter in pan
18. Tight tilt up of chef cooking
19. Tracking shot to pot boiling
20. SOUNDBITE (Czech) Ondrej Soukup, Chef of Oblaca:
At the beginning we had no idea who would come, Czechs or foreigners, if the people would come back or come just by accident. So, we decided to make varieties of cuisine from Asian to Czech and French. We tried to attract people by what they like, we have tried to find out what they like and this is the direction we want to go.
21. Tilt up from tight of chef placing gnocchi in dish to chef
22. Tight of chef putting butter mixture on gnocchi
23. Wide of steam table and cook in background
24. Tight of sic of gnocchi being put into dumbwaiter
25. Tight of server taking dish of gnocchi out of dumbwaiter
26. Tight of man and woman talking at bar
27. Pull from tight of man and woman in dining room to wide of dining room
28. SOUNDBITE (Czech) Lucie Cerna, Sales Manager of the One Room Hotel, Tower Park Prague:
The advantages of the room - it's definitely luxury, it's complete privacy that someone may be looking for, it's something different then the other hotels have to offer, it's an exclusive space with an exclusive view of Prague.
29. Wide of hotel room
30. Tight pan from drapes to view of city
AP Television
Prague, Czech Republic - March, 10th, 2013
31. Tight of rooms from hotel exterior
32. Wide tilt up of radio tower
LEADIN
Looking for a unique and totally private place to stay?
Then there's a hotel in a television and radio tower maybe the place for you to rest your head.
STORYLINE:
It's a room with a view.
In the most unlikely of places - inside a television and radio tower - perched on a hill over looking Prague in the Czech Republic.
In a city known for its beautiful buildings, this structure, with its dour, space-age design and sculptures of babies crawling up the sides, is regarded in some architectural circles as one of the ugliest in Europe.
Yet, it has become a dominant landmark in the city.
And is now a destination for people wanting total privacy because it boasts a hotel inside - a one room hotel.
Seventy-three meters (240 feet) above the ground, the six-star luxurious room is available for 1,000 Euros ($1,305) per night since its opening on Feb 13.
With a view no other hotel room in the city can beat, demand is growing, says Lucie Cerna, sales manager for the hotel, a man has booked the room to propose to his fiancee. So, I think it will be used for special occasions. It won't be a common hotel. And it could be also used as a conference room not just as a hotel.
The restaurant has become so popular in recent months management recommend booking a table a week in advance.
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The Weirdest Statues Ever Made Around The World HD 2017
The Weirdest Statues Ever Made Around The World 2016 HD
Humans have been enshrining people, animals, and ideas in statue form for thousands of years. Whether it be of a progressive thinker, a beloved pet, or a god, statues can be found in nearly every city on Earth. But not all statues are as meaningful as one of Martin Luther King, Jr. or Greyfriar’s Bobby.
1. The Travellers Have Arrived by Gilie and Marc in Sydney
2. The man-pig statue in Haw Par Villa, Singapore
3. The plaque of the statue Belle on the Oudekerksplein in Amsterdam
4. This sexy face fail at the Fountain of the Baboon in Rome
5. Statue of Freddie Mercury overlooking Lake Geneva in Switzerland
6. St. Wenceslas riding a dead horse in a Prague shopping mall
7. Maria the robot from the 1927 film Metropolis, currently looking over Babelsberg, Germany
8. The man with no head and arms in the Old Jewish Quarter of Prague
9. A hungry alligator coming out of the sewers to eat a baby in Brooklyn (probably in Park Slope)
10. The Žižkov Television Tower in Prague where Babies are crawling up the tower
11. The Kindlifresserbrunnen (Child Eater Fountain) in Bern, Switzerland, of an ogre eating a naked child and plucking more from its bag
12. The man selling too many watches in Vancouver
13. The bronze man getting a street haircut in Beijing
14. Another piece by Czech artist David Černý, Gesture
15. Giant monkey watching over two white human sculptures and the village
16. giant spider statue in Ottawa
17. Statue by Černý in central Prague
18. This cow who somehow got stuck up a tree in Melbourne
19. statue by cerny in central Prague
20. These statues laughing at everything you do in Vancouver
21. A statue of Michael Jackson in front of a McDonalds in the Netherlands
22. A statue of Charles Joseph Latrobe at Latrobe University in Australia showing what students feel like during exam week
23. A sculpture showing even the dead want their coffee
24. Bernd das Brot (Bernd the Bread Loaf): a statue of a grumpy, fatalistic loaf of bread in front of the Erfurt, Germany, town hall
25. The Peeing Statues by David Černý, peeing on the Czech Republic
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Grass Jam in Prague at the Baby Tower
Grass bombing at the baby tower in Prague in the Czech Republic.
Absinthe shots and kissing babies in Prague!!!
Don’t sleep on Prague, Czech Republic the next time you’re in Europe. This “straight from a fairytale” city is rich in history and culture and comes complete with its very own castle. Prague has tons to offer from driving on water, ancient lucky traditions, and bangin food. But when the sun goes down, the city turns up with bar crawls and five-story mega-clubs. Walk of shames and black-out nights are sure to be guaranteed.
Czech Republic on my eyes
The main dominant of the Zizkov district is the 216-meter high building of the capital. A circular panorama at a height of 97 m will show you Prague, as if on a palm. One floor of the tower is completely given relaxation and first-class gastronomy. The authors of the grandiose project of the 80s of the 20th century are V. Aulicki and J. Kozak. On the tower, 10 sculptures of crawling babies (Babies) of the famous Czech sculptor David Black were also located.
Installation of the Babies in Downtown Palm Springs Artist David Cerny
Video by Jill Hayes / CoachellaValley.com
The Babies are now crawling to their new spot and the secrets out. The Coachella Valley Team was lucky enough to watch the installation of the Gigantic 8 foot tall Prague babies in Downtown Palm Springs
These large baby sculptures by artist David Cerny will be on display down in the pit in front of the museum in downtown Palm Springs.-By Jill Hayes/ Coachella Valley
-By Jill Hayes / Coachella Valley
#CathedralCity #Coachella #CoachellaValley #DesertHotSprings #IndianWells #Indio #LaQuinta #PalmDesert #PalmSprings #RanchoMirage #IfItsHappeningItsHere
David Černý; Saint Wenceslaus, 1999, Lucerna Arcade, Prague
Check for more information: pragueart.info
image-identity.eu: The horse is upside down and the duke is still riding its dead body; this is a very striking art work by David Cerny, the infamous Czech artist whose controversial works are often installed in public spaces. The Lucerna Passage where the artwork has been installed is a busy place and people passing by are perfectly aware of its meaning, which resonates with a current and historical sense of national identity -- as well as the public perception of the Czech Republic's social and political situation: What kind of people are in power and who are the national elites? What happened to democracy in our country after the second war and why are the Communists still in power as a political party? What is the Czech Republic's position in the EU?
In placing his work in the Lucerna Passage, Cerny highlights its proximity to Wenceslas Square, which has been the central gathering and protest concourse for the Czech peoples, especially in their quest for a self-defined national identity.
Furthermore, the upside-down rider on a dead horse refers directly to the main statue at the top of Wenceslas Square. In the upper part of the legendary Square there is an elevated equestrian statue of the duke Saint Wenceslas by the prominent Czech sculptor Myslbek. The statue was unveiled in 1913 in front of the monumental building of the National Museum and expresses the virtues held very dear in the nation during the long 20th century: Christianity, peace, freedom, national and state sovereignty. The statue and concourse is emblematic of the numerous tragic turning points in the history of our nation: losing independence and state sovereignty on several occasions; waves of forced emigration and executions of the elite; language and national renaissances; the first and second wars; Communist domination after the second war; the Prague Spring and finally, the 1968 Soviet occupation.
Saint Wenceslas is a cult figure, a symbol of the Czech state and national identity since the early middle ages, and has always been an obligatory figure in history education. The two Wenceslases, Myslbek's and Cerny's, create a dialogue between past mythology and contemporary reality, political decay, and the loss of a clear national and democratic direction after liberation from Soviet Union in 1989. In contradiction to one another, the irony and absurdity of Cerny's rider’s position and activity raise questions about the truth and the making of national mythologies.
wikipedia.org:
David Černý (born December 15, 1967) is a Czech sculptor whose works can be seen in many locations in Prague. His works tend to be controversial.
Černý was born in Prague. He gained notoriety in 1991 by painting a Soviet tank pink, to serve as a war memorial in central Prague.[1] As the Monument to Soviet tank crews was still a national cultural monument at that time, his act of civil disobedience was considered hooliganism and he was briefly arrested. Another of Černý's conspicuous contributions to Prague is Tower Babies, a series of cast figures of crawling infants attached to Žižkov Television Tower.
waymarking.com:
Statue of St. Wenceslas mounting a dead horse at the Lucerna arcade in Prague.
The statue by a controversial Czech sculptor David Cerny mirrors the famous statue of St. Wenceslas, patron saint of the Czech state, in Wenceslas Square. For the comical, but also ironical effect, St. Wenceslas is sitting on the belly of his dead horse suspended from the ceiling.
The statue was originally situated at the bottom end of the Wenceslas Square (whereas the original St. Wenceslas dominates the upper end of the square). Nowadays it is kept in the arcade of the Lucerna palace not far from the original site.
The artist made a humorous pact with Dagmar Havlova, the owner of Lucerna, that the sculpture shall not be removed until the constitutional monarchy is restored in the Czech Republic.
Hundreds participate in the 6th Prague Zombie Walk through the old town
AP TELEVISION
1. Wide of the meeting point for the zombie walk, Prague, Czech Republic
2. Mid of man adjusting chains on his costume
3. Close of a girl's covered in fake blood
4. Mid of participants of the zombie walk painting their faces
5. Wide of the organisers at the registration desk
6. Mid of a participant dressed as a zombie miner
7. SOUNDBITE (Czech) Jaroslav Spinka, organiser of the Zombie Walk Prague:
We expect that in spite of the bad weather we will see hundreds of participants. In past years we had from 600 to 1000 people participating.
8. Mid of girl drinking fake blood
9. Mid of man in scary clown costume
10. Mid of participants in costumes holding umbrellas
11. Mid of a man with costume of alien coming out of stomach
12. Mid of participants dressed as zombies gathered before the walk
13. Wide of the crowd walking down from hill, making shrieking noises
14. Wide of the march
15. Various of marchers crossing bridge
16. Various of participants screaming
17. Wide of the march arriving to the Old Town Square in Prague city centre
18. Various of zombies in square screaming
19. Wide of tourists looking at crowd of people dressed as zombies, some taking photographs
20. SOUNDBITE (English) Bolomier Arnaud, tourist:
They just meet together and make a party, it is cool, it's really cool, it's very cool. Prague is a big city for that.
21. Various of zombies in the Old Town Square making shrieking noises
STORYLINE:
Despite unrelenting rain around 600 zombies gathered in Prague on Saturday to participate in the city's sixth zombie walk through the Old Town.
The annual event is part of similar walks organised in other cities around the world.
We expect that in spite of the bad weather we will see hundreds of participants, said event organiser Jaroslav Spinka before the walked began.
In past years we had from 600 to 1000 people participating, said Spinka.
The event attracted people dressed in an array of frightening costumes from across the country.
Some wore highly imaginative outfits, most doused in plenty of fake blood.
The marchers were keenly watched by curious tourists and local residents.
The walk stopped several times on its way to the Old Town square to allow the zombies time for collective yelling, howling and screaming.
After two hours the march ended at one of the famous clubs in Prague, the Rock Cafe.
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