Anna Zemánková

1908-1986 · Moravia, Czechia

Every day before dawn, between four and seven, a Moravian housewife drew flowers that exist in no garden on earth. Then she made her family breakfast.

Anna Zemánková, from the family archive.
Anna Zemánková, from the family archive. Photo: rodinný archiv Terezie Zemánkové, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons.

The life

Zemánková trained and worked as a dental technician before marriage and motherhood in Brno and Prague absorbed her middle years. In her fifties, weathering depression and the losses that gather by then, she began rising in the small hours to draw at the dining table, in a trance-adjacent calm she guarded carefully. Her family framed and championed the work; Venice hung it in the Biennale’s Encyclopedic Palace in 2013, decades after her death.

The work

Pastel botanicals from a parallel evolution: blooms with gills, seed pods like reliquaries, tendrils in confident arcs, later embellished with embossing, perforation, crochet and satin stitch until the drawings became part textile. The colour glows as if lit from behind the paper.

Why we love them

Three hours of sovereignty per day, taken before anyone else woke up, for decades. The discipline is as beautiful as the flowers.

Go deeper

Kindred spirits

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