Kiichi Asano (estate)
Dmitri Baltermants
Geraldo de Barros (estate)
Robert Bergman
Henri Cartier-Bresson
Philippe Chancel
Lottie Davies
Frauke Eigen
Alex Franck
Martine Franck
Julia Fullerton-Batten
Beate Gutschow
Paul Hart
Hana Jakrlova
Cuny Janssen
Chris Killip


Karen Knorr

Josef Koudelka
Zofia Kulik
Marketa Luskacova
Katarzyna Mirczak
Ina Otzko
Norman Parkinson (estate)
Willy Rizzo
Enzo Sellerio
Graham Smith
Eva Stenram
Jindrich Streit
Antanas Sutkus
Rimaldas Viksraitis

Al Vandenberg
Jindrich Streit        
 
 
 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 
         
 
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JINDRICH STREIT
 
         
 

Born in Moravia, in the eastern part of what is now the Czech Republic, Jindrich Streit (b.1946) graduated in art education from the Teacher Training Department of Palacky University, Olomouc in 1967. From 1974-77 he attended the School of Art Photography of the Union of Czech Photographers, Prague. He then taught in a village school in Sovinec, near the Polish border, where he lived and, in 1973, opened a gallery there, showing avant-garde artists from the Czech Republic and abroad.

As a student he took part in group exhibitions and in 1967 had his first solo show. His work documents country life in Sovinec and surrounding villages.

In 1982 his prints at an exhibition of alternative art provoked the interest of the secret police and he was imprisoned for ten months. Streit was forbidden to continue his 'criminal' activity and kept under surveillance. His work was first shown in the United Kingdom at the Side Gallery in Newcastle in 1989. Since then he has lectured in photography at the Film/Academy in Prague, the Arts Academy in Bratislava and the Silesian University in Opava.

Streit's work is now included in many public collections in the Czech Republic as well as in collections around the world including the Victoria & Albert Museum, London; Bibiotheque Nationale, Paris; Musee de l'Elysee, Paris; the Museum of Modern Art, New York and the Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography.