art party - meet vendula knopova, the artist with all the best jokes

Despite having some serious art cred, Vedula Knopova wants to be known as an ambassador of humor.

When Vendula Knopova appeared on the fashion and artistic scene as she won the photography prize of prestigious Hyères Festival last year, a lot of people were confused. Not because she doesn’t deserve it but because her photography practice goes way beyond the limits of the medium. When she presented her work during the festival at the Villa Noailles of Hyères, Vendula decided to embrace the installation form and pushed it to a performative extent. Fanzines, vernacular pictures, postcards were displayed like grigris and reflected the distance and humour she approaches the arts with. She constantly blurs the lines between the vernacular and the sacred, the ugly and the beautiful, seriousness and joke. Vendula likes to refer to herself as “an ambassador of humour” and uses adjectives such as “schizophrenic“ and “intuitive“ to define her art – which actually feels totally accurate. As she was presenting her new project at Galerie Le Coeur in Paris, “ŽIVIJO”, a virulent and funny satire of marriage for which she created wedding dresses for her best enemies, we met the artist whose work says a lot about love, freedom, motherhood and pretzels.

How would you define your work?

Schizophrenic, intuitive and sometimes pretty silly too. Whenever someone asks me what I do for living I resist saying I am a photographer, I don't consider myself as one. Someone described me as an ambassador of humor or do-it-yourself maker.

Cynicism is part of your work…. you always blur the lines between serious and fun, low and high culture. Would you say your work is political?

No, to be honest, the last thing I am interested in is politics. I don't follow that at all. But I would probably noticed if a giraffe became president. An important notion of my work is freedom.



Last year, you presented some of your mother’s computer images. What was the idea behind that?

My mum is called Lenka. She is a completely normal mum and casual user of a digital camera. I went on her hard drive in which she collected pictures she had taken or found on the Internet. I picked up a few of them. They were home pets pictures and natural disasters ones. I just wanted to make a collection out of them and mix them with other shots. I am a firm atheist but I preach my mother as god.

What would you define as the most absurd thing in the way we live our modern lives?

I am concerned with the general speed of our societies and habits. I feel I should turn into an octopuss(y) in order to deal with everything. That's why I would like to recommend a book from Carl Honoré, unofficial speaker of the slow philosophers and their believers.

What is the biggest challenge you have to face right now? 

Myself. Maybe it sounds like a cliché but my biggest challenge is to stop repeating old mistakes. And also defeat my own fear.

Do you have a particular obsession for food? I’m thinking about your words on Coca-Cola, your piece on pretzels and popcorn… 

Since I was a kid, I had this strange fear of food that I still try to figure out. If it was up to me, I would be eating potatoes with butter or bananas for the rest of my life. I hate conversations about cooking. Food goes into me like in a trash can. This is something I have tried to analyze in my work for a while now.


You said that you hate weddings. Could you tell me more about your ŽIVIJO project? What was the idea behind it?

We should receive a Nobel Prize for every never-ending wedding we have to attend to please our friends. The big day often turns into a waiting festival. And that sucks. That was the reason why I have decided to create my own wedding agency that provides everything to make your wedding day unforgettable. We offer complete service, including finding the right location, food menu, atmosphere, decoration and creative photo documentation. We offer style consultancy for brides and also set trends for wedding fashion.



What would you say to young girls who want to get married?

Cross out all the perverse uncles who have problems with alcohol off your guest list.

Do you still believe in love? What does it means to you?

Love means freedom to me and whoever does not believe in love should better jump out the window.

What is your own definition of empowerment, as a woman and as an artist?

I consider men and women equal in all areas. Except that sometimes I need someone to open a marmalade jar.

This Week

making images: behind the scenes

Take another look behind the scenes at photographer Harley Weir’s journey in capturing five women from around the world as well at a number of other creators defining the image of today in documentary filmmaker Chelsea McMullan’s Making Images video. 

Read More

making films: behind the scenes

Take another look behind the scenes in director Eva Michon's Making Films with Alma Har'el video: a look at the making of JellyWolf and the current state of play within the film industry through the eyes of female filmmakers championing diversity, and Alma Har'els Free The Bid initiative. 

Read More

making movement: behind the scenes

Take a look behind the scenes in filmmaker Agostina Galvez’s Making Movements: a look at the making of The Pike and the Shield: Five Paradoxes with ballerina Nozomi Iijima and other leading movers and shakers from the world of dance including choreographers and dancers Holly Blakey, Aya Sato and the duo Project O. 

Read More

making codes: behind the scenes

Take another at director Liza Mandelup's Making Codes video, a look behind the scenes at digital artist and creative director Lucy Hardcastle's piece 'Intangible Matter' that features producer Fatima Al Qadiri, artist Chris Lee and a host of more leading digital artists.

Read More

seeing sound: in conversation charlotte hatherley & carly paradis

Two of London’s most sought after figures in visually-shaped music meet.

Read More

making exhibitions: behind the scenes

Take a look behind the scenes in director Christine Yuan’s Making Exhibitions with Rebecca Lamarche-Vadel: a look at the making of Just A Second: A Digital Exhibition Curated by Rebecca Lamarche-Vadel, inspired by CHANEL Nº5 L'EAU, and a look at other leading curators and collectives from the art world including BUFU, Rozsa Farkas, Fatos Ustek, Angelina Dreem and Yana Peel.

Read More

lizzie borden: feminist trailblazer

As her magnum opus returns to UK shores, Lizzie Borden – the visionary artist behind Born in Flames – talks rebellion, feminist artistry, and her nostalgia for 70s NYC.

Read More

rebecca lamarche-vadel's
just a second

Rebecca Lamarche-Vadel is the Paris based curator for the Palais De Tokyo. Dedicated to modern and contemporary art she puts on large scale exhibitions that span installation, dance, sculpture, photography and spoken word. For The Fifth Sense she created a digital exhibition based on the transformative power of CHANEL’s Nº5 L’EAU.

Read More

reba maybury: she’s got the power

We sat down with the editor, writer and dominatrix Reba Maybury to discuss her taboo-breaking publishing house Wet Satin Press, her latest novel Dining With Humpty Dumpty and what it means to be a woman in control.

Read More
loading...