

From the family of the artist
Private Collection
Acquired from the above by the present owner
New York, New Museum, Ostalgia, July 14 – September 15, 2011
On the page, Anna Zemánková’s forms seem to germinate in real time. Tendrils unfurl in looping arabesques; petals radiate outward in rhythmic symmetry; biomorphic clusters pulse with an almost cellular intensity. At once botanical and fantastical, her drawings resemble specimens from an otherworldly herbarium—flora that feel both meticulously observed and entirely invented. Her surfaces shimmer with jewel-toned pastels, suggesting growth, mutation, and quiet transformation.
“I am growing flowers that are not grown anywhere else,” Zemánková once said—a deceptively simple phrase that captures the autonomy of her inner vision. This visionary botany took root not in youth, but in the second half of her life, when, almost by happenstance, drawing became a daily, nearly devotional act. Her process followed a ritual discipline. Rising before dawn, she would listen to classical music and draw in a trance-like state, suspended between sleep and waking. From looping ballpoint lines emerged curvilinear structures that expand across the surface with rhythmic precision, as though guided by an internal pulse.
That such a fully formed language emerged in the second half of her life remains one of the most compelling aspects of her story. Born in 1908 in Olomouc, Moravia, Zemánková showed early artistic promise, but her family discouraged the pursuit, directing her instead toward a practical profession as a dental technician. Marriage to a military officer and the upheaval of the Second World War led her to Prague, where she devoted herself to raising her children. For decades, art receded into the background.
It returned unexpectedly. In her early fifties, amid depression and severe health complications related to diabetes—conditions that would eventually lead to the amputation of both legs—her children discovered a suitcase of old drawings. The find rekindled something dormant. With encouragement from her son, himself an artist, and newly supplied with materials and a drawing table, Zemánková began a daily practice that would define the remainder of her life.
Her technique evolved with remarkable assurance. Pencil underdrawings gave way to layered tempera or pastel; later, she incorporated textile collage, crochet, beads, and sequins—materials drawn from the domestic sphere she had long inhabited. Craft and intuition merged seamlessly. The works throb with organic vitality, their undulating forms evoking both microscopic life and celestial constellations.
Recognition followed gradually. In the 1960s, within the constraints of Soviet-era Czechoslovakia, Zemánková began exhibiting informally among friends in Prague, even hosting periodic “open house” viewings. Her work eventually came to the attention of Jean Dubuffet, who acquired several pieces for the Collection de l’Art Brut in Lausanne, securing her place within the movement he had championed — a legacy the institution is marking this year with exhibitions celebrating the 50th anniversary of Dubuffet’s formal articulation of Art Brut, on view through September.
Today, Zemánková is a central figure within Art Brut. Her work was included in the Venice Biennale in 2013 and returned in 2024 under the theme “Foreigners Everywhere,” curated by Adriano Pedrosa. Her drawings now reside in major public collections, including the Centre Pompidou and the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
Her influence continues to unfold beyond the museum. For Resort 2026, Ulla Johnson unveiled Ulla Johnson x Anna Zemánková, translating three of the artist’s delicate botanical paintings across silken dresses, handmade denim, and statement outerwear — following the designer’s recent engagements with Helen Frankenthaler and Lee Krasner.
What began as a private ritual—an act of return at a moment of personal vulnerability—became a sovereign visual language. Zemánková did not simply resume drawing; she cultivated an interior cosmos. In growing flowers that exist nowhere else, she transformed adversity into generative force, leaving behind a body of work that feels at once deeply personal and expansively universal.