Čermák was born in Prague. His birth house at Betlémské náměstí 10 (Betlémské Square No. 10) has since been decorated with a commemorative statue of a girl crowned with laurel and with a golden inscription of his surname.[1] As a child, Čermák suffered an injury of the hip, and due to subsequent complications he spent a part of his childhood strapped to the bed in a narrow chest. This accident apparently inspired his artistic beginnings, as while in bed, deprived of the possibility of moving, he found an interest in drawing.[1] Histitle family was involved in arts patronage; his mother supported anonymously the renowned Czech writer Božena Němcová.[2]
Through his sister Marie, Čermák was the brother-in-law of Jerzy Konstanty Czartoryski. He died in 1878 in Paris. His remains were transferred to Prague in 1888. He is buried at Olšany Cemetery in Prague.[5]
Style
He was influenced by the work of Peter Paul Rubens. During his stay in Paris he encountered Eugène Delacroix and Alexandre-Gabriel Decamps and became familiar with their works. Many of his paintings depicted scenes from Czech history; he was, however, also interested in subjects from Montenegro and Old Herzegovina, and one of his most famous works is The Wounded Montenegrin.[4] His works are influenced by Romanticism. As an important artistic exponent of the Czech National Revival, he actively participated in the emancipation efforts of Czechs and other small European nations.[3] The themes of his works bear the stamp of anti-Habsburg stance.[6] Čermák painted portraits and genre pieces in addition to history paintings.
^ ab"Vycházky po Praze" [Walks around Prague] (in Czech). usedlosti.ctrnactka.net. Retrieved 25 October 2010.
^Veselý, Josef (2009-11-15). "Babička (Toulky Českou minulostí)" [Grandmother (Wanderings in the Czech past)] (in Czech). Czech Radio. Retrieved 25 October 2010.
Naděžda Blažíčková-Horová, ed. 19th-Century Art in Bohemia: (1790–1910) - Painting, Sculpture, Decorative Arts. Prague; National Gallery in Prague, 2009.