Vladimír Popovič was born in 1939 as the eldest son into a family of shopkeepers
in eastern Slovakia. His early childhood had the shadow of WWII cast over it, followed
by the rebuilding period of the Stalinist era communism of the early fifties.
After the war, the family moved to the regional town of Kezmarok and settled there.
Vladimír's childhood in eastern Slovakia, at the foothills of the High Tatra mountains,
strongly reverberates throughout the artist's work. Even if rarely through landscapes,
but more often through colours of grey stone and yellow bloom of rape, angular shapes
of rocks, patterns of fields and winding serpents of roads and alleys of trees.
Vladimír learned to play violin and started to sketch and paint, particularly when
forced to convalesce by a touch of tuberculosis in 1952. By the time he was 16 he
knew that he wanted to go to Bratislava, the capital of Slovakia, to study at the
Arts and Crafts School.
Once living in Bratislava he was drawn into the artistic and bohemian way of life
that was emerging in the city, and in 1959 was accepted as a student at the Slovak
Academy of Fine Arts. The sixties saw Vladimír shine as one of the most talented
students producing cutting edge and innovative work as part of the pan-European
artistic avant-garde. Vladimír married a fellow artist, Katarína Šujanová, in 1962
and his son, Andrej, was born two years later.
The loosening of the political atmosphere in Slovakia which nurtured the growth
and freedom of arts came to an end in August 1968 when the Soviet Army invaded and
occupied the country, and replaced the government. A mostly dark period in Vladimír's
creative output followed, with private works of great emotional impact as well as
public statements including a statue of the giant Catapult (1970) as a symbol of
the struggle between the political David and Goliath - Soviet Union and Czechoslovakia.
Vladimír slowly found his way and split his creative output between the occassional,
but financially necessary works for public buildings, approved, though not always
understood by the regime, and the private production in his studio. However, he
never sold out to the regime's ideology and as such lived on the fringe of the officially
sanctioned cultural life in the country. To keep his perspective he used every opportunity
to travel abroad and obtained inspiration from his visits to Yugoslavia, Greece,
France, Germany, Japan and Cuba.
In 1975 he suffered serious injuries in a car accident, it took more than a year
and several operations before he could walk again unaided. He had his second child,
Alexandra, in 1977. With the advent of the eighties, the corruption of the regime
became unbearable but the end of it was still unthinkable. This was the time of
the bleakest, monochromatic production by Vladimír, taking another steep dive when
his son defected to the UK in 1984.
The Velvet Revolution of 1989 turned everything upside down and Vladimír was shortly
invited to join the new lecturing team at the Slovak Academy of Fine Arts. His contribution
to art was recognised by the publication of his Mongraph and the “Grand Restrospecive”
exhibition held at the Slovak National Gallery in 2002, and by being made a Professor
at the Academy.
After 17 years of teaching Vladimír retired from the Academy to concentrate on his personal creativity.
He continues to live and work in Bratislava.