See what’s coming up on on the BCSA’s Events Calendar.

Get on the ice! Ice Hockey and Skating in Art

Kinsky Palace Staroměstské náměstí 1/3, Prague, Czech Republic

On the occasion of the 2024 Ice Hockey World Championship, Prague National Gallery presents an exhibition that opens up the theme of skating and hockey in visual art. Skating on frozen canals, lakes, and rivers was popular in 17th- and 18th-century Holland, and it soon spread to the Czech lands and Prague and became a... Read more »

Kafka: Making of an Icon

Weston Library Broad Street, Oxford, United Kingdom

Kafka: Making of an Icon marks the 100th anniversary of the author’s death, celebrating not only his achievements and creativity but also how he continues to inspire new literary, theatrical and cinematic creations around the world. This free exhibition features materials from the archives of the Bodleian Libraries, which hold the majority of Franz Kafka's papers,... Read more »

Tereza Bušková: Hidden Mothers

Midlands Art Centre Cannon Hill Park, Birmingham, United Kingdom

This installation features a video and objects created as part of Tereza Bušková’s project Hidden Mothers, conducted in Birmingham and London from 2019 to 2021. The project aimed to empower women, especially migrant mothers facing isolation, drawing inspiration from Victorian photography where mothers hid behind cloths while their infants were photographed. In contemporary society motherhood's complexities... Read more »

From the Homeland – opening concert

St Mary's Church Upper Streeet, London, United Kingdom

The inspiration for this year's Islington Festival of Music and Art is the Homeland, what it means, how it is celebrated. Looking through composers' relationships with their roots, how they take inspiration from them, either by going straight to the source, or by nostalgically diving in to their distant but strong memories. An obvious place... Read more »

From the Homeland – grand finale

Christ Church Highbury London, United Kingdom

The inspiration for this year’s Islington Festival of Music and Art is the Homeland, what it means, how it is celebrated. Looking through composers’ relationships with their roots, how they take inspiration from them, either by going straight to the source, or by nostalgically diving in to their distant but strong memories. An obvious place... Read more »

Czech Philharmonic play Dvořák and Suk

Royal Albert Hall Kensington Gore, London, United Kingdom

When the great Czech composer Antonín Dvořák died, his protégé and son-in-law Josef Suk wrote three movements of a symphony in his mentor’s memory. Then tragedy struck again: Suk’s wife, Dvořák’s own daughter, died too. Added to the long-breathed, lyrical symphony Suk had written came two new movements: a furious scherzo and a transcendental statement... Read more »

Janáček’s Glagolitic Mass

Royal Albert Hall Kensington Gore, London, United Kingdom

For their second consecutive night at the Proms, Jakub Hrůša and the Czech Philharmonic bring to life the blazing fanfares, raw outcries and hushed humility of Leoš Janáček’s unparalleled Glagolitic Mass. Inspiration for the work struck the composer in a misty wood. ‘Its moist scent was the incense,’ he wrote. ‘I felt a cathedral grow out... Read more »

Alice: Jan Švankmajer

BFI Belvedere Road, South Bank, London, United Kingdom

Alice in Wonderland told through the lens of Jan Švankmajer. Young Alice watches as the stuffed rabbit in her living room smashes itself out of a display case and disappears on a journey through a garden, soon followed by the girl who drinks a potion that allows her to enter a nightmarish, dark world where... Read more »

Little Otik: Jan Švankmajer

BFI Belvedere Road, South Bank, London, United Kingdom

Surreal Czech comedy horror featuring a log baby who develops dangerous habits. An infertile couple living in an apartment adopt Otik, a log child. However, they soon discover it reciprocates their love in an increasingly dysfunctional and aggressive way, leaving them worrying for anyone or anything that crosses its path. Švankmajer’s live action/stop-motion tale is... Read more »

Surviving Life: Jan Švankmajer

ICA The Mall, St. James's, London, United Kingdom

Extended introduction by Gareth Evans Eugene leads a double life – married to Milada, he also dreams of the beautiful Evgenia. Trying to swap his dreary life for a dream life, he seeks help from a psychoanalyst, who, under the disapproving gazes of Freud and Jung framed on her wall, attempts to interpret his experiences.... Read more »



BCSA makes an effort to ensure that information contained in these pages is accurate.
However, no liability is accepted arising from reliance upon the information contained in these pages or any other information accessed via this site.