Being an artist is hard, but anyone can be creative
Eva Králiková, nee Tóthová, was born in 1937 in Petržalka to Hungarian parents who came from villages around Galanta. She experienced the turbulence of history when she was very young, when she and her parents had to leave Petržalka, which fell to Germany, and escape to Budapest. The tumult of war drove them out of there as well, for the second time they lost the business they had built and settled in Galant. Here, Eva experienced her father’s arrest, air battles and the arrival of the German and Soviet armies. From her parents’ stories, she was well acquainted with the fate of the extended family, which was also significantly affected by the post-war closure of the border with Hungary and the forced resettlement of the population. Already in elementary school, she began to show artistic talents, which she fully developed at the School of Art Industry in Bratislava, where she was part of the strong generation of Juraj Jakubisko, Eliáš Havetta and Milan Sládek. With her parents and future husband in mind, she returned to Galanta after her studies, where she worked as a photographer. Even after starting a family, she did not give up art and became the founder of the art department at the People’s School of Art, which she led until the turn of the 80s and 90s. After retiring, she again began to devote herself fully to creation, especially to painting, and founded the show Galantská paleta.