Josef Ptáček

* 1946

  • "I didn't even take my camera with me on those trips, when we went for fun. And even when I went to a big foreign country for the first time, because I was then without a passport for seventeen years because I was branded an enemy of the regime and they took my passport and nobody talked to me at all, I had a cop who was always following me around. One time his name was Novotný, one time Dvořák, one time something else, he always had a green car with a different number on it. So it was just unbearable. And he had the task of recruiting me to become a State Security collaborator. And of course he didn't succeed, so they took my passport and that was that."

  • "We were still living in the old apartment, in the so-called castle in Studená. I liked those Ježíšek very much, because I believed that Ježíšek brings presents and that if I was good, he would bring me something nice. And I really wanted an electric train. And come this Christmas, I might have been about six or seven years old, maybe five or six, I would guess. And all of a sudden the bell just rang and that meant we could go from the Christmas Eve table to the room where the tree was lit and the electric train was running under the tree. I burst into tears of happiness and I couldn't quite believe that this could happen, that my greatest wish had come true and I was so upset about it that I refused to take the acylcoffin, it wasn't acylpyrine then, it was acylcoffin. And I didn't like it, it was a bit bitter in my mouth a bit and I didn't want to let my parents spoil my impression of the train, I thought I'm going to sit by that train and play with it and learn to back up and change switches. And then the command was to go to bed, it was the time. And they said that if I didn’t take the pill, it wasn’t out of the question that Ježíšek would see it and take the train away from me again. I just didn’t believe it. I didn’t take the pill, and in the morning, the train was gone."

  • "They even those two sisters, because my dad came from eight children. One of them died in the First World War as a legionnaire, and by the way he wrote wonderful diaries, which actually got lost after the death of one of those Viennese aunts, but I rather think someone stole it, because it was a much nicer read than Erich Maria Remarque's On the Western Front at Rest. But it can't be helped, some things just were and aren't, but that's the way of the world. So that Aunt Bozena, the Viennese one, she was very important to me. And I never knew this Jarek, the author of those literary works, because when the First World War happened, I wasn't born yet. But according to the photographs, he was a very likeable person."

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    Praha, 08.02.2024

    (audio)
    duration: 02:27:41
    media recorded in project The Stories of Our Neigbours
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Everyone is fleeing Prague and you are going there, you are crazy, they told us in August 1968

Little Josef Ptacek in the garden in Studena (1951)
Little Josef Ptacek in the garden in Studena (1951)
photo: Archive of Josef Ptáček

Josef Ptáček was born on 23 February 1946 in Počátky, he spent his childhood in Studena near Jindřichův Hradec. His mother was a schoolteacher, his father a passionate amateur photographer and musician, and he made a living repairing and adjusting agricultural machinery. He had a sister a year older. He graduated from the secondary agricultural technical school, then from the pedagogical faculty in České Budějovice. He taught briefly in Vodnany. During his stay in České Budějovice he attended lectures on photography and taking photographs, he was a member of the České Budějovice photography group FOTOS and the Pilsen photography group F5. In 1970, he was accepted to study photography at FAMU in Prague, but was suspended from his studies because his mother left the Communist Party. Photography has been his lifelong passion and he has been a freelance photographer since 1975. His photographs are available for example in the Theatre Institute in Prague, in the golden fund of the National Museum of Photography in Jindřichův Hradec, in the Museum of Decorative Arts in Prague, in the archives of theatres, museums, in private collections and in the author’s personal collection. Thanks to his photography, he has visited many countries, including India and China, and has repeatedly visited Tibet. He met his wife at the Drak theatre, where she was an actress, they have a daughter Jana and live in Prague’s Malešice.