Milan Pitlach


Milan Pitlach is a Czech architect and photographer.

Biography and career

After attending school in Opava, Milan Pitlach studied at the Faculty of Architecture of the Czech Technical University in Prague. Following this he worked from 1966 till 1969 in Studio Delta of the Union of Architectural Studios in Prague. During 1969–1970 he had an internship with Yorke, Rosenberg & Mardall in London. After his return to Prague he was again employed by Studio Delta with the Design Institute of Prague /PÙ VHMP/. In 1981 he immigrated to the German Federal Republic, where he settled in Düsseldorf. There he worked first with Dansard, Kalenborn & Partner, Heuser Architects, between 1984–1989 and then in the office of O. M. Ungers in Cologne. From 2003 till 2009 he lived in Shanghai, working as a chief architect of Archlong Group Co. At present he runs an office in Düsseldorf.
It was during his internship in London that Milan Pitlach began taking photographs. His first photographic exhibition was held in Reduta Club in Prague in 1972. Since that he has had some forty individual exhibitions, taken part in many group exhibitions and published his photographic work in a series of books and catalogues.

Architectural work

Milan Pitlach’s architectural language derives from the tradition of modern Czech architecture.
“The main premises of my designs are economy of volume, but also of layout and an effort to create space. Concepts are based on elementary volumes, which, however much they may be distorted, leave a sense of their original shape.”. Pitlach has reflected on his attitude to architecture in several critical essays, for example in Architektura CSR and Architekt, as well as Revolver Revue and its Critical Supplement. He has also taught as a visiting professor at Bergische Universität in Wuppertal and at his alma mater, The Czech Technical University in Prague.

Architectural work (selected projects)

Several of his projects and competition entries some have been awarded the highest prize: Master Plan of Traffic Flow of Prague-Liben, Kunsthalle Düsseldorf, Messepalast Vienna, Mediapark Cologne, Administrative Building BIBA Bremen, Modification of Karlovo Square, Třebíč, Administrative Building Block #114, Jing An District, Shanghai, Shanghai Jewish Memorial, Shanghai, Cultural Zone Min Hang, Shanghai, East Tai Hu Lake Development Plan, Suzhou. Among other prize-winning projects were:New South-West Town, Prague, Playgrounds for Children, Extension of the Town Library, Fulda, Residential Ensemble, Solingen, Central Railway Station Administrative and Congress Center, Prague, Station of Suspended Railway, Wuppertal, Master Plan of Industrial Zone, Schweinfurt, Modification of Komenský and Masaryk Square, Třebíč.

Exhibitions

London in 1969 made Milan Pitlach a photographer. “He was fascinated by the new subject-matter and the evidence of a life-style which he empathised with and admired and which he quickly adopted. And because it seemed to him very significant, he wanted to record it. … He did this in photographs and diaries, both forms of expression; because more than an abstract and professional approach to reality we find here an attitude of somebody who wants and must both visually and literally give an account of an important personal experience, perhaps a key event of his life.” On his return to Czechoslovakia he continued taking photographs as a document of the gloomy Czech reality of the Husak period. A similar motivation and aesthetic marks the work produced on the travels he made during that decade. At that time he developed a subjective line, portraying the “small” world around him. These pictures were exhibited at Dokumenta 1997 and published in a book with the title Deníky / Diaries.
Since his emigration to West Germany he has enjoyed the possibility of free movement, and this has resulted in an intensification of his photographic activities. In his work of the Eighties, a period marked by many journeys, the most extensive collection of photographs is from India. “In his photographs from India, which he made ten years after his English photographs we encounter formal virtuosity. Pitlach balances his compositions with professional certainty and elegance… He treats the counterpoint of light and shadow almost in the manner of the masters of the Baroque.” and appeared as a book in 2004; other various collections have been published, for example Landscapes According to Friedrich Nietzsche, Fragments, Calligraphies and Gaspar de la Nuit.

Exhibitions (selected)

Many works have been shown at exhibitions of projects and competition entries and published in architectural magazines such as Wettbewerb Actuell, Baumeister, Architekt, Architektura, Project.

Publications – Photographic work