The Pavilion of Theoretical Institutes of the Slovak University of Technology in Bratislava was built between 1948 and 1953 based on a project by the eminent Slovak architect Emil Belluš. The south wing of the building is decorated with a set of relief plaques that were mounted on the building between 1949 and 1953. Their creators were the most important Slovak sculptors of the 1950s.
There are twenty reliefs on the façade: eight on each of the western and eastern sides, three in the 1st floor windowsills on the southern side, and one above the building’s east entrance.
The collective theme is celebration of the professions that contributed most significantly to the building of a new society after 1948. These professions are symbolised by their distinctive attributes. Content of the reliefs, as well as the artistic method of processing (descriptive realistic depiction), conforms to the period of socialist realism in Slovakia during the first half of the 1950s. The composition is characterised by schematic representation; it features static scenes of two or three three-quarter figures (workers) depicted to the sides of the plaque, linked by the attributes of their profession.
The relief Plumbers is positioned on the eastern façade of the building in the seventh window axis from the south.
Its author is Ladislav Pollák, who repeats the composition of other reliefs that face the street. To the sides of the plaque are figures of workers, their bodies depicted from the front with heads turned in profile. They are shown wearing overalls and holding tools: the man to the left an assembly wrench, the man to the right welding tools. A radiator stands between them.
ZZ
Research status as of 10 June 2023.