After the Battle

Ján Kulich / 1958

Slavín – a memorial to Soviet soldiers killed in the territory of western Slovakia during the Second World War – was built between 1957 and 1960. The memorial was unveiled on the 15th anniversary of Bratislava’s liberation by the Red Army of the former Soviet Union. It was constructed during the rise of the communist regime with its harsh propaganda, a period characterised by the building of Slovakia’s largest memorial complexes dedicated to the Red (Soviet) Army (in Svidník and Liptovský Mikuláš). 

     Author of the architectural concept was Ján Svetlík, a Slovak sculptor and architect whose project won the third round of the competition for design of the memorial. An elaborate sculptural showpiece was envisaged from the outset, so the architect collaborated with various renowned sculptors – Tibor Bartfay, Jozef Kostka, Rudolf Pribiš, Ján Kulich, Ladislav Snopek, Alexander Trizuljak, Juraj Krén, and Dezider Castiglione.    

The memorial architecture comprises three compositionally interconnected sections – a southern entrance with monumental staircase, a central cemetery, and the memorial itself to the north. The front wall of the staircase is adorned with L. Snopek’s granite relief Oath on the Battle Flag, and the area leading to the graves features two sculptures by J. Kostka – Gratitude and Passing of the Wreaths.  

Slavín’s dominant element is a memorial built on an elevated platform. Accessible via the staircase, it features two statues – T. Bartfay’s At the Grave of a Comrade to the left_,_ and J. Kulich’s After the Battle to the right. Entry to the ceremonial hall is through a double door adorned with figural reliefs by R. Pribiš. A tall, tapering, prismatic obelisk rises from the hall, topped by the statue Victory by A. Trizuljak. 

Sculptural embellishment complements and supports the core objective of the memorial –celebration of the heroism of the Soviet army and gratitude of the Slovak people. The sculptures depict the violence of combat and hardships of war while also celebrating victory. 

     The sculpture After the Battle compositionally reflects the parallel sculpture At the Grave of a Comrade. In both, the figure of a small boy is placed to the outside, the escalating height of the figures thereby enhancing the view towards the memorial column. 

Created by J. Kulich, After the Battle is a three-figure sculpture comprising the standing figures of two soldiers and a boy. 

The figure on the left, a soldier wearing a uniform and cap with his military cloak drawn back, stares into the distance. In the centre, a wounded soldier stands in a torn shirt, his head bowed in pain as he leans with one arm on the soldier and the other arm on the boy. The boy, wearing civilian clothes and a beret, looks with participation at the wounded soldier. 

ZZ

Research status as of 30 June 2023.


Authorship

Co-authorship


Years

  • 1958 – implementation
  • 2020 – 2022 – heritage restoration of site of National Cultural Monument

Type

Material

bronze, marble, stone

Technique

casting, patinating, carving, polishing

Dimensions

sculpture h. approx. 320 cm; base 168 x 215 x 180 cm

Inscription

eastern side of the base: KULICH, 1958; northern side of the base: LIL ZUKOV PRAHA

Condition

  • preserved, maintained
Slavín heritage complex restored in 2020 – 2022.

Registration

  • National Cultural Monument number 204/2 in Central List of Monuments of Monuments Board of the Slovak Republic.
  • Protection zone of National Cultural Monument no. 204 in Central List of Monuments of Monuments Board of the Slovak Republic – Cemetery and memorial to the Red Army on Slavín in Bratislava.
  • Located in Monument Zone Central Urban Area, Bratislava.
  • Central Register of Military Graves of the Ministry of the Interior of the Slovak Republic.

Owner

  • Bratislava the Capital City of Slovakia

Administrator

  • Marianum Burial Services of the City of Bratislava

Address

ul. Na Slavíne

Location details

on east side of staircase to memorial

Plot number

2925/1

GPS

48.1537450, 17.0998250

Other works in the area

Victory

Alexander Trizuljak 1959 – 1961

Door with relief decoration

Rudolf Pribiš 1959

At the Grave of a Comrade

Tibor Bartfay 1959

Alexander Dubček Peace Meadow

nezistený 1997