Being caught in the shadow of POE I decided whilst in Prague I would visit this great exhibition. There was no-one there so here are a few pics if you are unable to visit and you are a fan of POE.

This exhibition is devoted to reflections of the oeuvre of Edgar Allan Poe (1809–1849) in Czech art and the phenomenon of horror and fear in general. Poe’s work continues to attract readers, and his short stories and poems inspire not only writers but also artists, film makers and musicians.

Artists took significant interest in Poe’s literary oeuvre only after the writer’s untimely death. This was mainly thanks to the poet Charles Baudelaire who translated Poe’s works to French. As early as in the second half of the 19th century, prominent artists such as Edouard Manet, Odilon Redon, James Ensor and Gustave Doré created remarkable artworks inspired by Poe. Although the first Czech translations of Poe’s woks date to the 1850s, artworks inspired by them only appeared several decades later, at the turn on the 20th century. Poe’s poems and short stories inspired František Kupka and soon after him, Josef Váchal, Jan Konůpek and František Kobliha. Alfred Kubin, a German artist born in Bohemia, made illustrations for the German translation of Poe’s collected stories. Later on, Alén Diviš and František Tichý created further Poe-inspired artworks. Poe was a source of inspiration for Jan Švankmajer and more recently, František Štorm and Jaroslav Róna.
In addition to the above-mentioned ones, the project will feature a broad spectrum of artists, including Krištof Kintera, Josef Bolf, Martin Zet and others as well as artists of the youngest generation, such as Jan Vytiska and Marek Škubal. The exhibition aim to demonstrate the close relationship that can occur between modern and contemporary art and a 19th-century author. As such, it supports the conception of the permanent exhibition 1796–1918: Art of the Long Century.
Exhibiting artists:

Josef Bolf, Adolf Born, Alén Diviš, Tereza Eisnerová, Jakub Gajdošík, Matouš Háša, Jan Hísek, Kryštof Hošek, Jakub Janovský, Bohumil Kafka, Krištof Kintera, František Kobliha, Běla Kolářová, Jan Konůpek, Jan Kotík, Alfred Kubin, Otakar Kubín (Coubine), František Kupka, Martin Mulač, Karel Nepraš, Jaroslav Panuška, Jiří Příhoda, Jaroslav Róna, Pavel Rút, Jakub Schikaneder, Vladimír Silovský, Karel Souček, Hugo Steiner-Prag, Richard Stipl, Jiří Šalamoun, Marek Škubal, Jakub Špaňhel, František Štorm, Jan Švankmajer, Mark Ther, František Tichý, Josef Váchal, Markéta Váradiová, Jan Vytiska, Martin Zet

The First 48 images are from the POE exhibition. The rest are other interesting artistic pieces.