František Uprka

František Uprka (8 September 1868 – 26 January 1929) was a Czech sculptor, the younger brother of folklife painter Joža Uprka. He was usually called by his nickname, Franta.

Life and work
Uprka was born on 8 September 1868 in Kněždub. He was one of four children born to Ján Uprka, a farmer, and his wife Eva née Machálková, from Lipov. His father was also an amateur painter, which inspired him and his brother, Joža, to pursue careers in art. Those plans were interrupted by their father's early death, in 1874, after which their mother insisted on more practical career choices, such as teaching or the clergy. As a result, František was sent to the Piarist grammar school in Strážnice, but he performed poorly there and returned to help on the farm. Later, he was able to follow his artistic inclinations; taking classes in woodcarving at a school in Valašské Meziříčí. He never finished his courses there, choosing instead to go to Prague, where he planned to study clay modelling at the Academy of Fine Arts with Josef Mauder. However, due to his incomplete primary education, he was not accepted at the Academy. He was able to find a position as an assistant in a stone carving firm. This enabled him to learn stonemasonry from Jindřich Václav Čapek, which led to lessons in sculpture from Antonín Pavel Wagner and Bohuslav Schnirch.

After completing his military service, in 1892, he made a study trip to several Czech and German cities; paying visits to schools that taught sculpture. In 1896, he settled in Prague, where he married Otilia Chramostová, the daughter of Josef Karel Chramosta, an actor and puppeteer at the Estates Theatre. He became a member of the Mánes Union of Fine Arts and, after 1903, began to exhibit with them. In 1906, he had a showing in Milan, followed by exhibits in Venice and Rome. In 1918, the famous Topičův salon reopened, after a seven year hiatus, with an exhibition featuring his works and those of Alois Kalvoda. In 1920 his statue, "Pilgrims", was presented at the Salon in Paris, as an example of Czech art. During the 1920s, he often stayed in Slovakia, where he created decorations for the poublic buildings in Bratislava. His last major work was a monument to František Bohumír Zvěřina in Hrotovice.

In 1928, he was stricken by appendicitis and rushed to the hospital for an emergency operation. After that, his health deteriorated. Following another stay in the hospital, he and Otilia went to Tuchoměřice to rest and recuperate. He died there, of a heart attack, on 26 January 1929, at the age of 61.