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251 - 300 of 333 works
Poster for 'Moravian Teachers' Choir' (1911)
Study for 'The Slav Epic' cycle No.1: The Slavs in Their Original Homeland (1912) (c.1910-1912)
Models posing as struggling figures for 'The Slav Epic' cycle No.2: The Celebration of Svantovít (1911-1912)
Models posing as struggling figures for 'The Introduction of the Slavonic Liturgy' (The Slav Epic cycle No.3, 1912) (1911-1912)
Princess Hyacinth (1911)
Poster for 'Regional Exhibition at Ivančice 1913' (1912)
Study for 'The Slav Epic' cycle No.2: The Celebration of Svantovít (c.1910-1912)
Poster for the 'Lottery of the Union of Southwestern Moravia' (1912)
'The Slav Epic' cycle No.1: The Slavs in Their Original Homeland. Between the Turanian Whip and the Sword of the Goths (between the 3rd and 6th centuries AD). (1912)
6th Sokol Festival (1912)
The Threat (1912)
Study for 'The Slav Epic cycle' No.19: The Abolition of Serfdom in Russia (1913-1914)
St Basil's Cathedral and Red Square, Moscow (1913)
Peasant father and son with the Tsar Bell in the background, Moscow Kremlin (1913)
Procession of the Beatification Ceremony, Red Square, Moscow (1913)
Mucha sketching in Red Square, Moscow (1913)
Beggar and a bourgeois lady, Moscow (1913)
'The Slav Epic' cycle No.2: The Celebration of Svantovít. When Gods Are at War, Salvation Is in the Arts (between the 8th and 10th centuries AD). (1912)
Study for 'The Slav Epic' cycle No.14: The Sacrifice at Szigetvár by Nikola Zrinski (c.1913-1914)
'The Slav Epic' cycle No.3: Introduction of the Slavonic Liturgy. Praise God in Your Mother Tongue (9th century AD). (1912)
'The Slav Epic' cycle No.4: Tsar Simeon of Bulgaria. The Dawn of Slav Literature (10th century AD). (1923)
Study for 'The Slav Epic' cycle No.7: Jan Milíč of Kroměříž (c.1915-1916)
Study for 'The Slav Epic' cycle No.9: Master Jan Hus Preaching at the Bethlehem Chapel. The Magic of the Word: Truth Prevails (1412). (c.1915-1916)
Mucha posing as Jan Hus for 'Master Jan Hus Preaching at the Bethlehem Chapel' (The Slav Epic cycle No.9, 1916) (c.1915-1916)
'The Slav Epic' cycle No.5: The Bohemian King Přemysl Otakar II. The Union of Slav Dynasties (13th century). (1924)
'The Slav Epic' cycle No.6: Tsar Štěpán Dušan. The Slavic Code of Law (14th century). (1923)
'The Slav Epic' cycle No.7: Jan Milíč of Kroměříž. The Magic of the Word: A Brothel Converted into a Convent (14th century). (1916)
France Embraces Bohemia (1918)
Song of Bohemia (1918)
Mucha with the Slav Epic canvases exhibited in the the Klementinum, Prague (1919)
'The Slav Epic' cycle No.9: Master Jan Hus Preaching at the Bethlehem Chapel. The Magic of the Word: Truth Prevails (1412). (1916)
Design for the poster for the Mucha Exhibition at the Brooklyn Museum, New York, January-February 1921 (1920)
'The Slav Epic' cycle No.10: The Meeting at Křížky. The Magic of Words: Sub utraque (1419) (1916)
'The Slav Epic' cycle No.8: After the Battle of Grunewald. The Solidarity of the Northern Slavs (1410). (1924)
Self-portrait with the mirrored image of his wife Maruška (photomontage), Zbiroh Castle, West Bohemia (Early 1920s)
Portrait of Woman (c. mid 1910s - 1925)
Study for the poster 'Russia Restituenda [Russia Must Recover]' (1922)
Mother and Child, Prague: study for the poster 'Russia Restituenda' (1922) (c.1921-1922)
Maruška posing as Russian peasant woman for 'Woman in the Wilderness' (1923) (c.1922-1923)
Russia Restituenda [Russia Must Recover] (1922)
Study for 'Woman in the Wilderness' (c. 1922-1923)
'The Slav Epic' cycle No.11: After the Battle of Vítkov. God is Found in Truth, Not Force (1420) (1923)
'The Slav Epic' cycle No.12: Petr Chelčický at Vodňany. Do Not Repay Evil with Evil (1433). (1918)
Woman in the Wilderness (1923)
Ruined Orthodox Church, probably Ružica Church, Belgrade, Serbia (1924)
Dome of the Chilandar Monastery, Mount Athos (1924)
Chilandar Monastery, Mount Athos (1924)
Stone breakers, Bulgaria (1924)
Romany mother and child, Bulgaria (1924)