*1995 – Zlín
2015 – 2021 Academy of Fine Arts, Prague (sculpture and painting studios)
2020 – Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design, Jerusalem, Israel
2025 – Stoneborn Tears, Gallery of the City of Blansko
2024 – Embodyment, Outvert Art Space/Gallerí Úthverfa, Ísafjörður (IS)
2023 – Rise From the Breath (with Julie Daňhelová) Studio Prám, Prague
2023 – Endless Flow, Hunt Kastner Project room, Prague
2022 – Through Quiet Places You Shall Unite (with Kristína Haviarová) 35M2 gallery, Prague
2022 – Overflow, Pince, Budapest (HU)
2019 – Memory of Unknown, Gallery Síň, Telč
2025 – Bodies Of Dust, Gampa, Pardubice
2024 – Róló, Útkall festival, Flateyri, (IS)
2024 – Group Therapy, GHMP, Prague
2023 – She Sells Sea Shells, Pragovka gallery, Prague
2021 – Drlaňa, Galerie Sýpka, Valšské Meziříčí
2021 – Sklad M1, plakátovací plochy, Praha
2020 – Truly, Photogether gallery, Zlín
2019 – The Last 30 Years of Emancipation, GAVU, Prague
2021 – 2022 – post graduate traineeship in studio of Zsófia Keresztes, Budapest (HU)
2024 – ArtsIceland, Ísafjörður, (IS)
2023 – Matadero Madrid, (ES)
2024 – Sculpture Network Emerging Sculptor Award, 2nd place
2017 – Sculpture symposium in Zbraslavice
Jindřiška Jabůrková (1995, Zlín Czech Republic) graduated from the Academy of Fine Arts in Prague. She studied sculpture and painting. She completed an internship at the Bezelel academy of fine arts and design in Jerusalem (2020) and an internship in Zsofia Keresztes studio in Budapest (2022). She participated in several symposia in the Czech Republic and residency in Matadero Madrid (ES) and ArtsIceland (IS) .
Her artistic practice is interdisciplinary, but recently, she has been focusing primarily on object-based work and site-specific installations.
She creates sculptures and installations inspired by natural phenomena such as erosion, particle flow, and the transformation of matter by natural forces. Her work reflects post-apocalyptic visions of the future—unsettling yet thought-provoking. Rather than evoking fear, these visions encourage greater sensitivity to one’s surroundings and a perception of the world from the perspective of objects.
She enjoys working with discarded materials, especially construction waste, which she integrates into her narratives, giving them a new life.
One of the key aspects of her work is a fascination with the transformation of matter over time. She often incorporates the element of water, which disrupts her sculptures by moving particles—degrading them while simultaneously shaping them into new forms.
She draws inspiration from Joseph Beuys’ artistic approach to materials, object-oriented ontology, the writings of Manuel DeLanda and Jane Bennett, as well as the study of nature according to J. W. Goethe and Rudolf Hauschka.
She lives and works in Prague, currently based in the Prám studio.
Interview on mater.digital