The sculptor who returned the Marian Column to Prague
Petr Váňa was born on April 22, 1965 and lived with his parents Maria and Josef in Řevnice near Prague. His father worked as a paramedic in the Kladno coal mines, then was transferred to the surface. He worked as a blaster in a quarry. His mother was an accountant. As Christians the family went to church. In the third grade of elementary school, the civics teacher tried to make fun of Petr in front of the whole class due to his religion. After elementary school, he entered the Secondary School of Sculpture and Stonemasonry in Hořice. He was almost expelled because he did not agree with the deployment of Soviet nuclear missiles in Czechoslovakia. After graduation, he was accepted to the Academy of Fine Arts in Prague, majoring in sculpture. In November 1989, he took part in the student strike to protest the brutal intervention of police forces on Národní třída. He graduated from the academy in 1990 and worked on the restoration of churches. From 1993 to 1997 he participated in the restoration of the Church of St. Salvator in Prague. From 1997 to 2020, he devoted his efforts to restoring the Marian Column, a Baroque monument from the 17th century demolished on the Old Town Square after the proclamation of independent Czechoslovakia in 1918. Due to the search for stone for the new pillar, he temporarily went bankrupt. Thanks to his wife, however, he got out of trouble and the new pillar has been adorning the Old Town Square since August 2020. In the same year, Petr Váňa lived in Prague and continued to create other sculptures for the Marian Column.