Background
Hlavacek was born on July 13, 1921 in Kenosha, Wisconsin, to Frank and Cecilia Hlavacek of Czechoslovakian/Yugoslavian descent.
Hlavacek was born on July 13, 1921 in Kenosha, Wisconsin, to Frank and Cecilia Hlavacek of Czechoslovakian/Yugoslavian descent.
He graduated from the Layton School of Art in Milwaukee in 1949 (a school that would also produce artists Paul Faulkner, Knute Heldner, Karl Priebe, Walter Sheffer, among others).
He was also recognized as a potter and draftsman. He received his master"s degree in fine arts from the Instituto Allende, San Miguel de Allende, Mexico, in 1970. He was faculty in the art department at the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater from 1964 until his death in 1982.
Hlavacek was known for both the "force and originality of his symbolism..and the bold simplification of form and color which was his trademark" (The Milwaukee Journal, July 6, 1982).
His inspiration came from the Wisconsin landscape and local plants, animals, and insects, and butterflies were a common theme in his later work. Following his study in San Miguel de Allende, Hlavacek"s work also took on color palettes, objects, and patterns reminiscent of indigenous Mexican art
Hlavacek described his motivation in an interview in 1952: "Today"s world is just too real, too much with us, so I like to deal with what some might term unreality."
His entry was reproduced in Life magazine. He also received purchase awards in Gimbels" Wisconsin Centennial competition and the Wisconsin Renaissance competition sponsored by Marine Banks.
His art appears in many public and private collections, including those of the Milwaukee Art Museum, Museum of Wisconsin Art, Marquette University, Alverno College, The University of Wisconsin-Whitewater, and the Bergstrom-Mahler Museum, among many others