If the revolution hadn‘t come, I probably would have been convicted
Stáhnout obrázek
Jan Včelař was born on 28th January 1956 in Gottwaldov (today Zlín). His father was an artist and his mother worked as a piano teacher at a music school. He grew up in an anti-communist family, his father was one of the first artists in Gottwaldov and later collaborated with Civic Forum. Already at primary school, he fell in love with the big beat and began to hang out with like-minded people in Gottwaldov. After primary school, he struggled to get into secondary school and a two-year economics extension course. He then studied for seven years at the Brno Conservatory, majoring in classical guitar, graduating in 1987. That same year he co-founded the band Blues Station, which played at meetings of the Society of Friends of the USA (SPUSA). He was also involved in copying banned literature, which he received from his friend Bohumil Obdržálek. He stopped his activities after Obdržálek‘s emigration. Through his musical activities and contacts with the dissent in Gottwaldov, State Security got interested in him and he underwent several interrogations. He was banned from teaching at the music school in Gottwaldov. He worked as a stagehand at the Workers‘ Theatre and later commuted to the School of Art in Uherský Brod. Since 1987, thanks to his friend Jiří Severin, he taught at the School of Art in Otrokovice. In 1989 he was threatened with prosecution because of an incident with a State Security officer who tried to persuade him to cooperate. After 1989, Jan Včelař worked as an antique furniture restorer with another ex-dissident, Bedřich Koutný, and they also kept horses. In 2025, he lived in Zlín and was a member of the Včelař Jazz Quintet.