David Černý Prague Guide (2026) — All Sculptures, Interactive Map & the World of Banksy Honestly Reviewed

Street Art · Prague

Ten David Černý sculptures with exact locations and what they mean — plus an honest assessment of the World of Banksy exhibition that most reviews get wrong

Updated 2026 🗿 10 Černý sculptures mapped 🎨 World of Banksy — honest review 📍 Old Town · Žižkov · Malá Strana · Vinohrady

Prague has two art experiences that generate the most visitor interest in 2026: David Černý’s permanent public sculptures scattered across the city, and the World of Banksy exhibition in an Old Town church. They are very different things. Černý is Prague’s own — born here, trained here, making work that responds directly to Czech political and cultural history. Banksy is a Bristol artist whose reproduction exhibition happens to be located in Prague. Both are worth visiting. Only one of them is about this city.


Who is David Černý

David Černý was born in Prague in 1967. He studied at the Prague School of Arts and Crafts and became internationally known in 1991 when, as a student, he painted a Soviet T-34 tank pink — the tank that had been positioned as a memorial in the Smíchov district since 1945. The act was illegal; he was briefly arrested. Members of parliament subsequently repainted it pink in solidarity. The political establishment was not amused. The tank was eventually removed to a military museum. Černý had established his method.

His work is consistently provocative in a specific way: it takes symbols of Czech national identity — the Good King Wenceslas, Franz Kafka, the Czechoslovak flag, the Communist legacy — and does something unexpected with them. The upside-down horse Wenceslas rides in the Lucerna Passage is not vandalism; it is a comment on the gap between national mythology and political reality. The rotating Kafka head is not decoration; it is a meditation on identity, self-knowledge and the experience of being watched. The babies crawling on the Žižkov Tower have barcodes instead of faces. He means something by all of it.

“I remember when the babies first appeared on the Žižkov Tower — 2000, I think, originally as a temporary installation for the Prague Capital of Culture bid. I was a teenager. The tower had always been there, ugly and Communist and impossible to ignore from half the city. The babies made it stranger and somehow better — or at least more honest about the strangeness. They were made permanent in 2001. I have been looking at them from Vinohrady ever since.” — Dan, HelloPrague.net

David Černý & Banksy — Prague Art Map
Click any marker or location in the list · Light map for easy reading
David Černý sculpture
World of Banksy
All Locations

David Černý — All 10 Prague Sculptures

01
Most Famous · Žižkov · Climb inside
Crawling Babies — Žižkov TV Tower
Mahlerovy sady 1, Žižkov · Metro A: Jiřího z Poděbrad · Free to see
Ten giant bronze babies — faceless, with barcodes instead of features — crawl up and down the Žižkov TV Tower. Originally installed as a temporary piece in 2000, they became permanent in 2001 after public demand. Three more versions sit in Kampa Park by the river. The barcodes are deliberate: Černý has described them as a comment on the dehumanising effect of consumerism and surveillance. The tower itself is 216 metres tall and was built between 1985 and 1992 — its presence dominates the Žižkov and Vinohrady skylines. The babies make it genuinely strange rather than merely ugly.
02
Most Mesmerising · Moving · Quadrio · New Town
Kafka’s Head (Hlava Franze Kafky)
Quadrio Shopping Centre, Spálená 22, Nové Město · Metro B: Národní třída
Forty-two mirror-polished stainless steel panels rotate independently and continuously to form and dissolve the face of Franz Kafka — Prague’s most famous literary son, who was born 400 metres from Old Town Square and spent most of his life in this city without ever quite belonging to it. The rotation takes approximately five minutes to complete a full cycle. The face assembles, holds for a moment, then dissolves back into abstraction. It operates daily from 8am to 9pm. Stand in front of it for five minutes. It is one of the most genuinely affecting pieces of public art in any European city.
03
Most Political · Lucerna Passage · Old Town
Dead Horse (Koně)
Lucerna Passage, Štěpánská 61, Nové Město · Near Wenceslas Square
St Wenceslas — patron saint of Bohemia, symbol of Czech national identity, depicted on horseback in the famous Myslbek statue at the top of Wenceslas Square — is shown here riding a dead horse hanging upside down. The piece was installed in 1999 in the Lucerna Passage (owned by Václav Havel’s family) and has remained there since. It is Černý’s most direct political comment: a response to what he saw as the gap between the promise of the 1989 Velvet Revolution and the reality of post-Communist Czech politics. The dead horse is the national myth; Wenceslas is the political class riding it anyway.
04
Most Disturbing · Peeing · Kafka Museum Courtyard
Piss (Čůrající postavy)
Franz Kafka Museum, Cihelná 2b, Malá Strana · Near Charles Bridge
Two bronze male figures urinate into a pool shaped like the Czech Republic, their streams forming letters that spell out quotations from famous Czech literary figures — controlled by motors that can be directed remotely via SMS. The Kafka Museum courtyard contains this piece permanently. It is either Černý’s most juvenile work or his most precise comment on Czech literary nationalism, depending on your tolerance for scatological humour in the service of cultural criticism. The pool is accurately shaped. The quotations are real. The piece has been vandalised multiple times and repaired each time.
05
Most Unexpected · Hanging · Husova Street · Old Town
Sigmund Freud Hanging
Husova 7, Staré Město · Old Town · Look up from the street
A figure of Sigmund Freud hangs by one hand from a beam projecting from a building on Husova street — looking down at the street below with an expression of apparent calm. The piece was installed in 1997 and is easy to miss if you are not looking up. Freud was born in what is now the Czech Republic (Příbor, Moravia) and the hanging figure is a comment on the precariousness of intellectual life — the thinker suspended above the crowd, attached to the world by a single grip. Walk along Husova at night with a glass of wine and look up. The effect is better in the dark.
06
Historical · 1989 · German Embassy · Malá Strana
Quo Vadis
German Embassy garden, Vlašská 19, Malá Strana · Exterior visible from street
A golden Trabant — the East German car that became the symbol of the 1989 mass exodus — stands on four human legs in the garden of the German Embassy in Malá Strana. In September and October 1989, thousands of East Germans crowded into this embassy garden seeking asylum in West Germany, abandoning their Trabants in the streets outside. The exodus was one of the events that precipitated the fall of the Berlin Wall. Černý installed the piece in 1990 as a memorial to that moment. The embassy garden is not publicly accessible but the piece is partially visible from Vlašská street.
07
Most Hidden · Courtyard · Malá Strana
Two Balls Balancing (Dvě koule se sebe dotýkající)
Helichova 4, Malá Strana · Hidden courtyard · Worth finding
Two large spheres balance on a wall in a courtyard in Malá Strana — the piece is deliberately unprovocative by Černý’s standards, almost serene. It is worth finding specifically because it requires looking: the courtyard is not signposted and most visitors to Malá Strana never reach it. The contrast with the more famous, more aggressive pieces makes it interesting. Černý can do quiet. He rarely chooses to.
08
RAF Connection · Spitfires · Národní třída
Butterfly Effect / RAF Spitfires
Máj building, Národní třída 26, Nové Město · Easy to miss — look up
Two Spitfire aircraft are mounted on the façade of the former Máj department store (now Tesco) on Národní třída — a memorial to the Czech and Slovak RAF pilots who flew for Britain during the Second World War. More than 2,500 Czechoslovak pilots served in the RAF; many were refused re-entry to their country after the war by the Communist government that regarded their service to a Western power with suspicion. The piece is subtle for Černý — the political point is made through historical reference rather than direct confrontation. Look up when you walk past on Národní třída.
09
Newest · Smíchov · Gallery Entrance
Musoleum
Nová Galerie, Smíchov · From 2023 · Walk or Tram
Černý’s most recent major Prague installation — a giant figure named Musoleum outside the Nová Galerie in Smíchov, installed in 2023. The piece continues his engagement with political and cultural power: the figure is simultaneously monumental and grotesque, in the tradition of his larger public works. Worth visiting if you are in Smíchov; not worth a special trip unless you have exhausted the central locations.
10
Kampa Park · River · Three Babies
Crawling Babies — Kampa Park
Kampa Park, Malá Strana · Near Charles Bridge · Free to see
Three versions of the crawling baby from the Žižkov Tower sit in Kampa Park — the island park between Malá Strana and the river. Easier to access than the tower babies, and with a different context: in the park, at ground level, they are confrontational in a way the tower installation is not. You can stand next to them. The barcode faces are more unsettling at human scale than from a distance. Kampa Park is worth visiting for its own sake — one of the better riverside parks in Prague, with the Čertovka mill stream running through it.

World of Banksy Prague — Honest Review
Michalská 29, Staré Město · CZK 360 (~€14) · Open daily · Not official · Not originals

The World of Banksy exhibition in Prague is located in a converted baroque church on Michalská — one minute from Old Town Square — and contains approximately 100–140 large-format reproductions and recreations of Banksy’s most famous works. It is visually impressive, well-presented and worth visiting. It is also important to be clear about what it is: it is not sanctioned by Banksy, it contains no original works, and Banksy himself has publicly distanced himself from “authorised” exhibitions of this kind.

⚠️ What the World of Banksy is not: It is not a Banksy museum in the sense of a collection of original works. It is a licensed reproduction exhibition — the same format as “The Art of Banksy” shows that tour internationally. The images are large, well-reproduced and contextualised with good information about the works. The venue (a baroque church) is genuinely beautiful. But you are seeing reproductions, not Banksy’s actual work. If you understand that going in, it is a good exhibition.

The comparison with David Černý is instructive. Černý’s work is here because Prague is his subject — the pink tank, the upside-down Wenceslas, the Kafka head are responses to this specific city and its history. Banksy’s work is about Britain, about globalisation, about consumer capitalism — important subjects, but not subjects that have a particular relationship to Prague. The exhibition is in Prague because the city receives four million tourists a year and the baroque church was available. That is not a reason not to go. It is a reason to see Černý’s work first.


Guided Tours — If You Want the Context Explained

The Černý sculptures are findable independently with this guide. If you want the stories told by a local guide — the political context, the reactions they caused, what Černý said about them — a guided street art or hidden gems tour covers the main pieces with that context added.

Book Tickets & Tours
World of Banksy
Skip-the-Line Entry · Tiqets
Book →
Banksy + City Tour
Banksy Ticket & Digital Tour · Viator
Book →
Žižkov Tower
TV Tower Observatory · Černý Babies
Book →
Hidden Gems Walk
Prague Hidden Gems Tour · GYG
Book →
Self-Guided Audio
WeGoTrip — Prague Self-Guided Tour
Book →
Old Town Walk
Prague Old Town Walking Tour · Tiqets
Book →

More Prague Guides


Frequently Asked Questions

Who is David Černý and why is he famous?
David Černý is a Prague-born sculptor and installation artist, born 1967, internationally known for provocative public works that engage directly with Czech political and cultural history. He became famous in 1991 when he illegally painted a Soviet memorial tank pink — an act of political protest that got him briefly arrested and subsequently supported by members of parliament who repainted it pink in solidarity. His permanent sculptures are distributed across Prague and include the rotating Kafka head, the upside-down Wenceslas on a dead horse, and the barcode-faced babies on the Žižkov TV Tower.
Is the World of Banksy in Prague worth visiting?
Yes, with an important caveat: it contains reproductions, not original Banksy works, and is not sanctioned by Banksy himself. If you understand that you are visiting a large-format reproduction exhibition in a beautiful baroque church setting — well-presented, well-contextualised — it is worth the CZK 360 (€14) entry. If you are expecting original Banksy works, you will be disappointed. See David Černý’s sculptures first — they are free, they are originals, and they have a direct relationship to Prague that the Banksy exhibition does not.
Which David Černý sculpture is the most impressive?
Kafka’s Head at Quadrio on Spálená street is the most technically impressive — 42 rotating mirror-polished panels that form and dissolve the face continuously. The crawling babies on the Žižkov Tower are the most immediately striking when seen from a distance across the city. The dead horse in Lucerna Passage is the most politically pointed. Most visitors who see all three rate Kafka’s Head as the single most affecting piece.
Are David Černý’s sculptures free to see?
Yes — all of Černý’s permanent public sculptures are free to see from public space. The Žižkov Tower observatory (where the babies are) charges entry for going up inside the tower, but seeing the babies from outside is free. The Kafka Museum charges entry but the Piss sculpture is in the courtyard which is accessible separately. The Lucerna Passage is a public shopping arcade — no entry charge.
How long does it take to see all David Černý sculptures in Prague?
A full day if you want to see all ten locations, including travel time between them. The central cluster — Kafka’s Head (Quadrio), Dead Horse (Lucerna), Freud (Husova), Piss (Kafka Museum) — can be covered in two to three hours on foot. The Žižkov Tower babies require a tram or metro journey east. Quo Vadis at the German Embassy and the Two Balls in Malá Strana add another hour. The Kampa Park babies combine naturally with a visit to Charles Bridge.

Book Prague Art Experiences

World of Banksy, Žižkov Tower and guided tours of the sculptures

World of Banksy — Tiqets → Žižkov Tower Observatory → Banksy + Digital Tour →

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