
On your left, you will spot a heavy, bronze figure seated squarely on a polished stone block, complete with his signature cast right into the front of the pedestal. That is Bedřich Smetana, a composer who gave a musical voice to the Czech national identity.
You would think a man of his stature would have gotten a monument right after his death in eighteen eighty-four. Well, it took seventy-five years of bickering just to find a location that would honor his drive for artistic legacy without disrupting the historic skyline. The idea was first pitched in nineteen oh nine, but this statue, weighing about a ton, was not unveiled until nineteen eighty-four.
The socialist government pushed it through to celebrate the Year of Czech Music. They placed him here so he could gaze out over the Vltava river, the very waters that inspired his most famous symphonic poem. While the striking Neo-Renaissance architecture of the museum behind him has anchored the riverbank for over a century, you can see how the surrounding waterfront subtly modernized around him if you check out the historic before and after image in your app.
The public reaction, however, was not exactly reverent. Locals immediately noticed Smetana’s stiff posture with his hands resting awkwardly in his lap. They gave the monument a mocking nickname... Sleighing Smetana. They thought he looked less like a musical genius gazing over the water, and more like a man clumsily sliding down a hill on an invisible sled. Even the chief conductor of the Czech Philharmonic strongly protested the rigid socialist design, though the state authorities completely ignored him.
Today, the statue guards the Smetana Museum, which holds a rather unexpected artifact... the composer's preserved earbone. It is a stark reminder that Smetana wrote some of his most triumphant music while totally deaf, proving that true creative vision outlasts both physical decline and political squabbles.
Since this outdoor area is open twenty-four hours a day, Smetana is always here, silently sledding toward the river. Now, let us head to our final stop, where Prague's artistic spirit meets modern technology, as we take a nine minute walk to Laterna Magika.


