Brunovský started his early career in art by working on stage set and poster design.
[1] The Hloznik School was well known for its high artistic and technical preparation in graphic arts and its humanist perspective.
For the founder, as for many of his students, Goya's great graphic cycle "The Horrors of War" served as a pattern or model.
His work is characterized by a sense of detail and miniature drawing, which results in ornamentalization, often creating a decorative image.
[3] Over the course of his career, Brunovsky experimented with various graphic techniques and was highly influenced in his subject matter by poetry and literature, as well, of course, as by other artists.
When he was young, Brunovsky exhibited surrealistic tendencies—defined as a tendency to individualism and absurdity and the unchecked play of the subconscious.