Katarina Ivanović
Katarina Ivanović (1811 – 1882), was a Serbian painter from the Austrian Empire (later Hungary in Austria-Hungary). She is regarded the first Serbian female painter in the modern art history.[1] During her studies at the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna she traveled to Munich, Paris and Italy.[1] She brought new themes to Serbian painting: Genre art and Still life.[1] She was stylistically in between the ideas of Biedermeier and Romanticism; she tried her hand at painting of historical compositions but reached the highest peaks in portrait.[1] A special unit was her self-portraits.[1] As the first educated Serbian painter, in 1876 she became the first woman member of the Serbian Learned Society.[1]
Ivanović was born in Veszprém in the Austrian Empire to a middle-class family, and grew up in Székesfehérvár. After studying in Budapest, she worked in Belgrade from 1846 to 1847.[2] In later years, she spent a lot of time traveling and living at different places, including Paris and Zagreb. Ivanović returned and died in Székesfehérvár in 1882.[2]
Gallery
- The Conquest of Belgrade (1844–45)
- Sima Milutinović (1840)
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Galerija Matice srpske.
- 1 2 "Katarina Ivanović Brief Bio". Retrieved 2013-01-21.
Further reading
- Kusovac, Nikola (1983). Katarina Ivanović: emlékkíallítás. Székesfehérvár: István Király Múzeum.
- Kusovac, Nikola; Mihailović, Radmila (1984). Katarina Ivanović: (1811–1882): Galerija Srpske akademije nauka i umetnosti. Belgrade: Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts.
- Timotijević, Miroslav; Mihailović, Radmila (2004). Katarina Ivanović. Belgrade: National Museum of Serbia. ISBN 978-86-83429-09-7.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Katarina Ivanović. |
- Galerija Matice srpske. "EПОХА РОМАНТИЗМА". Galerija Matice srpske.
- Sanu Education Listing
- Her works (Hungarian)
- Лепе и умне понос рода свог (Serbian)
- National Journal (Hungarian)
- Katarina Ivanović Brief Bio (English)