Petar Dobrović
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Petar Dobrović | |
---|---|
President of the Serbian-Hungarian Baranya-Baja Republic | |
In office August 14, 1921 – August 20, 1921 | |
Preceded by | office established |
Succeeded by | office abolished |
Personal details | |
Born | Pécs, Austria-Hungary | 14 January 1890
Died | 22 January 1942 Belgrade, Territory of the Military Commander in Serbia | (aged 52)
Nationality | Serbian |
Relatives | Nikola Dobrović (brother) |
Petar Dobrović (Serbian Cyrillic: Петар Добровић; pronounced [pêtar dǒːbroʋitɕ]; 14 January 1890 – 27 January 1942) was a Serbian painter and politician.[1]
Biography
[edit]Dobrović was born in Pécs, Kingdom of Hungary. A proponent of Serbian colorism, he was known for portraits and landscapes. He had earlier worked in impressionism and cubism.
He was briefly the President of a short-lived, small Serbian-Hungarian Baranya-Baja Republic in 1921, and later lived in Kingdom of Yugoslavia.
He died during the German occupation of Belgrade during the Second World War while in the elevator of the apartment building he lived in at 36 King Peter Street during a raid. He noticed the raid on the street and died while attempting to return to his flat. He is interred in the Belgrade New Cemetery.
Exhibitions
[edit]- Solo
- 1912 Premises of the Women's Society, Pécs
- 1919 Salon "Ulrich", Zagreb, City Hall, Novi Sad
- 1920 Druga beogradska gimnazija, Belgrade
- 1921 Stanković Hall, Belgrade
- 1924 Salon Manes, Prague
- 1925 Salon Galic, Split
- 1927 Stock Exchange Building, Novi Sad
- 1928 Great Hall of the County, Sombor, Society for the Advancement of Science and Art, Hall of the National Casino, Osijek, Art Pavilion, Zagreb
- 1929 Art Salon Šira, Zagreb, Ceremonial Hall of the Novi Sad Music High School, Novi Sad
- 1930 Art Pavilion, Belgrade
- 1931 Pulhri Studio, Prague, Kunstring, Rotterdam, Kunstzalen A. Mak, Amsterdam
- 1932 Denisuv Institut, Prague
- 1933 French Club, Belgrade
- 1934 Salon Ulrich, Zagreb. French Club, Belgrade
- 1936 French Club, Belgrade
- 1937 Matica Srpska Hall, Novi Sad
- 1940 Art Pavilion, Belgrade
- Posthumous
- 1955 Art Pavilion "Cvijeta Zuzorić", Belgrade
- 1974 Museum of Contemporary Art, retrospective, Belgrade, Gallery "Petar Dobrović", Belgrade, Modern Gallery, Ljubljana
- 1981 Gallery of the Faculty of Fine Arts, Belgrade
- 1983 Petar Dobrović Gallery, Belgrade
- 1985 Gallery of Fine Arts, Belgrade
- 1990 Museum space, retrospective, Zagreb, Matica Srpska Gallery, Novi Sad, National Museum, Belgrade, Museum Janus Panonius, Pécs
- 1999 Petar Dobrović Gallery, Belgrade, Matica Srpska Gallery, Novi Sad
- 2001 Petar Dobrović Gallery, Belgrade
Gallery
[edit]-
Wineyards in Baranja (1915), Pavle Beljanski Memorial Collection
-
Study for a portrait (1917), Ernest Zmeták Art Gallery
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Girl's head (1917), National Gallery of Slovenia
-
Figure (1927), Pavle Beljanski Memorial Collection
-
Škarpina (1928), Gallery of Fine Arts, Split
-
Svetozar Miletić, 1930
-
Landscape with Cypresses, Dalmatia (1931), Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen
-
Mlini na jugu (1936)
-
Portrait of Olga Dobrović (1938)
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ Mangold (2005:123, 279 and 624)
References
[edit]- Mangold, Max (2005), Das Aussprachewörterbuch, Duden, ISBN 978-3-411-04066-7
External links
[edit]
- 1890 births
- 1942 deaths
- People from Pécs
- Serbs of Hungary
- Serbian Austro-Hungarians
- Heads of state of states with limited recognition
- 20th-century presidents in Europe
- Serbian politicians
- 20th-century Serbian painters
- Emigrants from Austria-Hungary to Yugoslavia
- Serbian people of German descent
- Burials at Belgrade New Cemetery
- Serbian civilians killed in World War II
- Deaths by airstrike during World War II
- Serbian male painters
- 20th-century Serbian male artists
- Serbian artist stubs
- European painter stubs