Difference between revisions of "Ljubomir Micić"
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* [[Central_and_Eastern_Europe#Constructivists.2C_Futurists|Central and Eastern Europe#Constructivists, Futurists]] | * [[Central_and_Eastern_Europe#Constructivists.2C_Futurists|Central and Eastern Europe#Constructivists, Futurists]] | ||
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* [http://www.avantgarde-museum.com/en/museum/collection/4475-LJUBOMIR-MICIC/ Micić's biography on Avantgarde-Museum.com] | * [http://www.avantgarde-museum.com/en/museum/collection/4475-LJUBOMIR-MICIC/ Micić's biography on Avantgarde-Museum.com] | ||
* [http://web.archive.org/web/20130116085305/http://digital.nb.rs/zenit/micic.html Micić at Digital collection of National Library of Serbia] | * [http://web.archive.org/web/20130116085305/http://digital.nb.rs/zenit/micic.html Micić at Digital collection of National Library of Serbia] | ||
Revision as of 10:36, 2 June 2015
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In front of the international exhibition of posters Zenit, 1925. | |
| Born |
November 16, 1895 Jastrebarsko, Austria-Hungary |
|---|---|
| Died |
June 14, 1971 (aged 75) Kačarevo, near Pančevo, Yugoslavia |
Founder of Zenit journal. The first artist to collaborate with Micić and to contribute to Zenit's original orientation towards Expressionism was Vilko Gecan. Micić's Zenitism was supported only by a small number of the youngest Yugoslav artists, who joined and left after varying period of collaboration. Mihailo S. Petrov did linocuts of an expressionistic-abstract structure, wrote poems and published translations on abstract art for Zenit. From 1922-1925, Jo Klek's (Josip Seissel) drawings, aquarelles and collages were the best representatives of Zenitist art. Micić's important mission was collecting and exhibiting avant-garde arts in Zenit editorial offices in Zagreb and Belgrade, and the organisation of Zenit international exhibition of new art in Belgrade 1924.
See also
- Zenit
- Dada-Jok
- Croatia#Avant-garde
- Serbia#Avant-garde
- Central and Eastern Europe#Constructivists, Futurists