Petar Lubarda (Serbian Cyrillic: Петар Лубарда); 27 July 1907 – 13 February 1974) was a Serbian[1][2] painter.
Petar Lubarda | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | 13 February 1974 | (aged 66)
Biography
editHe was born in Ljubotinj, near Cetinje, Principality of Montenegro. Lubarda's father was an officer of the Royal Yugoslav Army who was killed by the Yugoslav Partisans, which left a mark on Lubarda's career and upbringing.[3] He spent a part of the war years in a German prison camp.[4] Lubarda self-declared as a Serb[5][6] and sent a letter demanding that this information be included as a part of his biography in upcoming art catalogues[7] as well as demanding that his work be presented as a part of Serbia's pavilion.[8]
He studied painting in Belgrade and Paris. From 1932 until his death he lived in Belgrade, with exception of period 1946–1950 when he was a professor at an art school in Herceg Novi.[9] His work is inspired by Serbian history and Montenegrin landscape.
His most preferred subject was the historic 1389 Battle of Kosovo, which Lubarda painted in various formats in more than 30 versions.
Lubarda won numerous awards including the prestigious Herder Prize, Medal of Honour by Calcutta Art Society in 1968 and many other awards in Europe, Brazil, New York City and Tokyo Biennale.[10]
The house used by Petar Lubarda and his wife Vera located in Senjak, Belgrade, was turned into an art gallery featuring notable works by Lubarda and personal items.[11][12]
Exhibitions
edit- Gymnasium, Nikšić, 1925
- Casa dell' Arte Moderna Bragaglio, Rome, 1929
- French club, Belgrade, 1933
- Art pavilion, Belgrade, 1934
- Art gallery ULUS, Belgrade, 1951
- Galerie Yougoslavie, Paris, 1952
- Galerie Michel Warren, Paris, 1954
- Leicester Galleries, London, 1955
- Art pavilion, Podgorica, 1958
- Small gallery, Ljubljana, 1959
- Gallery of, Belgrade, 1961
- Galleria Penelope, Rome, 1962
- Gallery of House of JNA, Belgrade, 1962
- Rabotnički university, Skopje, 1963
- Gallery of House of JNA, Belgrade, 1964
- Museum of Contemporary Art, retrospective, Belgrade, 1967
- Contemporary Art Museum of Macedonia, Skopje, 1967
- Art Gallery "Josip Bepo Benković", Herceg Novi, 1967
- Art pavilion, Podgorica, 1968
- Art museum SR Montenegro, Cetinje, 1968
- National museum, Kragujevac, 1968
- Art gallery of Belgrade Cultural Centre, 1968
- SANU Gallery, Belgrade, 1969
- House of culture "Olga Petrov", Opovo, 1969
- City museum, Sombor, 1970
- Art gallery, House of culture in Vrbas, 1970
- Art gallery of Belgrade Cultural Centre, Belgrade, 1971
Posthumous
- National museum, Belgrade, 1974
- Commemorative Exhibition, Skopje, 1974
- Lubarda's atelier, commemorative exhibition, Belgrade, 1974
- Collegium artisticum, retrospective, Sarajevo, 1978
- Modern gallery, Budva, 1978
- Modern gallery, retrospective, Ljubljana, 1978
- Museum of contemporary art, Belgrade, 1984
- Gallery of art of non-aligned countries "Josip Broz Tito", Podgorica
- Modern gallery, Budva, 1985
- Forum gallery, Nikšić, 1986
- Art Gallery "Josip Bepo Benković", Herceg Novi, 1989
- Biljarda, Cetinje, 1994
- Contemporary Art Museum of Macedonia, Skopje, 1998
- Gallery "Nikola I", Nikšić, 2000
- Palace of Nikola I, Bar, 2000
- Galeria Lorber, Shenkar College of Engineering and Design, Ramat-Gan, Israel, 2004
- Gallery of Radio Television of Serbia, Belgrade, 2007
- Belgrade gallery, Belgrade, 2007
- Heritage house, Belgrade, 2014
Awards
edit- Grand Prix, World exhibit, Paris, 1937
- I award at an international exhibition, The Hague, 1939
- I federal award of Yugoslavia, Belgrade, 1948
- I state award of SR Montenegro, Cetinje, 1948
- I state award of SR Montenegro, Цетиње, 1949
- International award, Biennale, São Paulo, 1953[13]
- Biennale award, Tokyo, 1955
- October award of city of Belgrade, Belgrade, 1955
- National award - Guggenheim, New York City, 1956
- 7 July award, Belgrade, 1964
- Order of brotherhood and unity, Belgrade, 1965
- Order of merit for the people with golden wreath, Belgrade, 1965
- AVNOJ award, Belgrade, 1966
- I award of gallery „13th November“, Cetinje, 1967
- Diploma of city of Belgrade, Belgrade, 1969
- Medal of Honour "Tagore" by Calcutta Art Society, Kolkata, 1970
- Herder Prize, Vienna, 1973
- Honorary citizen of Slovenj Gradec
- Honorary citizen of Kragujevac
Gallery
editReferences
edit- ^ "Говорио је Лубарда: Моја савјест умјетника ми не дозвољава да кршим вољу великог Његоша". ИСКРА. Retrieved 16 January 2020.
- ^ "Petar Lubarda - Srbin iz Ljubotinja". www.njegos.org. Retrieved 16 January 2020.
- ^ IN4S (27 July 2019). "Govorio je Lubarda: Moja savjest umjetnika mi ne dozvoljava da..." IN4S (in Serbian). Retrieved 16 January 2020.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ "Logorske Vizije Petra Lubarde". 20 July 2019.
- ^ "Говорио је Лубарда: Моја савјест умјетника ми не дозвољава да кршим вољу великог Његоша". ИСКРА. Retrieved 16 January 2020.
- ^ "Petar Lubarda - Srbin iz Ljubotinja". www.njegos.org. Retrieved 16 January 2020.
- ^ "Petar Lubarda - Srbin iz Ljubotinja". www.njegos.org. Retrieved 16 January 2020.
- ^ "Petar Lubarda - Srbin iz Ljubotinja". www.njegos.org. Retrieved 16 January 2020.
- ^ "Arte - Petar Lubarda - Biografija". www.arte.rs. Retrieved 16 January 2020.
- ^ "PRISLUŠKIVALI GA RADIJATORI: PETAR LUBARDA". Presstiž internet magazin... 27 July 2017. Retrieved 16 January 2020.
- ^ "Legat Petra Lubarde: Dokaz da u kulturi može i mora bolje". Kuca Stil (in Serbian). Retrieved 16 January 2020.
- ^ "Kuća Legata". www.kucalegata.org. Archived from the original on 11 March 2017. Retrieved 16 January 2020.
- ^ „Фантастична звер” вратила се у Београд („Политика”, 27. фебруар 2017)
External links
editFurther reading
edit- Perović, Olga (2004). Lubarda. Belgrade: Galerija Tiodorović. ISBN 9788690597505.
- Lompar, Milo (2018). Knjiga o Lubardi. Belgrade: Srpska književna zadruga.
- Predrag Milosavljević, Miodrag B. Protić, Umetnička galerija ULUS, Belgrade, 1951
- Žan Kasu, Jugoslovenska galerija, Paris, 1952
- Milan Kašanin, Savremeni beogradski umetnici. pages 31–32, Prosveta, Belgrade, 1953
- Miodrag B. Protić, Savremenici I, Nolit, Belgrade, 1955
- Oto Bihalji Merin, Lubarda - Kosovski boj, Jugoslavija, Belgrade, 1956
- Miodrag B. Protić, Galerija Kulturnog centra, Belgrade, 1961
- Lazar Trifunović, Petar Lubarda, III kolo edicije Slikari i vajari, Prosveta, Belgrade, 1964
- Aleksa Čelebonović, Savremeno slikarstvo u Jugoslaviji. pages 39–40, Izdavački zavod Jugoslavija, Belgrade, 1965
- Miodrag B. Protić, Muzej savremene umetnosti, Belgrade, 1967
- Stanislav Živković, Galerija SANU, Belgrade, 1969
- Miodrag B. Protić, Srpsko slikarsvo XX veka, Nolit, Belgrade, 1970
- Sreto Bošnjak, Likovna galerija Kulturnog centra, Belgrade, 1971
- Lazar Trifunović, Srpsko slikarstvo 1900–1950, Nolit, Belgrade, 1973
- Olga Perović, Collegium artisticum, Sarajevo, 1978
- Mala enciklopedija Prosveta: Opšta enciklopedija, volume II, page 429, Prosveta, Belgrade, 1978
- Lazar Trifunović, Od impresionizma do enformela. pages. 55–69, Nolit, Belgrade, 1982
- Miodrag B. Protić, Slikarstvo XX veka, Jugoslavija, Belgrade, Spektar, Zagreb, Prva književna komuna, Mostar, 1982
- Ješa Denegri, Dragoslav Đorđević, Marija Pušić, Muzej savremene umetnosti, Belgrade, 1984
- Likovna enciklopedija Jugoslavije, volume II. page 209, Jugoslavenski leksikografski zavod „Miroslav Krleža“, Zagreb, 1984
- Jasna Tijardović, Galerija „Forum“, Nikšić, 1986
- Ješa Denegri, Pedesete: teme srpske umetnosti, Svetovi, Novi Sad, 1993
- Aleksa Brajović, Slika i misao Petra Lubarde, Zvonik, Belgrade, 2001
- Group of aurhos, Petar Lubarda, Radionica duše, Belgrade, 2002
- Ksenija Samardžija, Srđa Zlopaša, Stevan Vuković, Kuća legata, Legat Petra Lubarde, Belgrade, 2014
- Enciklopedija leksikografskog zavoda, volume IV. page. 651, Jugoslavenski leksikografski zavod, Zagreb
- Enciklopedija leksikografskog zavoda, volume III. pages 343–344, Jugoslavenski leksikografski zavod, Zagreb