Serbia's renowned painter, Olja Ivanjicki, dies

Painter Olja Ivanjicki died on Wednesday in Belgrade, at the age of 78, the Serbian Association of Painters has confirmed.

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Wednesday, 24.06.2009.

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Painter Olja Ivanjicki died on Wednesday in Belgrade, at the age of 78, the Serbian Association of Painters has confirmed. Ivanjicki, born in Serbia and of Russian extraction, was one of the founders of the Mediala surrealist figurative painting group created in the 1960s to rally major Serbian artists, including Leonid Sejka, Dado Djuric, Vladimir Velickovic, and Ljuba Popovic. Serbia's renowned painter, Olja Ivanjicki, dies She had 87 individual exhibitions at home and abroad, and introduced pop art to Belgrade in the sixties. Ivanjicki's paintings can be seen in numerous museums and galleries all over the world. She exhibited at the Metropolitan Museum in New York, the Museum of Contemporary Art in Belgrade, the Museum of Modern Art in Skopje, and at the Dobbs Ferry campus in New York. The winner of many awards and prizes, she was named best artist of the 20th century in Yugoslavia based on a popular vote. Two weeks ago, Belgrade's Kolarac Hall presented the monograph "Eternal Condition" by British art historian Sue Hubbard which was dedicated to the famous painter. Hubbard described Ivanjicki as "the daughter of Leonardo da Vinci". The monograph, published in Serbian, English and Russian, remains a lasting monument to Ivanjicki's genius. Olja Ivanjicki, 1931-2009 (Tanjug)

Serbia's renowned painter, Olja Ivanjicki, dies

She had 87 individual exhibitions at home and abroad, and introduced pop art to Belgrade in the sixties.

Ivanjicki's paintings can be seen in numerous museums and galleries all over the world. She exhibited at the Metropolitan Museum in New York, the Museum of Contemporary Art in Belgrade, the Museum of Modern Art in Skopje, and at the Dobbs Ferry campus in New York.

The winner of many awards and prizes, she was named best artist of the 20th century in Yugoslavia based on a popular vote.

Two weeks ago, Belgrade's Kolarac Hall presented the monograph "Eternal Condition" by British art historian Sue Hubbard which was dedicated to the famous painter.

Hubbard described Ivanjicki as "the daughter of Leonardo da Vinci". The monograph, published in Serbian, English and Russian, remains a lasting monument to Ivanjicki's genius.

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