From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Danica Đurović (1925 - 2001), sometimes Danja, was a Montenegrin painter.

Born in Cetinje, Đurović was first educated at the Academy of Applied Arts at the University of Zagreb, the art school of Herceg Novi, and the Pedagogical Academy in Nikšić; her first career was as a teacher. She took painting lessons in the studio of the Ministry of Culture in Cetinje, and later worked with Milo Milunović in his studio. Milunović influenced her early choice of subjects, such as still lifes, but she soon moved in a more expressionistic direction stylistically. This phase concluded with a further turn towards abstraction, in which recognizable forms are simplified and rearranged. She returned to early themes in her later painting. Đurović is represented in the collection of the Art Museum of Montenegro. She died in Podgorica in 2001. [1] [2]

References

  1. ^ Painters of Montenegro. Originated and developed by Bato Tomašević; text by Mladen Lompar; photographs by Dragoljub Zamurović; [translator Magde Phillips Tomašević]. Podgorica: Atlas Group: CID, 2010 (Beograd: Publikum), pp. 102-103
  2. ^ Perović, O.; Marović, Milan. Art moderne du Monténégro (in French). Umjetnička galerija Socijalistička Republike Crne Gore. Retrieved May 15, 2022.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Danica Đurović (1925 - 2001), sometimes Danja, was a Montenegrin painter.

Born in Cetinje, Đurović was first educated at the Academy of Applied Arts at the University of Zagreb, the art school of Herceg Novi, and the Pedagogical Academy in Nikšić; her first career was as a teacher. She took painting lessons in the studio of the Ministry of Culture in Cetinje, and later worked with Milo Milunović in his studio. Milunović influenced her early choice of subjects, such as still lifes, but she soon moved in a more expressionistic direction stylistically. This phase concluded with a further turn towards abstraction, in which recognizable forms are simplified and rearranged. She returned to early themes in her later painting. Đurović is represented in the collection of the Art Museum of Montenegro. She died in Podgorica in 2001. [1] [2]

References

  1. ^ Painters of Montenegro. Originated and developed by Bato Tomašević; text by Mladen Lompar; photographs by Dragoljub Zamurović; [translator Magde Phillips Tomašević]. Podgorica: Atlas Group: CID, 2010 (Beograd: Publikum), pp. 102-103
  2. ^ Perović, O.; Marović, Milan. Art moderne du Monténégro (in French). Umjetnička galerija Socijalistička Republike Crne Gore. Retrieved May 15, 2022.

Videos

Youtube | Vimeo | Bing

Websites

Google | Yahoo | Bing

Encyclopedia

Google | Yahoo | Bing

Facebook