Uglješa Bogunović | |
---|---|
Угљеша Богуновић | |
Born | citation needed] | October 22, 1922[
Died | April 27, 1994citation needed] | (aged 71)[
Notable work |
Uglješa Bogunović (1922-1994) was a Serbian architect, among Belgrade's and the country's most prominent. [2]
Bogunović was born on 1922 in Teslić, Yugoslavia (now Bosnia and Herzegovina). [1]
One of his most famous works, in collaboration with architects Slobodan Janjić and Milan Kostić, is the Mount Avala TV Tower that was destroyed in the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia. [3] His other works include the reconstruction of Skadarlija Street in the 1960s [4] [5] and the Yugoslav Pavilion at the World Trade Fair in San Francisco in 1964. [6]
Begunović died in 1994 [7] in Belgrade.[ citation needed]
Begunović's work was included in the show Toward a Concrete Utopia: Architecture in Yugoslavia, 1948–1980 at New York's MoMA in 2016. [8] [9]
Uglješa Bogunović | |
---|---|
Угљеша Богуновић | |
Born | citation needed] | October 22, 1922[
Died | April 27, 1994citation needed] | (aged 71)[
Notable work |
Uglješa Bogunović (1922-1994) was a Serbian architect, among Belgrade's and the country's most prominent. [2]
Bogunović was born on 1922 in Teslić, Yugoslavia (now Bosnia and Herzegovina). [1]
One of his most famous works, in collaboration with architects Slobodan Janjić and Milan Kostić, is the Mount Avala TV Tower that was destroyed in the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia. [3] His other works include the reconstruction of Skadarlija Street in the 1960s [4] [5] and the Yugoslav Pavilion at the World Trade Fair in San Francisco in 1964. [6]
Begunović died in 1994 [7] in Belgrade.[ citation needed]
Begunović's work was included in the show Toward a Concrete Utopia: Architecture in Yugoslavia, 1948–1980 at New York's MoMA in 2016. [8] [9]