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Bogdan Šuput

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Bogdan Šuput (Sisak, 6 September 1914 - Novi Sad, 20 January 1942) was a Serbian painter, a member of the group "Ten".

Biography[edit]

He was born on September 6, 1914, in Sisak. At the age of nine, he moved to Novi Sad with his parents. He attended the State Men's Gymnasium in Novi Sad, and later enrolled at the Royal Art School in Belgrade, and his professors were Beta Vukanović, Dragoslav Stojanović, Simeon Roksandić, Ljubomir Ivanović and Nikola Bešević. Considering him his most gifted student, Ljuba Ivanović persuaded him to dedicate himself exclusively to graphics, and when the Academy of Fine Arts in Belgrade was founded in 1937, he proposed him as his assistant. However, Šuput, who was in Paris in the meantime (Matica srpska sent him to the Paris International Exhibition as a young talented artist) and was delighted with the colour and oil painting, rejects the offer of his favourite professor. He became an associate of the Student Matica in Novi Sad in 1935. At the same time, he began publishing graphics and caricatures in the Novi Sad newspapers Dan and Reggeli Újság, as well as in Belgrade's Politika and Ošišanom ježu. He became an associate of the Student Matica in Novi Sad in 1935.

From 1936 to 1938, he attended the Academic Course at the Art School in Belgrade, from which he dropped out to go to Paris for painting training. There he participated in the founding of the Association of Yugoslav Fine Artists living in Paris in 1938. At that time, he published graphics with social themes in the almanac Vojvodjanski zbornik and the magazine Naš život in Novi Sad.

Group "Ten"[edit]

He returned to Novi Sad from Paris on June 23, 1939, and became a member of the group "Ten", [1]which included Ljubica Sokić, Danica Antić, Jurica Ribar, Stojan Trumić, Aleksa Čelebonović, Nikola Graovac, Dušan Vlajić, Bora Grujić and Milivoj Nikolajević. Immediately after the formation of the group "Ten", its members are from February 25 to 7. In March 1940, they organized a joint exhibition in the great hall of the Cvijeta Zuzorić Art Pavilion in Belgrade. According to the art critic: Bogdan Šuput is undoubtedly the strongest and most expressive talent from this sympathetic group.[2]In the middle of March 1940, Šuput visited Ulcinj, and in August, the Ljubija mine, for a vacation and in search of new painting motifs. In the fall of the same year, he went to serve his military service in Sarajevo. In the April break-up of Yugoslavia, in 1941, he fell into German captivity. In the Stalag IV A prison camp in Olbersdorf, Saxony, he belongs to the illegal organization "Drug", but he is active in cultural and artistic life and works as a set designer for performances there. He managed to leave the camp on 1 November 1941 and arrived in Novi Sad eleven days later, but on January 23, 1942, he was shot dead along with his mother and aunt in a raid carried out by Hungarian fascists.[3]

Opus

Bogdan Suput, Glava mladica (1934)

Bogdan Šuput, Portrait of an Old Man (1934) Dying at the age of twenty-eight, he left behind a small opus, of which 84 are oil paintings, 43 graphics, 38 watercolours, and most of them are drawings drawn with charcoal, chalk or ink, most of which represent nudes, portraits and landscapes. Šuput's work of art, created in just a few years, has uniform stylistic and aesthetic values. Some works are among the top achievements of poetic realism in Serbian painting of the fourth decade of the 20th century. He has participated in nineteen solo and group exhibitions. Although a painter by vocation, he was also successfully engaged in graphic activity in the technique of woodcarving and linocut.

His beautiful appearance left an impression on passers-by. I saw in Paris, more than once, how people turn around, but Bogdan did not seem to notice his beauty, because Apollo chose a shy and distracted person in numerous human incarnations. After all, he was a painter, a man who seeks beauty and happiness outside of his personality. Judging by his youthful painting, often gloomy, he showed, from time to time, signs of hidden melancholy, or perhaps certain anxiety and premonition of tragedy. He acted like a man born countless times.

- Predrag Pedja Milosavljevic Bogdan Šuput was born in the First World War and killed in the Second World War. Death interrupted him in the ascending line. He was great hope and the most talented painter of his generation. His prolific artistic creation was intense and short-lived, condensed, in one breath. He remained in the memory of his friends and admirers of fine arts as an eternally young, smiling, dear, an extremely gifted an excellent painter, graphic artist, cartoonist, fanatically devoted to art and confident in his abilities, whose works attracted the attention of current art critics and fans. and some of them represent significant anthological values. Apart from being privately owned, Šuput's works are in the National Museum in Belgrade, the Museum of the City of Belgrade, the Museum of Contemporary Art in Belgrade, the Modern Gallery in Zagreb, the Pavle Beljanski Memorial Collection, the Matica Srpska Gallery and the Gallery with

References[edit]

  1. никола Тасић: "Историја Београда", Београд 1995.
  2. "Београдске општинске новине", Београд 1. март 1940.
  3. Александар Декански: "Eo Ypso", Сремака Митровица 2014.


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