- Božidar Jakac
Infobox Artist
bgcolour = #6495ED
name = Božidar Jakac
imagesize = 200px
caption =
birthdate = birth date|1899|07|16
location =Novo Mesto ,Duchy of Carniola ,Austria-Hungary
deathdate = Death date and age|1989|11|12|1899|07|16
deathplace =Ljubljana , Slovenia, Yugoslavia
nationality =Slovenia n
field =painting ,graphic design ,illustration ,documentary film
training =Academy of Fine Arts in Prague
movement =Expressionism ,Lyrical Realism , Symbolism
works = "Concert",
"A Portrait of France Prešeren",
"Following the Traces of the 4th and 5th Offensive" (drawings collection),
"A Portrait of Oton Župančič",
"TheTeran Vine"
influenced by =Rihard Jakopič ,Edvard Munch
influenced =
awards = awd|AVNOJ Award|1967awd|Prešeren Award|1947|Following the Traces of the 4th and 5th Offensiveawd|Prešeren Award|1948|A Portrait of Oton Župančičawd|Prešeren Award|1980|rich exhibition activity in the past years and a vivid fine art presence in the Slovene and Yugoslav cultural spaceBožidar Jakac (
July 16 1899 -November 12 1989 ) was a Slovene Expressionist, Realist and Symbolist painter, graphic artist,art teacher ,photographer andfilmmaker . He produced one of the most extensive oeuvres ofpastel s andoil painting s (landscapes,veduta s andportrait s),drawing s and, above all,graphics inSlovenia . He was also one of the key organizers in the establishment of the Ljubljana Academy of Fine Arts and the International Biennal of Graphic Art inLjubljana .Biography
Jakac was born in
Novo Mesto , which was then part ofAustria-Hungary . He started painting in 1910 or 1911 when he was attending the Novo Mesto grammar school, and more seriously when he was frequenting the technical high school inIdrija , which he finished in 1917. As he lacked money to continue his studies he had to set off to the Isonzo Front to fight for the monarchy. In 1918, after theWorld War I ended, his former professorIvan Vavpotič introduced him to a prominent Slovene Impressionist painterRihard Jakopič , who exhibited Jakac's paintings and became his first true mentor.From November 1919 Jakac studied painting and
graphic arts at theAcademy of Fine Arts in Prague (under professorsJakub Obrovský and Franz Thiele). There, he came into contact with rich artistic tradition and versatile modern art movements that expanded his artistic horizons tremendously. During that period he also visited Paris and Bremen. He finished the postgraduate studies of graphic arts under professorAugust Brömse .In 1920 Jakac returned to Novo Mesto and became the bearer of "
The Spring of Novo Mesto ", anavant-garde movement inliterature andfine arts , which included also the poetsMiran Jarc andAnton Podbevšek , painterIvan Čargo and composerMarij Kogoj . In 1924 he settled in Ljubljana. At first, he earned his money as awoodcut illustrator at the liberal newspaper "Jutro" and a professor ofdrawing at the Second State Gymnasium in Ljubljana. Three years later he gave up his work and became an independent artist. At that time he also travelled extensively, for example toParis ,Tunisia , theAmericas andNorway , and married Tatjana Gudrunova who influenced his work profoundly. In 1932, he published his memoirs and letters from America in a book entitled "Odmevi rdeče zemlje" ("Echoes of the Red Earth") in cooperation with his friend Miran Jarc.In September 1943 Jakac joined the partisan resistance in the
Province of Ljubljana , where he promoted culture and education and noted the events in numerous graphics. In 1943 he participated as a deputy in theAssembly of Delegates of the Slovenian Nation inKočevje , which was a general constitutional convention organized by theLiberation Front of the Slovenian People in order to establish the legal basis for future political sovereignty. That year he was also among the Slovene deputies at thesecond AVNOJ Conference inJajce . At that time he contributed significantly to the establishment of Ljubljana Academy of Fine Arts, which was realised in 1945, and then served as its dean for three mandates (1945-1947, 1947-1949 and later in 1959-1961) and taught graphic arts till his retirement in 1961.In 1949 Jakac became a full member of
Slovene Academy of Sciences and Arts . In addition, in 1963 he became a correspondent member of theYugoslav Academy of Sciences and Arts inZagreb and a correspondent member of theSerbian Academy of Sciences and Arts inBelgrade (1963). He was also the president of theAssociation of Fine Artists of Yugoslavia , a republican and federal deputy, and the initiator of the International Biennal of Graphic Art inLjubljana .Jakac died in Ljubljana in 1989 and is buried in Novo Mesto.
Work
Jakac's first steps in the arts were literary and musical in nature, since he was not sure yet which branch of the arts he preferred. However, as he discovered the fine art he was hooked on it once and for all.
In his teenager years, he created
watercolor s of scenes from nature and of the Novo Mesto landscape, distinguished by reducedRealism ,Mood Impressionism and the exploration of light effects, as well as by discovery and establishment of his pastel technique.After the depature to Prague he progressed rapidly in his artistic development and incorporated many of the elements of
Cubism ,Expressionism andAbstract art in his works. Although he liked to picture the landscape of theCzech lands , he preferred the poetic landscape of his home regionLower Carniola ( _sl. "Dolenjska"), full of shades and veiled atmosphere.On his travels abroad in the 1930s, Jakac photographed and painted what he saw, giving his work an important documentary value. His art slowly transformed itself into lyrical realism.
Jakac was an excellent portraitist who depicted a number of prominent Slovenes and
Yugoslavs , friends and very often also himself. In 1940 he painted a portrait of the Slovenian poetFrance Prešeren , which became one of the emblematic rafigurations of thenational poet . In the 1970s, his portraits were used in a series of Yugoslavpostage stamps .After the war Jakac continued to paint landscapes of the dynamic Lower Carniola. Some of Jakac's best works ("The
Teran Vine", "The Last Stars") originate from his late period, when he created symbolistically-chargedcolored woodcut s.Jakac was essentially a black-and-white artist. His favourite painting technique was chalk pastel, which appealed to him due to its mellowness and the possibility for quick painting during his numerous travels.
Jakac was also one of the pioneers of the Slovene cinema. He produced several black-and-white documentary vedutas of
Novo Mesto , which made him the first Slovene master of camera.Today, many of the works of Jakac are permanently exhibited in
Božidar Jakac Gallery inKostanjevica na Krki and in Jakac House in Novo Mesto. His films are kept by theArchives of the Republic of Slovenia .Awards
Jakac received numerous local and foreign awards for his work. The most prestigious of them was the
AVNOJ Award , which he won in 1967. He was also awarded thePrešeren Award four times: for his drawings collection "Po sledovih 4. in 5. ofenzive" ("Following the Traces of the 4th and 5th Offensive") in 1947, for hissepia drawing "Portret Otona Župančiča" ("A Portrait of Oton Župančič") in 1948, for his illustrative cycle "XIV. divizija na Štajerskem" ("The XIVth Division inLower Styria ") in 1949, and for his rich exhibition activity in the past years and a vivid fine art presence in the Slovene and Yugoslav cultural space in 1980.Jakac was named the honorary academician of Accademia dell'Arte del Disegno in
Florence (1965) and a full member ofEuropean Academy of Arts, Sciences and Humanities inParis (1982). In 1959, he was the first person bestowed the title of the honorary freeman of Novo Mesto.References
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