Misplaced Pages

Mihailo Bokorić

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Serbian painter
Translation arrow iconThis article contains translated text and needs attention from someone fluent in Serbian and English.
Please see this article's entry on Pages needing translation into English for discussion.
If you have just labeled this article as needing attention, please add
{{subst:Needtrans|pg=Mihailo Bokorić |language=Serbian |comments= }} ~~~~
to the bottom of the WP:PNTCU section on Misplaced Pages:Pages needing translation into English. (August 2022)

Mihailo Bokorić also spelled Bukorović or Bukurović (Serbian Cyrillic: Михајло Бокорић; Biskupija near Knin, Dalmatia around 1730 - Pečka, Habsburg Monarchy, 6 November 1817) was a Serbian painter, portraitist, and iconographer.

Biography

He moved from Dalmatia to Lika and then to Banat. He married in Pečka near Arad, and spent most of his life there and worked for the Orthodox churches in Pomorišje. In his time he was a famous and sought-after as a painter, iconographer and portraitist.

According to tradition, he learned painting from Georgije Tenecki (or Stefan Tenecki). It is believed that the iconostasis of the Romanian, though formerly Serbian, church in Pečka is his work. And there are icons, the "seal" of the "Holy Trinity" and the "Mother of God", from him made for the temples in the monasteries of Bezdin, in Srpski Sveti Petar (1781), Nađlak (1828), Vašarhelj (1787) and Modoš. There are also a large number of his works held by individual families, and there are several of his portraits in Bezdin Monastery.

References

  • "Vreme", Belgrade, November 19, 1934.
  • Serbian Biographical Dictionary: A - B. Novi Sad: Matica Srpska. p. 77.
  • "Serbian Zion", Sremski Karlovci, August 5, 1901.

Literature

References

  1. IBN: Index bio-bibliographicus notorum hominum. Biblio Verlag. 1982.
  2. "Vreme", Beograd 19.novembar 1934.
  3. Manual: Slavonic Personalities (Past and Present). Slavonic Press. 1940.
  4. Srpski biografski rečbik: A - B. Novi Sad: Matica srpska. p. 77.
  5. "Srpski sion", Sremski Karlovci 5. avgust 1901.
Categories: