Gračanica Cultural Center
Priština Art Gallery

April 2 – 22, 2026

The rich cultural and historical heritage of the Sićevo region, picturesque landscapes, untouched nature and centuries-old viticulture tradition are a challenge and inspiration for researchers, scientists, artists, and adventurers. Directly above the gorge through which the Nišava River flows between the northern branches of the Suva River and the southern slopes of the Svrljiška Mountains, is located Sićevo, a village with characteristic architecture, a Mediterranean climate, and friendly and sociable hosts. It was the place of the first gathering, residence and work of artists in nature in the Balkans. In Sićevo, the famous painter Nadežda Petrović, driven by patriotism, the ideal of cultural unity and community of the South Slavs, founded the First Yugoslav Art Colony with colleagues from Slovenia and Croatia, the forerunner of today’s Sićevo Art Colony.

During the nineteenth century, artists throughout Europe, defying academic clichés, abandoned studios and urban spaces and unitedly returned to nature and rural life. Nadežda Petrović gained her first knowledge of such artistic experiments during her studies with Julius Exter in Germany and during her meeting with Adolf Helzer and Ludwig Dill, representatives of the famous New Dachau colony near Munich, and they undoubtedly convinced the young painter that the art of the flower should be inspired by nature, freedom and the people among whom the artist lives and creates. Two years later, during the First Yugoslav Art Exhibition in Belgrade in September 1904, she presented with particular enthusiasm her idea of ​​establishing the First Yugoslav Art Colony, which increasingly became the subject of conversation at gatherings in the Petrović home.

Just as Nadežda Petrović’s work cannot be separated from the context of a pronounced spirit of freedom, the unification of the people, and social and political engagement as a whole, the idea of ​​a colony that should study the interior of Serbia for three months, collecting and recording interesting landscapes, costumes, folk ornaments, types, and scenes from the life of our people, should be viewed through the prism of the historical moment and the national enthusiasm that prevailed after the withdrawal of the Ottomans and the liberation of the country. In the spirit of the emerging new century, the returned territories, the renewal and revival of the country, the south of Serbia began to develop and modernize, a railway connecting Belgrade and Niš passed through the gorge (1884), and the construction of the Sveta Petka hydroelectric power station was planned. In the atmosphere of general progress and industrialization, guided by optimism and impressions of earlier visits to Sićevo, she associated this place with the idea of ​​a colony and in the summer of 1905 made it the Balkan Barbizon. Printed sources reported that on the last day of July, Nadežda Petrović and Fedro Vesel arrived in Sićevo, later Paško Vučetić, Rihard Jakopić and Grohar, and Branko Popović, a painter, art critic, and professor of art history at the Technical Faculty in Belgrade, also stayed there for a few short periods, while the presence of Emanuel Vidović and Ivan Meštrović, who possibly joined later, remains questionable. In support of this, without diminishing the importance of their support, there are statements and statements by the teacher that the painter, whom she had hosted in her home, came to the village with the Slovenes immediately after the end of the school year in early July and that they stayed there until the end of August, only she (Nadežda) stayed for a few more days, until the beginning of September. One of the residents of Sićevo, Blagoje Pavlović, described the artists housed in rural households as sociable and friendly, frequent guests at celebrations, weddings and afternoon carols. Every day, they toured the surroundings and the banks of the Nišava with easels and necessary equipment, and they also visited the more distant Pirot. However, Nadežda was most occupied with paintings and the desire to get to know the surroundings as much as possible.

The exhibition of the Yugoslav Art Colony was organized on January 27, 1907 at the National Museum in Belgrade and, like the colony, was controversially evaluated: from the fact that it displayed works in the most modern genre to a large number of negative reviews, motivated by political reasons or a conflict between the participants of the colony and the Association of Yugoslav Artists Lada. The idea of ​​a reunion in a village in the south of the country, of educational, educational and general cultural significance and role, was not realized due to historical circumstances. The annexation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Balkan Wars and the Great War thwarted Nadezhda’s conviction that the united Yugoslavs would create their own permanent exhibitions, their own school and their own history of art. That had to wait for another time. However, as a lasting national value, created in contact with the people and nature, Nadezhda’s paintings of landscapes and portraits remain, such as The Funeral in Sićevo, Women with a Red Scarf, Two Peasants, then The Girl from Sićevo, Serbia, The Host… In the spirit of impressionism, announcing the emerging expressionism, they introduced Serbia into European artistic trends, so, according to Ljubica Miljković, an art historian, thanks to Nadezhda, and perhaps to a lesser extent to Sićevo, our painting for the first time kept pace with European art and enriched the European artistic treasury with its own unique value.

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These events from the beginning of the century occupy an important place in the history of national art, and Sićevo is mapped as a significant art center. Later, sporadically between the two world wars, predominantly in the 1950s, colonies were founded throughout Vojvodina and Croatia, so, as expected, in Niš, along with economic, socio-economic and cultural development, there was a need, and to some extent an obligation, to restore the legacy that Nadežda Petrovića bequeathed to this area. Artists, journalists, cultural and public workers, gathered in formal bodies, after the initial initiative for its establishment, agreed that, following the example of the First Yugoslav and the values ​​it represented, the new colony should retain the Yugoslav concept, that in addition to the two participants from Niš, two from each republic and one from the province should be invited, that it should be visual in nature, and that its work should include painters, graphic artists, and sculptors. The Sićevo Art Colony was officially founded in 1964 and has been held continuously for over six decades at the end of summer each year.

In addition to working together in a natural environment, exchanging ideas, gaining new experiences and socializing, the beneficial effects of this form of artistic activity were already evident in the first years, as evidenced by numerous events in the city’s art life, the interest of the professional public and the media, the more active participation of Niš artists in exhibitions and reviews in the country and abroad, and the affirmation of the local art scene.16 During the first six convocations, 88 works of art were created, which are now the heritage of the National Museum of Niš. Challenges in terms of material, accommodation and organizational problems threatened to thwart the enthusiasm and desire of Niš artists for Sićevo to survive, indicating the necessity of an institution dedicated to nurturing contemporary visual creativity, realizing the colony, forming a fund, caring for the works, their presentation and study. Thus, among other things, thanks to the colony, the Gallery of Contemporary Fine Arts Niš was founded on June 9, 1970. Since then, 560 domestic and foreign artists of different generations and styles have participated in the work of this public city event of an international nature, the work of which is decided by the Council appointed by the City Assembly of Niš. Staying in an authentic rural setting, surrounded by rocks, magical landscapes and sumptuous colors, unlimited in thematic and motif sense, they enriched the institution’s collection with 950 paintings, graphics, new media and sculptures, which represent a lasting value and are a significant cultural heritage of the city. With occasional short-lived attempts to introduce innovations such as the participation of art critics, later the function of selectors, and perhaps most importantly – redemption prizes, Sićevo has retained its artistic character. Social and political circumstances, wars and the breakup of the country influenced the concept in terms of the weak response of artists from the former republics, especially Slovenia and Croatia, so that in the 2000s the circle of countries from which participants come was greatly expanded. The celebration of 120 years since the founding of the First Yugoslav Art Colony was an opportunity to gain insight into the rich, carefully formed collection from the 1970s to the present day, to point out the significance of the artistic undertaking of that time and in the context of the wider cultural space, tradition, social and political circumstances, to see its influence on contemporary artistic thinking, understandings of fine arts and echoes in creativity. Accordingly, the concept of the exhibition at the Pristina Art Gallery in Gračanica reflects the idea of ​​unity and Yugoslavism through a selection of paintings and sculptures created during the first thirty or so convocations, i.e. during the existence of Yugoslavia and the participation of artists from the former republics. It is also a period of dynamic developments on the international art scene, which, in addition to classical media, records the existence of several parallel trends, innovative phenomena and interests in abstract, minimal and conceptual art, systemic painting and greater use of contemporary media, photography and video through which authors express personal views, criticize current socio-political reality and point to existential problems. Such tendencies were also present in our country, so that the openness to the world of the 1980s, exhibitions of world art in Belgrade and studio training abroad brought our creators closer to contemporary visual events and trends.

Artists from Serbia, Macedonia, and Slovenia enjoyed the freedom and work under the open sky, so they were encouraged by the surroundings, the Sićevačka landscape, the beauty of the gorge, rocks, and the sumptuous palette of colors, and they wove their own impressions and visual sensations, each in their own unique way, applying individual artistic expression, into their works (Milenko Šerban, Mihajlo Petrov, Stojan Trumić, Čedomir Krstić, Boža Ilić, Stojko Stojković, Miroslav Anđelković, Perica Donkov, Velizar Krstić, Miodrag Protić, Momčilo Antonović, Kosta Bradić, Rada Selaković). For some authors, the rich cultural and historical heritage of this region served as a starting point for research and expression of personal reflections (Ivan Tabaković, Bata Mihailovi

ć), the dialogue of nature with historical and artistic heritage (Mladen Srbinović, Čedomir Vasić, Tomaž Kržišnik) or, by questioning their inner worlds, they introduced a dose of mysticism into idyllic landscapes (Bojan Bem, Ređep Feri) and imaginatively, almost dreamily, indulged in the world of fairy tales and mythology (Radomir Reljić). For some, Sićevo was an opportunity to express their own preoccupation and critical attitude towards social and socio-political circumstances in a new environment, without communicating the impressions of their immediate surroundings (Mića Popović, Zoran Pavlović), a rational and analytical approach in the spirit of new geometry (Stojan Ćelić, Bora Iljovski, Borko Lazeski) or expressive representations of the experienced (Velizar Krstić, Petar Mazev).

Like painting, the development of sculptural thought in our country in the second half of the twentieth century, marked by the diffusion of styles, the application of technological discoveries and the introduction of new materials into sculptural practice, was in line with the then circumstances in the world and in terms of the stylistic and formal division into figurative and abstract, or associative sculpture, with the parallel existence of numerous subgroups and sub-trends, it followed global trends.18 This, taking into account the fact that the Gallery’s Collection of Contemporary Sculpture, with mainly represented works by artists from the former republics, provides a modest contribution to the understanding of the development of various phenomena in sculpture in these regions, is evidenced by the exhibited works by sculptors from Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina and Slovenia, created during the 1970s and 1980s. Forming mainly in traditional materials, within the framework of figuration, they found their expression in classical anatomical (Aleksandar Šakić, Viljem Jakopin) or archetypal forms (Nikola Antov), ​​skillfully combining forms within the framework of geometric stylization (Momčilo Krković) or suggestively breaking down the classical view of sculpture while experimenting with more contemporary materials (Olga Milić) to the display of reduced associative forms (Ivan Felker, Dušan Donkov, Nikola Njirić).

This exhibition provides an insight into a smaller part of the collection of the SLU Niš Gallery, valuable in artistic, historical and aesthetic terms, formed thanks to the Sićevo Art Colony until the 2000s. It indicates the layered movements in art of the second half of the twentieth century and bears witness to new phenomena, contemporary aspirations and modern tendencies. Heterogeneous in visual expression, research approaches and reflections, in the context of the time and environment in which they were created, without limitations in the thematic and motif sense, the presented works depict individual artistic styles, narrative codes, transposed attitudes and interests. Given the scope and continuous enlargement, diversity in terms of the generational affiliation of the authors, the environments they come from, the media they cultivate, the ideas and themes that occupy them, the Sićev collection, in the light of current developments in visual art, provides an opportunity for various types of curatorial studies, analyses and comparisons. By presenting paintings and sculptures by prominent protagonists of the Yugoslav art scene, the impact of the unique cultural space and the importance that the Sićevci colony, which arose from the achievements of the First Yugoslav Art Colony, had in the second half of the twentieth century, has been seen to some extent. Its noble mission and value oblige us to preserve tradition, carefully select participants, adequately care for and preserve exhibits, and create opportunities for their presentation on a larger scale.

Emilija Ćoćić Bilić, Senior Curator