Teodor Stefanov Gologlavac [1] [2] or Teodor Stefanov Valjevac [3] was a Serbian icon painter of the 18th century. [4]
The icons, painted by Teodor Stefanov Gologlavac, are preserved in the gallery of the museum of Sremska Mitrovica. [5] [6] Also, his work can be found in the following monasteries: Manastir Kaona, [7] Manastir Divša, [8] Manastir Privina Glava, and Dvor Srpskopravoslavne zvorničko-tuzlanslanske eparhije. [9]
Serbian art refers to the visual arts of the Serbs and their nation-state Serbia. The medieval heritage includes Byzantine art, preserved in architecture, frescos and icons of the many Serbian Orthodox monasteries. In the early modern period, Serbian visual arts began to be influenced by Western art, culminating in the Habsburg monarchy in the late 18th century. The beginning of modern Serbian art is placed in the 19th century. Many Serbian monuments and works of art have been lost forever due to various wars and peacetime marginalizations.
Bukovac is a suburban settlement of the city of Novi Sad, Serbia. It is located in Petrovaradin municipality.
The Divša Monastery, also known as Đipša (Ђипша), is a Serb Orthodox monastery on the Fruška Gora mountain in the northern Serbian province of Vojvodina. It is believed to have been founded by Despot Jovan Branković in the late 15th century. The earliest historical records about the monastery date to the second half of the 16th century. Owing to Turkish raids, the monastery was deserted in the 17th century; at the beginning of the 18th century, Dipša was mentioned as an appendage of the neighbouring Kuveždin monastery. Its old church underwent reconstruction in 1744, but the final alteration was made in 1762, when a new narthex was built. A chapel dedicated to the Mother of God was placed therein, upstairs. The iconostasis for the restored church was carried out by Teodor Stefanov Gologlavac in 1753.
The Krka Monastery is a Serbian Orthodox monastery dedicated to the Archangel Michael, located near the river Krka, 3 kilometres (1.9 mi) east of Kistanje, in central Dalmatia, Croatia. It is the best known monastery of the Serbian Orthodox Church in Croatia and it is officially protected as part of the Krka National Park. It was established around 1577 or later on the ground of previous Gothic-Romanesque style Catholic church.
The Lepavina Monastery is a Serbian Orthodox monastery dedicated to the Presentation of Mary and located at the village of Sokolovac, near the town of Koprivnica in Croatia.
The Dragović monastery is a Serbian Orthodox monastery situated on a hill downstream the Cetina River, not far from Vrlika in Croatia. When the artificial Peruća Lake was created, the original monastery sank due to land movement. The new monastery was built on a hill not far from the previous one and is now located next to Lake Peruća, 20 kilometers from Knin.
The Hermitage and Monastery of Saint Peter Koriški is a ruin of the hermitage and monastery located in Koriša, Prizren municipality, Kosovo. The monastery and hermitage are on the same location.
The Monastery of Saint Archangel Gabriel, also known as the Zemun monastery is a Serbian Orthodox monastery. Its church was built in 1786, on the site of an older church in the Donji Grad neighbourhood of Zemun. The monastery was officially established in 1990.
The Pustinja Monastery is a Serbian Orthodox monastery in village Poćuta near Valjevo in Central Serbia.
Monastery of the Mother of God in Hvosno was a Serbian Christian monastery of the Serbian Orthodox Church in the historical region of Hvosno. It was situated at the foot of Mokra Mountain, nearby hamlets Vrelo and Studenica, some 20 kilometers (12 mi) north of the city of Peć, in modern Kosovo. The Monastery was declared Monument of Culture of Exceptional Importance on 10 July 1967, and Republic of Serbia claims to have it under protection.
The Vranjina Monastery, also known as the Vranina Monastery or St. Nicholas' Monastery, is a Serbian Orthodox monastery on the south-east part of Vranjina island on Skadar Lake in Montenegro. Vranjina Monastery with its church dedicated to Saint Nicholas is one of the oldest monasteries in Montenegro.
The Moračnik Monastery is a Serbian Orthodox monastery on Moračnik island on Skadar Lake in modern-day Montenegro. It is positioned across from the village of Bobovište, whose residents used it as their church before they converted to Islam.
The Podlastva Monastery is a medieval women's Serbian Orthodox monastery located in Lastva Grbaljska, in Grbalj, Montenegro. The monastery's church is dedicated to the Birth of the Most Holy Theotokos.
The Nova Pavlica Monastery is a 14th-century Serbian Orthodox monastery located in Pavlica, Raška, in southwestern Serbia. It belongs to the Eparchy of Žiča. The monastery is located near Stara Pavlica, near river Ibar and near old town of Brvenik.
Jakov Orfelin was a Serbian Baroque painter. He made iconostasis for the churches of Bačka and Syrmia regions and also some portraits. He is the nephew of the painter, engraver and writer Zaharije Orfelin.
Vasilije Romanovič and Jov Vasilijevič were accomplished icon painters who came from Imperial Russia to Srem on an invitation from the Arsenije IV Jovanović Šakabenta together with a group of Serbian newly graduated academic artists of the Kiev Pechersk Lavra. Romanovič became part of the teaching staff of a newly-constructed Academy of Painting, built and funded by the metropolitan, while Vasiljevič became a court painter of the Metropolitanate of Karlovci.
Kozma Damjanović was a Serbian icon painter of the late Byzantine style living and working in Old Slavonia in the 17th and early 18th century. Damjanović came from Kostajnica. In the collection of icon painting from that period in the Museum of the Serbian Orthodox Church stand out the achievement of Kozma Damjanović along with three other contemporary painters of his. His most interesting pieces were three unusual icons of the Holy Trinity that he painted in 1704 and donated them to three villages in Slavonia. Early in the 18th century these icons in the specific geographical and historical context have become the center of jurisdictional disputes between Orthodox and Catholic Churches in northern Croatia.
Aleksije Lazović was a painter from modern-day Montenegro. He is particularly famous for his icons.
Đurađ Bošković also spelled Djurdje Bošković was a Serbian art historian, one of the most important researchers of Serbian medieval architecture.