Milena Pavlović-Barili
Milena Pavlovic-Barili | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | 6 March 1945 New York City, U.S. | (aged 35)
Nationality | Serbian |
Known for | Painting |
Milena Pavlović-Barili (alt. Barilli; Serbian Cyrillic: Милена Павловић-Барили; 5 November 1909 – 6 March 1945) was a Serbian painter and poet. She is the most notable female artist of Serbian modernism.[1]
Biography
[edit]Her Italian father, Bruno Barilli, was an influential composer, elder son of Cecrope Barilli, director of the Parmesan Academy of Fine Arts and a member of a noted artistic Barilli family.[2] Her paternal uncle was Latino Barilli, himself a prominent Italian painter. Milena's Serbian mother, Danica Pavlović-Barili (1883-1965), a descendant of Karađorđe Petrović, founder of the House of Karađorđević, ruling family of the Kingdom of Serbia and later Kingdom of Yugoslavia, has served as lady in waiting to Queen Maria of Yugoslavia and was tasked with improving her Serbian language.[3] She was also appointed as superintendent at the court of King Alexander I of Yugoslavia, who was her second cousin once removed. Danica also had artistic talent and studied art in Munich, where she met her husband Bruno Barilli in 1905, an Italian actor and music composer, whom she married in an Orthodox ceremony 4 years later in the city of Požarevac.
Milena studied at the Royal School of Arts in Belgrade, Kingdom of Yugoslavia (1922–1926) and in Munich (1926–1928). In the early 1930s, she left Serbia and returned only for brief visits until the outbreak of World War II. During her stays in Spain, Rome, Paris and London, where she socialised with Jean Cocteau and André Breton, she was influenced by many western schools and artists, notably Giorgio de Chirico. After 1939, she lived and worked in New York where her career peaked as an illustrator for Vogue,[4] Harper's Bazaar, and other publications under the J. Walter Thompson advertising agency.[5] In 1941, she appeared in the Twentieth Annual of Advertising Art, and before her death, she was commissioned to design costumes for Gian Carlo Menotti's ballet Sebastian and a production of Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream; these were never completed. She died of a heart attack at the age of 35, having sustained serious injuries in a horse-riding accident the previous summer. She was cremated, according to her American husband's wishes, and buried in a cemetery in Rome.[5]
The topics of her work varied from portraits to imaginative interpretations of biblical stories. The motifs often included dream-like situations, veils, angels, statues of Venus, and Harlequins. Many of her works are parts of permanent exhibitions in Rome, New York City, Museum of Contemporary Art (Belgrade), and her hometown of Požarevac, where the house in which she was born has been converted into a museum in her honor.[6] In 1943, Pavlović-Barili's work was included in Peggy Guggenheim's show Exhibition by 31 Women at the Art of This Century gallery in New York.[7]
Legacy
[edit]She was born in Požarevac. The house in which she was born is now a museum, the Milena Pavlović-Barili Gallery, dedicated to her life. The house was donated to the town of Požarevac by Milena's mother Danica Pavlović-Barili in 1961, and opened for public in 1962. The gallery holds 894 works of art by Milena Pavlović Barilli (136 oils, 51 pastels, 415 drawings, 286 tempera and watercolors, 6 prints), 72 works from the collection of the Biennale and contemporary authors, 9 works from the family art collection, which is a total of 975 works.[8]
Artworks about Milena and her work
[edit]Performance
- Milena ZeVu, ‘Milena’ homage to the Serbian artist Milena Pavlovic Barilli (1909-1945), House of Jevrem Grujic, March 2019, Belgrade, Serbia
Gallery
[edit]-
Portrait of Milena's father, Bruno Barili (1938)
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Self-portrait, 1938
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Self-portrait, 1939
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Act with mirror
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Hot Pink with Cool Grey, 1940
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Front pages of "Vogue" magazine and one of the dresses that Milena created
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Posthumous casting of Milena's hands
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Milena with the portrait of her relative King Peter II, New York (1942)
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Milena's parents Bruno and Danica
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Milena as a child with her parents and maternal grandparents
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Vukovic, Sofija. "Milena Pavlović Barili" (in Serbo-Croatian). stazenezele. Archived from the original on 24 February 2015. Retrieved 2 January 2016.
- ^ Dejan Djokić (2023). A Concise History of Serbia. Cambridge University Press. p. 375. ISBN 978-1-107-02838-8.
- ^ https://en.domjevremagrujica.com/magnificent-milena
- ^ "From Serbia to the World: Fashion Illustrations of Milena Pavlović Barilli". fashionheritage.eu. Retrieved 2021-05-06.
- ^ a b Barilli, Milena Pavlović (2010). Milena Pavlovic Barilli: la moda nella stanza di un'artista (in Italian). Edizioni Pendragon. ISBN 978-88-8342-818-0.
- ^ "Milena Pavlović Barilli, she painted the world". Serbia.com. Retrieved 2 January 2016.
- ^ Butler, Cornelia H.; Schwartz, Alexandra (2010). Modern Women: Women Artists at The Museum of Modern Art. New York: Museum of Modern Art. p. 45. ISBN 9780870707711.
- ^ "Историјат – Галерија Милене Павловић Barilli". galerijampb.rs. Retrieved 2024-06-07.
External links
[edit]- Translated works by Milena Pavlović-Barili Archived 2020-10-13 at the Wayback Machine
- 1909 births
- 1945 deaths
- People from Požarevac
- Serbian women poets
- Serbian women writers
- Eastern Orthodox Christians from Serbia
- Serbian people of Italian descent
- Deaths by horse-riding accident in the United States
- Burials in the Protestant Cemetery, Rome
- 20th-century women writers
- 20th-century Serbian poets
- 20th-century Serbian painters
- Serbian women painters
- Accidental deaths in New York (state)
- 20th-century women painters