Zenitism
Zenitism (Serbo-Croatian: Zenitizam / Зенитизам) was an art movement in Yugoslavia from 1921 until 1926, first in Zagreb from 1921 to 1924 and from 1924 in Belgrade. The movement was mainly involved in visual arts, graphic design, poetry, literature, theatre, film, architecture and music.[1] Like other avant-garde movements at the time, it held anti-war, anti-bourgeois and anti-nationalist views and rejected traditional culture and art. Micić defined the movement as "abstract metacosmic expressionism."
Most of its ideas were communicated through the Zenit magazine which Ljubomir Micić launched and which published 43 issues.
The movement
The movement was established following World War I, during which Yugoslavia lost a million inhabitants.[2] Although some artists from the region were known in Europe, Zenitism was the first notable art movement from the Balkans in Europe.
Zenit
All Zenit issues can be viewed freely in the National Library of Serbia's digital archives:
- Zenit 1, February 1921
- Zenit 2, March 1921
- Zenit 3, April 1921
- Zenit 4, May 1921
- Zenit 5, June 1921
- Zenit 6, July 1921
- Zenit 7, September 1921
- Zenit 8, October 1921
- Zenit 9, November 1921
- Zenit 10, December 1921
- Zenit 11, February 1922
- Zenit 12, March 1922
- Zenit 13, April 1922
- Zenit 14, May 1922
- Zenit 15, June 1922
- Zenit 16, July 1922
- Zenit 17/18, September/October 1922
- Zenit 19/20, November/December 1922
- Zenit 21, February 1923
- Zenit 22, March 1923
- Zenit 23, April 1923
- Zenit 24, May 1923
- Zenit 25, February 1924
- Zenit 26-33, October 1924
- Zenit 34, November 1924
- Zenit 35, December 1924
- Zenit 36, October 1925
- Zenit 37, November/December 1925
- Zenit 38, February 1926
- Zenit 39, March 1926
- Zenit 40, April 1926
- Zenit 41, May 1926
- Zenit 42, July 1926
- Zenit 43, December 1926
References
- ↑ http://digital.nb.rs/zenit/english.html
- ↑ Erlikman, Vadim (2004). Poteri narodonaseleniia v XX veke : spravochnik. Moscow. ISBN 5-93165-107-1.
External links
- Zenit at Monoskop.org.
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