Group shot of artists celebrating Davorin Jenko's birthdayVisualizing Family, Gender Relations, and the Body. The Balkans approx. 1860-1950Ana DjordjeviceditorCentre for Southeast European History, University GrazCentre for Information Modelling in the Humanities, University Grazo:vase.1470Muzej Pozorišne Umetnosti SrbijeMuseum of Theater Art of SerbiaIII-616Cultural ParticipationTotal CultureAlcoholic BeveragesDrink, Drugs, and IndulgenceClothingOutbuildingsStructuresLeisure Time ActivitiesLiving Standards and RoutinesConversationRecreationDramaArtsMusical and Theatrical ProductionsCommercialized EntertainmentPersonal NamesIndividuation and MobilityStatus, Role, and PrestigeIndividuation and MobilitySocial StratificationFriendshipsInterpersonal RelationsSerbiaBelgradeBelgrade20.46513,44.80401PhotographPhotographer1896-1898MilanJovanovićJovanović, MilanOutdoor group photograph of actors and actresses in front of a building. All of them are wearing modern clothes. Some are holding glasses in their hands. The faces of a woman and a man looking out of a window in the door on the right of the building can also be seen.Davorin Jenko (1835, Dvorje – 1914, Ljubljana) was a famous Slovene composer. He is sometimes considered the father of Slovenian national Romantic music. He also composed the Serbian national anthem, 'Bože pravde' ('God of Justice') and the former Slovenian national anthem 'Naprej zastava Slave' ('Forward, Flag of Glory!'). In 1862, he moved to the town of Pančevo in southern Vojvodina, where he worked as the choirmaster of the local Serbian Orthodox church. He later moved to Belgrade on the other side of the Austrian-Serbian border. There he worked as a composer in the Serbian National Theatre. Jenko was among the first four members of the Academy of Arts of the Royal Serbian Academy of Sciences, appointed by King Milan I of Serbia on 5 April 1887. He lived in Serbia until 1897, when he moved to Ljubljana.Not specifiedImperial236269SerbiaBelgrade