University of Basel

VIF | Visualizing Family, Gender Relations and the Body. The Balkans approx. 1860-1950

Group portrait of Professor Milenko Vesnić, Professor Slobodan Jovanović and another man

Group portrait of Professor Milenko Vesnić, Professor Slobodan Jovanović and another man, © Museum of Applied ArtenlargeGroup portrait of Professor Milenko Vesnić, Professor Slobodan Jovanović and another man, © Museum of Applied Art

Description

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Object:Group portrait of Professor Milenko Vesnić, Professor Slobodan Jovanović and another man
Description:Group shot of three men, one sitting and two standing next to him. All three are dressed in formal suits.
Comment:Milenko Vesnić is sitting in the armchair and Slobodan Jovanović is the first from the right. Slobodan Jovanović (1869, Novi Sad – 1958, London), son of the Serbian politician, political theorist, economist and journalist Vladimir Jovanović and his wife Jelena, was one of Serbia's most prolific jurists, historians, sociologists, journalists and literary critics. In Serbia he is universally regarded as one of the most influential political thinkers of the turn of the century, who was also a leader of the Serbian intelligentsia for nearly half a century. He held important public positions such as that of a political attaché with the Serbian mission to Istanbul. He was Professor at the University of Belgrade's Faculty of Law and later became the university's Rector. He was also President of the Serbian Cultural Club, full member and later President of the Serbian Royal Academy of Sciences, deputy Prime Minister and later Prime Minister in exile, where he stayed until his death as he was prosecuted by the communist regime. Milenko Vesnić (1863, Dunišić – 1921, Paris) also held many public positions such as Secretary to Serbian Legation in Constantinople, Professor of International Law at the Grande École in Belgrade, Deputy of the National Assembly and Minister of Education, Minister of Justice, Envoy of Serbia in Paris, Prime Minister, Minister for Foreign Affairs. He was the founder of the periodical 'Pravnik' (Lawyer). The name of the third man is unknown.
Date:Not before 1900, Not after 1902
Location:Belgrade
Country:Serbia
Type:Photograph
Creator:Jovanović, Milan, (Photographer)
Dimensions:Artefact: 205mm x 125mm
Format:Boudoir
Technique:Not specified
Keywords:210 Records > 212 Writing
210 Records > 214 Publishing
290 Clothing
460 Labor > 462 Division of Labor by Gender
550 Individuation and Mobility > 551 Personal Names
550 Individuation and Mobility > 554 Status, Role, and Prestige
560 Social Stratification
570 Interpersonal Relations
640 State
650 Government Activities
660 Political Behavior
670 Law
690 Justice
810 Science and Humanities
870 Education
890 Gender Roles and Issues
Copyright:Muzej Primenjene Umetnosti
Archive:Museum of Applied Art, Inv. No.: 18982
License:This picture is licensed under Creative Commons [CC BY-NC-ND 3.0]
Editor:Ana Djordjevic
Permalink:https://gams.uni-graz.at/o:vase.1093