The Officers' Club buildingSIBA – A Visual Approach to Explore Everyday Life in Turkish and Yugoslav Cities, 1920s and 1930s Milanka MatićeditorNataša MiškovićeditorMiddle Eastern Studies, University of BaselCentre for Information Modelling in the Humanities, University Grazo:siba.4029Borba fotodokumentacija, BelgradeVremeBorba.vladaPhotoarchive BorbaArchitectureStructuresStreets and TrafficSettelmentsCultural Identity and PrideTotal CultureBusiness StructuresStructuresPhotographic plate1920-1940Svetozar GrdijanGrdijan, Svetozar View of the Officers’ Club at the corner of Resava and Masarik streets. The building features large windows and a cupola with the inscription 'Oficirska Zadruga'. The scene in front includes an open cabriolet with a driver and an elegantly dressed couple in the rear, entering from the right. The car is about to pass an open carriage coming from the direction of the Officers’ Club. In the back of the latter is a young man or boy, who seems to be elegantly dressed in a suit and is reading a book or a newspaper. Several cars are parked in a row along Resava Street.The building was designed by Svetozar Jovanović, a very young architect at that time, in cooperation with Danilo Vladisavljević and Vladimir Popović, and completed by 1908. The young man in the back of the carriage has dark skin and seems to be of African descent.Not specifiedNot specified90130SerbiaYugoslaviaBelgradeResavska ulicaDjurić-Zamolo, Divna (2009): Graditelji Beograda 1815-1914. Beograd: Muzej grada Beograda, 192. Vujović, Branko (1994): Beograd u prošlosti i sadašnjosti. Beograd: Draganić, 247.
ArchitectureStructuresStreets and TrafficSettelmentsCultural Identity and PrideTotal CultureBusiness StructuresStructures