University of Basel

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

Studio portrait of merchant Jovan Pačić and his daughter Bosa

Studio portrait of merchant Jovan Pačić and his daughter Bosa, © Museum of Applied ArtenlargeStudio portrait of merchant Jovan Pačić and his daughter Bosa, © Museum of Applied Art

Description

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Object:Studio portrait of merchant Jovan Pačić and his daughter Bosa
Description:Full-length shot of a man in a dark suit, sitting on a padded armchair and of a young woman leaning against him and resting her right arm on his thigh. She is wearing a dark, high-necked dress with a collar.
Comment:Jovan Pačić (1827–1899) was the son of Toma Vučić Perišić's daughter Stanka, who was married to merchant Sterija Pača. Toma Vučić Perišić (1787/1788, Barič – 1859, Belgrade) was considered a hero of both the First and the Second Serbian Uprising. Him and his wife, Jelena Jovan Pačić, had three sons (Toma, Milivoje, Dragoljub) and three daughters (Stanka, Bosiljka/Bosa and Ana), one of whom was Jovan's mother and Bosa's grandmother.
Relations:/o:vase.1069
Date:Not before 1896, Not after 1903
Location:Belgrade
Country:Serbia
Type:Photograph
Creator:Jovanović, Milan, (Photographer)
Dimensions:Artefact: 163mm x 116mm
Format:Cabinet
Technique:Not specified
Keywords:290 Clothing
430 Exchange > 438 Domestic Trade
460 Labor
550 Individuation and Mobility > 551 Personal Names
550 Individuation and Mobility > 554 Status, Role, and Prestige
570 Interpersonal Relations > 579 Brawls, Riots and Banditry
590 Familiy
660 Political Behavior
660 Political Behavior > 668 Political Movements
890 Gender Roles and Issues
Copyright:Muzej Primenjene Umetnosti
Archive:Museum of Applied Art, Inv. No.: 10921
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.1068