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Prodanovich, Miletus

Mileta Prodanovich (born in Belgrade in 1959) is a Serbian prose writer, poet and artist. Professor at the University of Arts in Belgrade.

Miletus Prodanovich
Serb. Miletus Prodanoviћ
Birth nameMiletus Prodanovich
Date of Birth1959 ( 1959 )
Place of BirthBelgrade , Yugoslavia
Citizenship Yugoslavia
Serbia
Occupationwriter, poet, artist
Years of creativity1980 - AD at.
Language of WorksSerbian
Debut1980
AwardsBulgarica (2000), Belgrade Prize (2002)

Biography

Born in 1959 in Belgrade. In 1985 he received a master's degree at the Belgrade Academy of Arts, since 1990 he has been teaching there. In 1989-1990, he completed a special course at the Royal College of Art in London . Since 1980, participating in exhibitions.

In 1986 he was one of the artists who represented Yugoslavia at the Venice Biennale [1] .

Author of the novels “Dinner in St. Apollonia” (1983), “New Wedges” (1989), “A Dog with a Broken Ridge” (1993), “Dance, a Beast, to My Tender Music” (1996), “Red Shawl from Pure Silk "(1999)," It could be your lucky day "(2000)," Garden in Venice "(2002)," Alice in the Land of Saint Carps "(2003)," Collection "(2006); collections of short stories “Road Sketches on Pictures and Labels” (1993) “Heavenly Opera” (1995); the poetry collection "Miasma" (1994); essays “Eye on the Road” (2000), “The Elder and Most Beautiful Belgrade” (2001).

Mileta Prodanovich was a member of the influential Belgrade art group of the 1980s - Alter Imago (with Nada Alavagno, Tahir Lusic and Vlada Nikolic). In his artistic cycles, the artist addresses the problem of the interaction of language, text, painting and performance. In his work, dialogue practice and a meta-historical collage dominate. In recent years, M. Prodanovich has increasingly used photographs in his interpretation of reality.

Winner of the Bulgarica Prize for the best book in the vast expanses of the former Yugoslavia (2000), Belgrade Prize for the best book (2002), etc.

Prodanovich’s prose was translated into English, Spanish, Italian, French, German, Polish, Ukrainian, Slovenian, Bulgarian, Macedonian and Greek.

Notes

  1. ↑ Account Suspended

Links

  • Interview with Mileta Prodanovich on the Litakcent website
  • Gubenko Dmitro "Serbia: nobility to Europe." "Ukrainian Tijden." Number 15 (76) on 04/17/2009.


Source - https://ru.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Prodanovich ,_Mileta&oldid = 97519516


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