Jerko Ješa Denegri

The topic of Jerko Ješa Denegri is a topic that has generated interest and debate in today's society. Since its origins, Jerko Ješa Denegri has been an object of study and reflection, generating conflicting opinions and conflicting positions. In this article, we aim to objectively and exhaustively address different aspects related to Jerko Ješa Denegri, from its historical background to its relevance in the current context. Different perspectives will be analyzed, relevant data will be presented and we will seek to offer a global and complete vision of Jerko Ješa Denegri, with the aim of contributing to the debate around this very relevant topic.
Jerko "Ješa" Denegri
Born
Jerko Denegri

(1936-09-05) 5 September 1936 (age 88)
Occupation(s)Art Historian and Art Critics

Jerko "Ješa" Denegri (Serbian Cyrillic: Јерко "Јеша" Денегри, pronounced [jerko jeʃa deneɡri]) is a Serbian art historian and art critic who lives in Belgrade, Serbia.

Biography

He was born on 5 September 1936 in Split, Kingdom of Yugoslavia, now Croatia. Graduated on University of Belgrade Faculty of Philosophy at the Department of Art History where he defended his PhD thesis.[1] He was a curator at the Museum of Contemporary Art (Belgrade) from 1965 to 1991 and a professor on Belgrade Faculty of Philosophy from 1991 to 2007 at the Department of Art History. He wrote more than 3000 theoretical texts, essays, critics about modern, contemporary and actual art in daily, weekly and monthly periodicals as such as in specialized journals. Author of many Yugoslav and Serbian visual art exhibitions and a monograph and catalog preface of their most important protagonists. He was a commissioner on the Yugoslav Biennial of Young Artists in Paris Centre Pompidou,[1] and Venice Biennial.[2] He initiated and was the editor and chief editor of several professional journals: The Art (Belgrade), Architecture-Urbanism (Belgrade), Moment (Gornji Milanovac - Belgrade), Projeka(r)t (Novi Sad) etc.

He is the member of International Association of Art Critics (AICA).

References

  1. ^ a b Mattioni, Vladimir. Urbanizam.net. UPI 2M PLUS.
  2. ^ La Biennale di Venezia. Esposizione internazionale d'arte, Esposizione biennale internazionale d'arte. Vol. 40. Italy: Electa. 1982. ISBN 9788820802936., pg. 200