Dragiša_Brašovan

Dragiša Brašovan

Dragiša Brašovan

Serbian architect


Dragiša Brašovan (Serbian Cyrillic: Драгиша Брашован; May 25, 1887 – October 6, 1965) was a Serbian modernist architect, one of the leading architects of the early 20th century in Yugoslavia.[1]

Quick Facts Born, Died ...

Works

Brašovan's personal items, Gallery of Matica Srpska


Barcelona

  • Serbian, Croatian and Slovene Pavilion for the 1929 Barcelona International Exposition. Was with the Barcelona Pavilion of Mies van der Rohe and the Swedish Pavilion of Peder Clason the only examples of avant-garde architecture. The building, demolished after the exposition, had the shape of an irregular star and the façade had no ornamental elements as the other historicist pavilions.

Belgrade:

Jagodina:

  • Apartment blocks of Cable Factory Svetozarevo (FX), built in the late 1950s

Novi Sad:

  • Workers' Association, 1931.
  • Banovina Palace, (now the Executive Council of Vojvodina), 1939.
  • Main Post Office, 1961.

Orlovat:

  • Church of the Presentation of Mary, 1924-1927.[2]

Zrenjanin:

  • Serbian bank building, about 1920th
  • Sokolski dom, 1927.
  • Begej Vila, 1926.

Čortanovci:

  • Stanković Vila, 1930.

Čačak:

  • "Partizan" departement store, 1963

See also


References

  1. Blagojevic, Ljiljana (2003). Modernism in Serbia: The Elusive Margins of Belgrade Architecture, 1919-1941. MIT Press. Dust jacket. ISBN 978-0-262-02537-9.

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