Wilhelmina "Mina" Karadžić-Vukomanović (Serbian Cyrillic: Вилхелмина "Мина" Караџић-Вукомановић; 12 July 1828, in Vienna – 12 June 1894, in ibidem) was an Austrian-born Serbian painter and writer.[1]
Biography
She was born in Vienna, as the seventh child of Vuk Stefanović Karadžić and the Viennese Ana Maria Kraus. From an early age she received comprehensive education, beginning with reading and writing in German language, and continuing with French, Italian, Serbian, and English.[2] She studied visual arts with the Austrian painter Friedrich Schilcher, as well as in various galleries in Vienna, Venice, Dresden, and Berlin.[3]
In the early 1850s, Karadžić worked on translating a collection of Serbian folk poems to German language. The collection was finalized and published in 1852 as Gusle, Serbische Nationallieder by Ludwig August von Frankl. In 1854 Karadžić published Volksmarchen der Serben, a German translation of Serbian folk tales and proverbs collected by her father Vuk, with the introduction by Jacob Grimm.[4]
In 1858, she married Aleksa Vukomanović in St Michael's Cathedral in Belgrade. In 1859, she gave birth to their son Janko Vukomanović and lost her husband to illness when the child was three months old.[5]
Mina Karadžić's painting is divided into two periods, the first under the influence of classicism, and the second under the influence of romanticism.[3] Her best known paintings include:
Self-Portrait
Portrait of brother Dimitrije
An old woman with a white cap
Marko Kraljevic with a mace
Marko Kraljevic sa šestopercem
Young black man
Montenegrin
Greek hero
Bosnjak with red Sarough
Portrait of a girl with a red scarf
The girl in a plaid dress
Portrait of a Woman
An old man with long hair
The young man with a beard
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mina Karadžić.
^Srđ. Dubrovnik. 1902. Archived from the original on 2015-05-18. Retrieved 2015-05-11.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)