The Conquest of Belgrade

The Conquest of Belgrade
Serbian: Osvajanje Beograda
Scene depicting the capture of Belgrade by Serbian revolutionaries
ArtistKatarina Ivanović
Year1844–1845
CatalogueInventory no. 413
MediumOil on canvas
Dimensions157 cm × 188.5 cm (62 in × 74.2 in)
LocationNational Museum of Serbia, Belgrade
Coordinates44°49′00″N 20°27′34″E / 44.8167°N 20.4594°E / 44.8167; 20.4594

The Conquest of Belgrade (Serbian: Osvajanje Beograda, Serbian Cyrillic: Освајањe Беoгрaдa)[a] is an oil painting by the romanticist Katarina Ivanović, one of Serbia's first significant female painters. Painted between 1844 and 1845, it depicts the capture of Serbia's capital, Belgrade, by Serbian revolutionaries in late 1806, during the First Serbian Uprising.

Ivanović was inspired to create the painting upon reading a book titled History of the Serb People while studying at the Munich Academy. The painting was poorly received by art critics in the Serbian capital. The art historian Lilien Filipovitch-Robinson suggests this was due to its poor compositional and spatial conception.

By the 1870s, Ivanović's works had largely been forgotten in Serbia. The Conquest of Belgrade was one of four paintings offered by Ivanović to the Gallery of Historical Portraits in 1874. The Gallery went on to form the nucleus of what was to become the National Museum of Serbia. The painting is currently in the possession of the National Museum.


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