Baroque in Croatia. Presentation of Baroque culture in Croatia in the socialist period
Baroque in Croatia. Presentation of baroque culture
in Croatia in the socialist period
Dubravka Botica
Introduction
In the Croatian art historiography of the Cold-War period, Baroque art stands out as
a particular subject of interest. Defined in simplified terms as the art of CounterReformation and of Absolute Monarchy, that is to say the art of the Church and the
nobility, Baroque art posed a stark contrast to the dominant ideology of
communism, with its emphasis on the culture of the peasantry and the workers.
One might expect that for art historians this was not likely to offer the best possible
conditions for researching local Baroque heritage. However, no comprehensive
account of art historiography in Croatia in the twentieth century has yet been
written – nor has the subject even attracted much interest among the research
community as yet. Over the past decade a growing number of texts have appeared
dealing with the beginnings of art history on Croatian territory1 or with a number of
individual influential scholars who have blazed the trail in promoting art history as
a professional practice in the first half of the twentieth century.2 However, the
development of academic discourse in the post-war period on art history has only
been touched upon in passing by researchers concentrating on broader topics, such
as the analysis of culture and art of particular historical periods.3 Therefore, due to
the lack of any comprehensive overview of the development of academic discourse
on the subject in Croatia, the interpretation of Baroque art in the Croatian art
historiography of the second half of the twentieth century remains fragmentary.
Using the examples of the 1958 Hrvatska u XVII stoljeću (Croatia in the Seventeenth
Century) exhibition and articles by Anđela Horvat providing a series of overviews
on art heritage, published in the late 1970s and early 1980s in the journal Kaj, this
essay seeks to analyse the dominant interpretive models of Baroque art in socialist
Croatia as reflected in presentations on the subject designed for broader audiences.
In the awareness that any comparison can inevitably only be partial, as the two
See, for example, Jasna Galjer, Likovna kritika u Hrvatskoj 1868–1951, Zagreb: Meandar
media, 2000, and Ivana Mance, Zèrcalo naroda. Ivan Kukuljević Sakcinski: povijest umjetnosti i
politika, Zagreb: Institute of Art History, 2012.
2 A particular stress should be put on the series of annual symposiums Hrvatski povjesničari
umjetnosti (Croatian Art Historians), organized by the Društvo povjesničara umjetnosti
Hrvatske (Association of Croatian Art Historians) in Zagreb: ‘Anđela Horvat (1911–1985),
Znanstveni skup posvećen stotoj obljetnici rođenja’, Zagreb, November 2011. The
proceedings were published in Peristil. Zbornik radova za povijest umjetnosti, 54, 2011; ‘Iso
Kršnjavi – Veliki utemeljitelj’, November 2012; ‘Arthur Schneider (1879–1946)’, November
2013; ‘Gjuro Szabo (1875–1943)’, October 2015.
3 Jasna Galjer, Dizajn pedesetih u Hrvatskoj: od utopije do stvarnosti, Zagreb: Horetzky, 2004.
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Journal of Art Historiography Number 15 December 2016
Dubravka Botica
Baroque in Croatia ... in the socialist period
presentations employ entirely different discursive media – an exhibition on the one
hand and a series of texts on the other – the analysis focuses primarily on the
ideological framework that characterised their respective periods and how that
framework was reflected in the examples. This essay’s diachronic comparison will
give an initial idea of the shifts in interpretation that occurred from the 1950s
through to the 1980s, as the ideologically determined emphases and dominant
aesthetic theories of the time, for instance, are far less present in the newer texts than
they were in the earlier exhibition, which was organised in a decade crucial to the
shaping of socialist Yugoslavia’s cultural and visual identity.
Researching Baroque art in the socialist period
Between 1945 and 1991, while Croatia still remained part of the Socialist Federal
Republic of Yugoslavia (hereinafter: Yugoslavia), Baroque art was positioned
outside the main focus of art historical research. Scholars directed their efforts
mainly in the direction of medieval art along the Adriatic coast and hinterland,
explored issues relating to the origin and characteristics of ‘national’ art, and
endeavoured to distinguish works by the local masters (with Slavic names) from
those by foreign masters (with foreign sounding – mainly Italian – names).4 Another
focus lay on post-war twentieth century art, in which the ideological framing of the
time was much more evident than in research that focused on older periods.
These tendencies were particularly prominent in the late 1940s and
throughout the 1950s, the decade that played a key role in creating the standard
assessment of the role of art in the new socialist regime. Views and criteria first
established in the 1950s were to persevere right up until the collapse of Yugoslavia
in 1991/1992, albeit becoming decreasingly binding as time progressed. The choice
of abstract non-figurative art as the style of a modern society in which cultural
policies were clearly moving away from Socialist Realism was a particularly
important decision in the period immediately after the split with the Soviet Union in
1948. However, discussions of the 1950s put more emphasis the new notion and
definition of the role of art and the new position of artists and culture workers in
society. Discussions on the topic in magazines like Republika or Pogledi5 clearly
betray the ideologically biased views of the leading scholars and provide evidence
for the conclusion that culture and art were both understood as an extension of
politics, although that phenomenon was not as explicit as it was in Eastern Bloc
See for instance the works by Cvito Fisković, ‘Dokumenti o radu naših graditelja i klesara
XV–XVI. stoljeća u Dubrovniku’ Prilozi povijesti umjetnosti u Dalmaciji, 3, 1947, 3–26; Naši
graditelji i kipari XV. i XVI. u Dubrovniku, Zagreb: Matica hrvatska 1947; Prvi poznati
dubrovački graditelji, Dubrovnik: Jugoslavenska akademija znanosti i umjetnosti 1955. Ljubo
Karaman also significantly contributed to research on the ‘local environment’ with his O
djelovanju domaće sredine u umjetnosti hrvatskih krajeva, Zagreb: Društvo historičara umjetnosti
NRH, 1963.
5 Časopis Republika, published by Društvo hrvatskih književnika (Croatian Writers’
Association) from 1945 on. Pogledi: časopis za teoriju društvenih i prirodnih nauka, published
from 1952 to 1955 by Društvo sveučilišnih nastavnika (University Professors’ Association),
Zagreb.
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Baroque in Croatia ... in the socialist period
countries, since contacts and communications with the western arts scene were
never interrupted throughout the period.
Even though the key participants in these discussions, Grgo Gamulin (1910–
1997), professor of art history at Zagreb University. and Krsto Heged (...truncated)