Vladimir Nikolić

Serbian architect From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Vladimir Nikolić (1857–1922; Serbian Cyrillic: Владимир Николић) was a Serbian architect notable for his projects built in Vojvodina province. He mostly worked in Neo-renaissance,[1] Neo-romanticic and Serbo-Byzantine Revival[2] styles.

Quick Facts Born, Died ...
Vladimir Nikolić
Born(1857-06-13)June 13, 1857
Died1922 (aged 65)
NationalitySerbian
OccupationArchitect
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Biography

Nikolić finished elementary school in Senta, and continued his education in Pančevo, Maribor, Munich and later went on to Vienna and enrolled at the Polytechnic but did not finish his studies.[3]

He spent nine years working on several projects in the Kingdom of Serbia, for which he was awarded Order of the Cross of Takovo by king Milan I of Serbia.[4] In early 1892 Nikolić moved from Belgrade to Sremski Karlovci, which was the spiritual capital of Serbs of Vojvodina. At the behest of his godfather[5] or cousin[6] Patriarch Georgije Branković, he designed and built numerous buildings in Sremski Karlovci and other parts of Vojvodina, including the Patriarchate Court. Nikolić was an active hunter and winemaker.[7][8]

The architecture of the Patriarch's Palace (1892) belongs to the neo-Renaissance and the Secession, although the author found his inspiration on the boundaries of the Renaissance, and among the Romantic and Byzantine symbols. After constructing the Bishop's Palace according to the principles of Theophil Hansen (1901), he remained faithful to the spirit of neo-Romanticism, the Byzantine tradition and the Secession.

Selected works

See also

References

Literature

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