Serbian architect
Uglješa Bogunović (1922-1994) was a Serbian architect, among Belgrade 's and the country's most prominent.[ 2]
Bogunović was born on 1922 in Teslić , Yugoslavia (now Bosnia and Herzegovina ).[ 1]
One of his most famous works, in collaboration with architects Slobodan Janjić and Milan Kostić, is the Mount Avala TV Tower that was destroyed in the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia .[ 3] His other works include the reconstruction of Skadarlija Street in the 1960s[ 4] [ 5] and the Yugoslav Pavilion at the World Trade Fair in San Francisco in 1964.[ 6]
Begunović died in 1994[ 7] in Belgrade.[citation needed ]
Begunović's work was included in the show Toward a Concrete Utopia: Architecture in Yugoslavia, 1948–1980 at New York's MoMA in 2016.[ 8] [ 9]
References
^ a b Jugoslovenska umetnost XX veka: Srpska arhitektura, 1900-1970 [Yugoslav Art of the 20th Century: Serbian Architecture, 1900-1970 ] (in Bosnian). Museum of Contemporary Art, Belgrade . 1972. p. 130. OCLC 46321451 .
^ "Serbia in the World" . 2000.
^ Krivokapić, Boris (2019). "The Nato Bombing Of Yugoslavia (1999) 20 Years Later – The Problems Of Legality, Legitimacy And Consequences" . In Vuković, Nebojša (ed.). David Vs. Goliath: NATO War Against Yugoslavia and Its Implications . Institute of International Politics and Economics. p. 466. ISBN 978-86-7067-261-1 .
^ Beard, Danijela Š.; Rasmussen, Ljerka V. (June 2020). Made in Yugoslavia: Studies in Popular Music . Routledge. ISBN 9781315452319 .
^ Janićijević, Jovan (1998). The Cultural Treasury of Serbia . IDEA. ISBN 978-86-7547-039-7 .
^ Joint Translation Service (8 October 1964). "Summary of the Yugoslav Press" .
^ "Uglješa Bogunović | MoMA" . The Museum of Modern Art . Retrieved 2021-07-13 .
^ "Valentin Jeck, Uglješa Bogunović, Slobodan Janjić, Milan Krstić. Avala TV Tower, Mount Avala, Belgrade, Serbia (Exterior view, 2016). 2016 | MoMA" . The Museum of Modern Art . Retrieved 2021-07-13 .
^ James, Brian (2019). "Exhibition Review: Toward a Concrete Utopia: Architecture in Yugoslavia, 1948–1980, Museum of Modern Art, New York, USA" . Design and Culture . 11 : 142– 144. doi :10.1080/17547075.2019.1558969 . S2CID 197757239 .