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Nasta Rojc

Nasta Rojc (6 November 1883 – 6 November 1964) was a Croatian painter.

Nasta Rojc
Portrait by Ludwig Grillich, before 1926
Born
Jerka Hermina Ljubica Rojc

(1883-11-06)6 November 1883
Died6 November 1964(1964-11-06) (aged 81)
Other namesNasta Rojc-Šenoa
OccupationPainter
Years active1909–1949

Born in Bjelovar, she was a sickly child and a misfit. She did not enjoy school or playing with other children, but liked both hunting and horse riding. After she declared in her youth that she was an atheist, her father had her educated in a convent school. Becoming depressed, she was sent to the seaside town of Kraljevica at fifteen, where she met a painter, Branko Šenoa, who inspired her to become an artist. Her father objected, but in exchange for her agreement to learn cooking, he allowed her to attend art school. She studied in Zagreb, Vienna, and Munich, learning to paint, sculpt, and engrave. When her father insisted she marry, Rojc who was a lesbian, entered a lavender marriage with Šenoa, after her father agreed to help her acquire a studio and assist with her living expenses.

From 1909 she exhibited works with the Croatian Art Society in Zagreb and was the first woman to have a solo exhibition at the Salon Ullrich. She participated in numerous exhibitions in the capitals of Eastern Europe until the onset of World War I. During the war she took commissions for portraits and worked on an autobiography. Around the same time, Rojc met a group of lesbians who had worked for the Scottish Women's Hospitals for Foreign Service during the war in Serbia and Sarajevo. After the war, the hospital personnel founded an orphanage in Bajina Bašta. One of them was a British peer, Alexandrina Onslow, who became Rojc's partner.

From 1923, they openly lived as a couple in a house Rojc had designed, which was shared with her husband until his death in 1939. Between 1924 and 1926, Rojc and Onslow lived in Scotland and England, where Rojc had a successful exhibition at the Gieves Art Gallery in London. Returning to Zagreb at the end of 1926, her work was derided by the critics. She exhibited with the Women's International Art Club in London until 1929, and was inspired to found the Klub likovnih umjetnica (Women Artists' Club) with Lina Virant Crnčić to promote the works of women artists. The group held eleven exhibitions between 1928 and 1940, in which she presented works of her own. When World War II broke out, the couple joined the resistance movement. They were reported to the Ustaše, arrested, sent to prison for several months in 1943, and were unable to reacquire their property until after the war ended. Rojc died in 1964, fourteen years after Onslow, with whom she was buried.

Rojc and her work were largely forgotten until the breakup of Yugoslavia. Almost immediately after Croatian independence a retrospective of her work was presented and scholars began evaluating Rojc's two autobiographies, her correspondence within her international lesbian network, and her photographic archive. It is rare that queer history in the region has had tangible documentation and the records that she left are seen as significant for both British and Yugoslavian lesbian history. Her paintings are held in many public and private collections including the Modern Gallery, Zagreb, the City Museum of Bjelovar, the Josip Kovačić Collection owned by the City of Zagreb, as well as the Croatian National Theater. In 2006 Rojc's likeness was featured on a postage stamp. Historian Leonida Kovač published a book analyzing Rojc's legacy in 2010, recognizing that it was innovative and pushed the boundaries of socio-cultural norms. Numerous retrospective exhibitions of her work have been held throughout Croatia; in 2017, fifty-three of her paintings were exhibited at the Palais Porcia, Vienna.

Early life and education edit

Jerka Hermina Ljubica Rojc, known as Nasta, was born on 6 November 1883 in Bjelovar, Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia, Austria-Hungary, to Slava (née Blažić) and Milan Rojc [hr].[1][2][3] Her siblings included Slavica, Ljerka, Slava, Vjera, Milan, and Vladimir, although both Slavica and Ljerka died as young children and were buried at the St. Andrew Cemetery of Bjelovar.[1] Milan was a prominent lawyer,[3] politician, and cultural figure who contributed to establishing secondary education in Croatia.[4] Rojc attended elementary school in her home town.[2][3] She was a sickly child and did not enjoy schooling or playing with other children, but was an avid horsewoman and hunter.[5] After she had declared that she was an atheist, her father sent her to Sacré Coeur (Sacred Heart), an Ursuline monastery school in Graz.[3][6] Rojc described the period as "torment".[6] Experiencing rejection and little affection from her family, she became depressed and at fifteen was sent to the seaside town of Kraljevica to recuperate. While there she met the painter Branko Šenoa and their friendship spurred her interest in painting.[7] Her father allowed her to return to Bjelovar where she attended the Realgymnasium of Bjelovar for two years,[2][3][6] and began studying painting with Josip Hohnjec [sl]. In 1901,[3] she took painting lessons under Oton Iveković at his private school in Zagreb.[8] The following year, Rojc moved to Vienna, Austria, and enrolled at the Kunstschule für Frauen und Mädchen [de] (Art School for Women and Girls). She also began taking courses at the photography school located on Köllnerhofgasse.[9] Until 1904, she studied still life and plein-air landscape painting under Tina Blau, Ludwig Michalek, and Hans Tichy.[8]

According to Rojc, her father did not support her desire to become a painter, so her schooling was often interrupted.[10] She agreed to learn to cook provided her father paid for her art courses.[5] While she was in Vienna, her father was appointed to a government post and the family relocated to Zagreb in 1906. The move was traumatic for Rojc, as she was forced to leave behind her horses.[7] In 1907, she enrolled at the München Frauen-Akademie (Munich Women's Academy), where she studied with Adolf Höfer, Angelo Jank, and Heinrich Knirr.[2][8] Simultaneously, she took lessons at the private school run by Moritz Heymann [de], where she met Miroslav Kraljević, among other painters who were part of what was known as the Munich Circle.[8] Although she wanted to go to Paris, illness prevented her from doing so.[11] Returning to the Vienna Art School for Women, in 1908 she began to study sculpture,[3] copper engraving, and carving with Ludwig Michalek and Otto König [de].[8][12][13] To continue her chosen career as a painter, Rojc agreed to marry Šenoa in 1910,[3][Notes 1] on the condition that her father provided her with adequate living expenses and a studio.[7][15] The marriage was in name only, as Rojc was a lesbian and had relationships with artist Dora Car and opera soprano Milka Ternina.[6][15] She also studied anatomy, perspective, portraiture and composition, before completing her studies in 1911 and returning to Zagreb.[2][3][12]

Career edit

Early (1909–1923) edit

 
Dobar zaklon (Good Shelter), by Rojc

Rojc began exhibiting in 1909, entering works in the annual of the Hrvatskog društva umjetnosti (Croatian Art Society) in Zagreb, returning in both 1911 and 1913. [2][8] In 1911, she became the first woman to have a solo exhibition at the Salon Ullrich.[16] In 1912, she participated in the Yugoslav Spring Exhibit in Belgrade and the Vienna Art Salon.[2][8] In 1913, Rojc illustrated Ivana Brlić-Mažuranić's first edition of the children's novel Čudnovate zgode šegrta Hlapića (The Brave Adventures of Lapitch). She returned to the Vienna Salon that year,[2] and in 1914, organized an exhibition there focused on women's embroidered handicrafts from Petrinja and Zagreb, her own sculptures, and those of fellow sculptor Mila Wod [hr].[8][17] Her long-range goal was to create a series of exhibitions featuring works from women's folk art associations for Slavic artists in Ljubljana, Lviv, Prague, and other capitals of Eastern Europe. The outbreak of World War I halted her plans[5] and instead she began doing studio work, painting portraits and working on an unpublished autobiography Sjene, svjetlo i mrak (Shadows, Light, and Darkness, 1918–1919).[6][8] Her first commissioned portrait was of the actress Marija Ružička Strozzi in 1914.[11] Rojc participated in a group exhibition at the Strossmayer Gallery of Old Masters in 1917,[18] and held a solo exhibition in Zagreb in 1918.[13] She also hung works in 1920 and 1921 in the exhibitions of the Lada Association [sr],[8] the first artists' organization to be founded in Belgrade.[19]

 
Na cesti (On the road), painting by Rojc

At the time, Rojc focused on both male and female nudes, painting such works as Kupač s leđa u vrtu Hietzing kraj Beča (Bather from Behind in the Garden of Hietzing near Vienna, 1904–05), Molitelj i Ženski akt (Women's Act of Prayer, 1907), Klečeći ženski akt, (Act of Woman Kneeling, 1908) and portraits of friends including Tanne Hernes (1907), Zoe Borelli (1909). She painted numerous self-portraits and became interested in portraying images of the New Woman.[8] Rojc's self-portraits rejected the ideas of traditional femininity, focusing instead on androgyny.[8][15] They are characterized as having an unusual psychological depth, giving the viewer a sense of the subject's loneliness, seriousness, and secret inner life which was not open to anyone else.[20] According to scholars Vladimir Bjeličić and Dragana Stojanović, her Autoportret s kistom (Self-Portrait with a Brush, 1910),[8] is a challenge to the stereotype of "man-artist-genius", in which Rojc deliberately painted herself in a dark interior to convey her isolation, while holding the paintbrush in her left hand to confirm her non-conformity.[21] She also painted herself dressed in men's clothing,[8] in pieces like Autoportret u lovačkom odijelu (Self-Portrait in a Hunting Suit, 1912) and Ja borac – Ja (Me, the Fighter, 1914).[5][8] Her initial landscapes presented a mix of neo-romantic and Symbolist painting styles, and were primarily panoramic images of Croatia, as in Putnik (Traveler, 1911), Ljetna oluja (Summer Storm, 1913), and Obala kod Novog (Coast Near Novi, 1914). In this period, she also produced small etchings, typically focused on the theme of sorrow. These included Žena svjetionik (Lighthouse Woman, 1907), Glazba, Agonija i Ex libris Nasta Rojc – Autoakt u raljama mačke (Music, Agony and Bookplate of Nasta Rojc – Self-Actions in the Jaws of a Cat, 1908) and Zagrljaj smrti (Embrace of Death, 1912) [8]

War-time relationships edit

During World War I a group of British suffragists, led by the Scottish doctor Elsie Inglis, came to the Balkan peninsula under the auspices of the Scottish Women's Hospitals for Foreign Service.[22] As women were not allowed to serve as military personnel and were restricted to specialties in women and children's health, Inglis organized the Scottish Women's Hospitals to allow women to serve as ambulance drivers, cooks, doctors, nurses, and paramedics at the front.[23][24] Turned down by the War Office, Inglis negotiated with allied governments and was allowed to establish hospitals, initially in France and in the Kingdom of Serbia.[25] The first unit arrived in Serbia in December 1914 and by the spring of 1915, Evelina Haverfield was appointed as administrator of the unit. In turn, Haverfield brought her partner Vera Holme to organize the ambulance and transport services, overseeing both horses and motorized vehicles. Holme had been involved in theater before the war and was the chauffeur of Emmeline Pankhurst. She and Haverfield had a network of lesbian friends in the Scottish Women's Hospitals service.[24]

 
Rojc painting in her studio circa 1925, photo by Onslow

When they were not working, the personnel organized sing-alongs, guessing games, and theatrical performances.[26] When the Germany Army invaded Serbia, the Scottish Women's Hospital was forced to evacuate, but in 1916 and 1917, another unit operated in Dobrudja, Romania, where Alexandrina Onslow [wikidata] was stationed,[27][28][Notes 2] after her previous service in Belgium and France.[30][31][Notes 3] At the end of the war, Haverfield and Holme returned to Serbia and established an orphanage at Bajina Bašta. Inglis had died in 1917 and Haverfield died three years later. Onslow became the president of the Haverfield Fund for Serbian Children and joined Holme at Bajina Bašta through 1922.[27][28] As they had during the war, in their off-hours the former workers of the Scottish Women's Hospitals met for social evenings and took sailing excursions in the Mediterranean Sea.[32] On one such excursion in the Adriatic Sea, which probably occurred in 1919,[Notes 4] Rojc and Onslow met.[15][33] They began living together as a couple in 1923.[35] Rojc designed and had built a house at 6 Rokov perivoj (lit.'Roko's Park'),[5] which had more studio space than living areas.[6] They lived openly as a couple there, [35] sharing the home with Rojc's husband until his death in 1939.[36][37][Notes 5] It served as her art studio and a salon, in which other artists and writers, like Brlić-Mažuranić and Marija Jurić Zagorka gathered.[35]

United Kingdom (1924–1926) edit

 
Rojc with opera singer Maja Strozzi-Pečić [hr] in London, 1926

In 1924, Rojc and Onslow moved to England, where Rojc painted depictions of the estates of Onslow's friends and landscapes in Scotland.[5][34] Many of the works from this period were painted in a post-impressionist style. Among the landscapes were Duke of Wellington Park (1924), Loch Tay (1924), and London Park (1924–25). She also painted the first ever image of a car by a Croatian painter in Naš auto u Škotskoj (Our Car in Scotland, 1924).[8] In June 1926, she exhibited at the Gieves Art Gallery. A review in The Studio called her landscapes commendable, particularly those with snow scapes, and described them as having "a delicacy of tone adjustment and a truth of effect". According to the reviewer, her portraits and figure studies were more tentative.[39] The success of the exhibition led to an invitation to exhibit the following year with the Women's International Art Club.[5][Notes 6]

Yugoslavia (1926–1940) edit

The couple returned to Zagreb at the end of 1926 and Rojc exhibited the paintings that had been successful in London in November. The reception was the opposite of her British success, with Croatian critics deriding her work.[34] She accepted the invitation to exhibit with the Women's International Art Club once they agreed to include works by Lina Virant Crnčić and Zdenka Pexidr-Srića [hr] and participated in their London annuals in 1927, 1928, and 1929.[5][40] Inspired by the London art club, Crnčić and Rojc invited fellow artists to form the Klub likovnih umjetnica (Women Artists' Club) in 1927.[16] The first association of women artists in Croatia,[5][16][34] it set out to foster all-women exhibitions, promote the development of similar clubs throughout Yugoslavia, and provide public education about art. Proceeds from the exhibitions were used for public lectures.[41]

Approved by the Yugoslav Interior Affairs Ministry in November, the club organized its first exhibition in 1928 at the Art Pavilion, Zagreb.[42] Once again Croatian critics publishing reviews in Narodne novine and other media wrote scathing and misogynistic critiques not only about the exhibits, which they qualified as outdated and not serious art, but about how the works and participants were selected.[35] Rojc wrote a reply which was published in Ženské listy (Women's Pages) countering that the exhibition was organized through a collaborative and respectful process, using a modern method instead of obsolete hierarchical structures and rules.[43] She exhibited at each of the eleven events held by the Women Artists' Club between 1928 and 1940.[8][44] Because of her openly lesbian relationship, Rojc refused to serve as president of the Women Artists' Club, fearing that it might impact the club's reputation or result in negative publicity. Instead, she served as the organization's secretary.[36]

Onslow, whose family were British peers,[45] used her influence with nobles, including Maria of Yugoslavia, to garner patrons for the club, organize international networks, and secure commissioned works for Rojc, one of which was a portrait of King Alexander I.[46] Rojc was also involved with the Little Entente of Women and helped to organize an exhibition in 1938 to show the works of Eastern European women artists in Zagreb.[47] Simultaneously with the event, a retrospective of Croatian women artists who had painted between 1800 and 1914 was set up next to the main exhibit in the Art Pavillian. Rojc was the youngest of the Croatian painters, who included Marija Strümer Bedeković and Slava Raškaj.[48] That year, the Women Artists' Club also hosted a solo exhibition of Rojc and another for the Austrian painter Trude Waehner.[49]

By the end of the 1920s, Rojc's work focused more on nationalistic expression, with landscapes depicting romantic vistas and villages. She also began painting still lifes and animal portraits. Drawing on Dadist and New Objectivity traditions, her 1928 work Naše doba (Our Age) was a social commentary on class, gender, ideology, and race.[8] That year she also made a bronze sculpture, Seljak i Seljanka (Peasant Man and Woman, 1928) and a wood carving, Vjetar (Wind, 1928). Representative of her work in this period are Zima s gavranima (Winter with Ravens, 1926), Moje ruže (My Roses, 1934), Zima u Jurjevskoj (Southern Winter, ca. 1935), Otok Prvić (Prvić Island, ca. 1935), Konj u staji (Horse in the Stable, ca. 1936), and Morski pejzaž (Seascape, 1938).[8]

Later life (1940–1964) edit

When World War II broke out, Rojc and Onslow joined the resistance movement. They were reported to the Ustaše, arrested, and sent to prison in 1943. Although afraid they would be shot, Rojc berated their guards as "cowards".[6] Both women became ill and were sent to the prison hospital. Unable to find evidence against them, the couple were released after a few months, but could not return to their home until 1945, when some of their property was returned to them.[7][50] They continued supporting the resistance and opposing the spread of fascism.[6][7] In her later life, Rojc enjoyed gardening, and in particular tended a large rose garden.[37] She continued to produce art works, such as the bronze, Šestinčani (Sestinians, 1940), and paintings, Vješanje u Dubravi (Hanging in Dubrava, ca. 1945), Portret Nadice (Portrait of Nadica, 1948), and U jeseni (In Autumn, 1949).[8] She also wrote a second autobiography, which she completed about 1949.[15] Onslow died at their home on 2 February 1950.[51][Notes 7] Elene Puškarsky served as Rojc's carer in her later years, which were overshadowed by her poverty.[6][5]

Death and legacy edit

Rojc died on her birthday in 1964 and was buried beside Onslow in a joint tomb in Mirogoj Cemetery.[5] Five years after her death, a retrospective showing of her work was presented in Bjelovar.[13] Despite her prominence and dedication to civic works, the historian Leonida Kovač stated that Rojc was forgotten and "erased from the history of modern art in Croatia".[5] After her death, Rojc's work was preserved by Puškarsky, and then protected by the collector Josip Kovačić [hr]. Along with her house and furnishings, her manuscripts were purchased by the family of the artist Davor Preis, who uses her studio, lives in the house, and cared for Puškarsky until her death.[6][37]

Almost immediately following the breakup of Yugoslavia, Rojc's writings and those of other Croatian lesbians began to be discussed by scholars, although her autobiographies have not been published.[52] In 2019, plans were underway to publish Rojc's first autobiography with the Miroslav Krleža Institute of Lexicography, when editing was completed by Ana Šeparović.[7] Her photographic albums have been preserved but are not available to the public. Her photographs document women active in the women's suffrage movement in the Balkans, Romania, and Serbia from the late Belle Époque to the interwar period. They also provide insight into women's other political activities and lesbian history in Britain and Yugoslavia in the era.[9] Similarly, her correspondence with Holme, which took place over decades, provides tangible proof of queer history in the region and has offered scholars clues to historic terminology and codes used by lesbians in their relationships.[53] Scholars Catherine Baker and Olga Dimitrijević said that analyzing the letters also has the potential to change what is known about British lesbians in the period.[54] In 2006, a postage stamp designed by Danijel Popović was released, bearing Rojc's image.[55]

Rojc's paintings, Autoportreta s lovačkom puškom (Self-Portrait with a Hunting Rifle) and Autoportreta s konjem (Self-Portrait with a Horse) are owned by the Modern Gallery, Zagreb.[6] Other works are held by the City Museum of Bjelovar, in the Josip Kovačić Collection owned by the City of Zagreb, and in the Croatian National Theater of Zagreb, as well as in the private Kovačić-Mihočinec Collection, among others.[12] A retrospective of her work was assembled in the mid-1990s by Đurđa Petravić Klaić,[6] and another at the Art Pavilion]] in 2004. Kovač published Anonimalia: normativni diskurzi i samoreprezentacija umjetnica 20. stoljeća (Anonymalia: Normative Discourses and Self-Representation of 20th Century Artists) in 2010, in which she confirmed Rojc as one of the Munich Circle, recaptured her place as an important Croatian painter, and evaluated the avant-garde elements of her works.[8]

In 2014, on the fiftieth anniversary of her death, her body of work was featured at the Art Pavilion and then toured at the Varaždin City Museum and the Dubrovnik Art Gallery. The golden jubilee featured over a hundred works painted from 1902 to 1949. Many of the predominantly oil paintings in the exhibit had been presumed lost until assembled by curator Jasminke Poklečki Stošić of the Art Pavilion.[12] Stošić worked for two years to locate pieces in private collections in Croatia and abroad, many of which had never been exhibited.[11] A smaller collection of fifty-three paintings was exhibited at the Palais Porcia, Vienna between March and April 2017 in honor of the Year of Croatian Culture and Art in Austria festivities.[12] In 2019, the Museum of Contemporary Art, Zagreb, dedicated a month-long exhibit, Nasta Rojc: Me, the Fighter, to her, which featured a biographical collage with text created by Kovač and art by Ana Mušćet. Kovač, an art historian, studied the unpublished autobiography from the end of World War I and letters written by Rojc, held in private collections, and then invited graduate student Mušćet to illustrate the text.[6] In 2020, in the first all-woman exhibition held in Croatia since its independence, her works were featured, along with those of other Croatian painters, in a two-month long show at the Art Pavillion.[50] Rojc's artistic work is now recognized for its early modernist approach. Not content to merely replicate what she saw, she produced works actively questioning and redefining socio-cultural norms.[56] She is widely acknowledged to be one of the most significant Croatian painters of the early twentieth century.[8][7]

Notes edit

  1. ^ The 2009 article on Šenoa in Allgemeines Künstlerlexikon Online gives the marriage date in 1909.[14]
  2. ^ Dimitrijević identified the location as Dobrinja, which is a neighborhood of Sarajevo in her 2014 work on Rojc.[27] Her 2017 article with Baker identifies the unit as being stationed in Dobruja, Romania.[28] Cornelis states there were a total of fourteen Scottish Women's Hospital units located in Belgium, Corsica, France, Greece, Macedonia, Malta, Russia, Romania, and Serbia.[29]
  3. ^ Onslow served as a driver with the Australian Voluntary Hospital and staff at the Belgian Field Hospital operated by the British Committee of the French Red Cross.[30][31] She was awarded the Victory Medal and British War Medal for her service.[31]
  4. ^ Josip Kovačić noted that this meeting took place in 1924;[33][34] however, Dimitrijević and Baker surmise it was earlier because of the notes in Rojc's 1918–1919 autobiography.[15]
  5. ^ Stolz states in his biography of Šenoa that Onslow and Rojc met in England in 1923 and that Rojc and Šenoa divorced in 1925, when she returned to Zagreb.[14] However, this conflicts with Dimitrijević and Baker's timeline that they met on the Adriatic in 1918-1919 and began living together in Zagreb in 1923;[38] Kovačić's and WOW Places editors' statements that they did not return from England until 1926;[34][5] and Alujević, Nekić, and Balija's reports that they did not divorce.[36][37]
  6. ^ WoW Places states the Gieves exhibit occurred in 1924,[5] but all other sources consulted give the year as 1926.[8][13][39]
  7. ^ Croatian sources routinely show Onslow died in 1949,[5][50] although a few sources show 1946.[37]

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b Rojc 2011, p. 13.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Degener 1914, p. 1397.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i Zorko 2019, p. 34.
  4. ^ Rojc 2011, p. 7.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Čajdo et al. 2021.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Terbovc 2019a.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g Terbovc 2019b.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x Croatian Encyclopedia Online 2020.
  9. ^ a b Roban 2020, p. 9.
  10. ^ Rojc 2011, p. 17.
  11. ^ a b c Vujanović 2014.
  12. ^ a b c d e HINA 2017.
  13. ^ a b c d Domljan 1995, p. 172.
  14. ^ a b Stolz 2009.
  15. ^ a b c d e f Dimitrijević & Baker 2017, p. 57.
  16. ^ a b c Alujević & Nekić 2019, p. 168.
  17. ^ Johnson 2012, p. 272.
  18. ^ Jugoslavenska akademija znanosti i umjetnosti 1917, p. 140.
  19. ^ Danas 2005.
  20. ^ Čorak 2008, p. 21.
  21. ^ Stojanović & Bjeličić 2014, p. 306.
  22. ^ Dimitrijević 2014, p. 71.
  23. ^ Morrison & Parry 2014, p. 337.
  24. ^ a b Dimitrijević 2014, p. 72.
  25. ^ Morrison & Parry 2014, pp. 337–338.
  26. ^ Dimitrijević 2014, pp. 73, 76.
  27. ^ a b c Dimitrijević 2014, p. 76.
  28. ^ a b c Dimitrijević & Baker 2017, p. 54.
  29. ^ Cornelis 2020, p. 176.
  30. ^ a b The National Archives 1914a.
  31. ^ a b c The National Archives 1914b.
  32. ^ Dimitrijević 2014, p. 77.
  33. ^ a b Dimitrijević 2014, p. 78.
  34. ^ a b c d e Kovačić 2002.
  35. ^ a b c d Dimitrijević & Baker 2017, p. 58.
  36. ^ a b c Alujević & Nekić 2019, p. 171.
  37. ^ a b c d e Balija 2016.
  38. ^ Dimitrijević & Baker 2017, pp. 57–58.
  39. ^ a b Holme 1926, p. 47.
  40. ^ Banić 2015.
  41. ^ Alujević & Nekić 2019, pp. 168–169.
  42. ^ Alujević & Nekić 2019, p. 169.
  43. ^ Dimitrijević & Baker 2017, pp. 58–59.
  44. ^ Alujević & Nekić 2019, pp. 169–170.
  45. ^ Burke 1895, p. 542.
  46. ^ Alujević & Nekić 2019, p. 170.
  47. ^ Alujević & Nekić 2019, pp. 177–178.
  48. ^ Alujević & Nekić 2019, p. 179.
  49. ^ Alujević & Nekić 2019, p. 181.
  50. ^ a b c Vodopija 2020.
  51. ^ Probate Registry 1950, p. 167.
  52. ^ Stepanović 2020, pp. 35–36.
  53. ^ Dimitrijević & Baker 2017, p. 50.
  54. ^ Dimitrijević & Baker 2017, p. 51.
  55. ^ Hrvatska pošta 2006.
  56. ^ Kolešnik 2000, p. 188.

Bibliography edit

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  • Banić, Mia Njavro (19 February 2015). "Nasta Rojc dokaz je kako se umjetnost ne smije dijeliti na mušku i žensku" [Nasta Rojc Is Proof That Art Should Not Be Divided into Male and Female]. DuList (in Croatian). Dubrovnik, Croatia. from the original on 29 November 2020. Retrieved 15 June 2023.
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nasta, rojc, november, 1883, november, 1964, croatian, painter, portrait, ludwig, grillich, before, 1926bornjerka, hermina, ljubica, rojc, 1883, november, 1883bjelovar, kingdom, croatia, slavonia, austria, hungarydied6, november, 1964, 1964, aged, zagreb, yugo. Nasta Rojc 6 November 1883 6 November 1964 was a Croatian painter Nasta RojcPortrait by Ludwig Grillich before 1926BornJerka Hermina Ljubica Rojc 1883 11 06 6 November 1883Bjelovar Kingdom of Croatia Slavonia Austria HungaryDied6 November 1964 1964 11 06 aged 81 Zagreb YugoslaviaOther namesNasta Rojc SenoaOccupationPainterYears active1909 1949Born in Bjelovar she was a sickly child and a misfit She did not enjoy school or playing with other children but liked both hunting and horse riding After she declared in her youth that she was an atheist her father had her educated in a convent school Becoming depressed she was sent to the seaside town of Kraljevica at fifteen where she met a painter Branko Senoa who inspired her to become an artist Her father objected but in exchange for her agreement to learn cooking he allowed her to attend art school She studied in Zagreb Vienna and Munich learning to paint sculpt and engrave When her father insisted she marry Rojc who was a lesbian entered a lavender marriage with Senoa after her father agreed to help her acquire a studio and assist with her living expenses From 1909 she exhibited works with the Croatian Art Society in Zagreb and was the first woman to have a solo exhibition at the Salon Ullrich She participated in numerous exhibitions in the capitals of Eastern Europe until the onset of World War I During the war she took commissions for portraits and worked on an autobiography Around the same time Rojc met a group of lesbians who had worked for the Scottish Women s Hospitals for Foreign Service during the war in Serbia and Sarajevo After the war the hospital personnel founded an orphanage in Bajina Basta One of them was a British peer Alexandrina Onslow who became Rojc s partner From 1923 they openly lived as a couple in a house Rojc had designed which was shared with her husband until his death in 1939 Between 1924 and 1926 Rojc and Onslow lived in Scotland and England where Rojc had a successful exhibition at the Gieves Art Gallery in London Returning to Zagreb at the end of 1926 her work was derided by the critics She exhibited with the Women s International Art Club in London until 1929 and was inspired to found the Klub likovnih umjetnica Women Artists Club with Lina Virant Crncic to promote the works of women artists The group held eleven exhibitions between 1928 and 1940 in which she presented works of her own When World War II broke out the couple joined the resistance movement They were reported to the Ustase arrested sent to prison for several months in 1943 and were unable to reacquire their property until after the war ended Rojc died in 1964 fourteen years after Onslow with whom she was buried Rojc and her work were largely forgotten until the breakup of Yugoslavia Almost immediately after Croatian independence a retrospective of her work was presented and scholars began evaluating Rojc s two autobiographies her correspondence within her international lesbian network and her photographic archive It is rare that queer history in the region has had tangible documentation and the records that she left are seen as significant for both British and Yugoslavian lesbian history Her paintings are held in many public and private collections including the Modern Gallery Zagreb the City Museum of Bjelovar the Josip Kovacic Collection owned by the City of Zagreb as well as the Croatian National Theater In 2006 Rojc s likeness was featured on a postage stamp Historian Leonida Kovac published a book analyzing Rojc s legacy in 2010 recognizing that it was innovative and pushed the boundaries of socio cultural norms Numerous retrospective exhibitions of her work have been held throughout Croatia in 2017 fifty three of her paintings were exhibited at the Palais Porcia Vienna Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 2 1 Early 1909 1923 2 2 War time relationships 2 3 United Kingdom 1924 1926 2 4 Yugoslavia 1926 1940 2 5 Later life 1940 1964 3 Death and legacy 4 Notes 5 References 5 1 Citations 5 2 BibliographyEarly life and education editJerka Hermina Ljubica Rojc known as Nasta was born on 6 November 1883 in Bjelovar Kingdom of Croatia Slavonia Austria Hungary to Slava nee Blazic and Milan Rojc hr 1 2 3 Her siblings included Slavica Ljerka Slava Vjera Milan and Vladimir although both Slavica and Ljerka died as young children and were buried at the St Andrew Cemetery of Bjelovar 1 Milan was a prominent lawyer 3 politician and cultural figure who contributed to establishing secondary education in Croatia 4 Rojc attended elementary school in her home town 2 3 She was a sickly child and did not enjoy schooling or playing with other children but was an avid horsewoman and hunter 5 After she had declared that she was an atheist her father sent her to Sacre Coeur Sacred Heart an Ursuline monastery school in Graz 3 6 Rojc described the period as torment 6 Experiencing rejection and little affection from her family she became depressed and at fifteen was sent to the seaside town of Kraljevica to recuperate While there she met the painter Branko Senoa and their friendship spurred her interest in painting 7 Her father allowed her to return to Bjelovar where she attended the Realgymnasium of Bjelovar for two years 2 3 6 and began studying painting with Josip Hohnjec sl In 1901 3 she took painting lessons under Oton Ivekovic at his private school in Zagreb 8 The following year Rojc moved to Vienna Austria and enrolled at the Kunstschule fur Frauen und Madchen de Art School for Women and Girls She also began taking courses at the photography school located on Kollnerhofgasse 9 Until 1904 she studied still life and plein air landscape painting under Tina Blau Ludwig Michalek and Hans Tichy 8 According to Rojc her father did not support her desire to become a painter so her schooling was often interrupted 10 She agreed to learn to cook provided her father paid for her art courses 5 While she was in Vienna her father was appointed to a government post and the family relocated to Zagreb in 1906 The move was traumatic for Rojc as she was forced to leave behind her horses 7 In 1907 she enrolled at the Munchen Frauen Akademie Munich Women s Academy where she studied with Adolf Hofer Angelo Jank and Heinrich Knirr 2 8 Simultaneously she took lessons at the private school run by Moritz Heymann de where she met Miroslav Kraljevic among other painters who were part of what was known as the Munich Circle 8 Although she wanted to go to Paris illness prevented her from doing so 11 Returning to the Vienna Art School for Women in 1908 she began to study sculpture 3 copper engraving and carving with Ludwig Michalek and Otto Konig de 8 12 13 To continue her chosen career as a painter Rojc agreed to marry Senoa in 1910 3 Notes 1 on the condition that her father provided her with adequate living expenses and a studio 7 15 The marriage was in name only as Rojc was a lesbian and had relationships with artist Dora Car and opera soprano Milka Ternina 6 15 She also studied anatomy perspective portraiture and composition before completing her studies in 1911 and returning to Zagreb 2 3 12 Career editEarly 1909 1923 edit nbsp Dobar zaklon Good Shelter by RojcRojc began exhibiting in 1909 entering works in the annual of the Hrvatskog drustva umjetnosti Croatian Art Society in Zagreb returning in both 1911 and 1913 2 8 In 1911 she became the first woman to have a solo exhibition at the Salon Ullrich 16 In 1912 she participated in the Yugoslav Spring Exhibit in Belgrade and the Vienna Art Salon 2 8 In 1913 Rojc illustrated Ivana Brlic Mazuranic s first edition of the children s novel Cudnovate zgode segrta Hlapica The Brave Adventures of Lapitch She returned to the Vienna Salon that year 2 and in 1914 organized an exhibition there focused on women s embroidered handicrafts from Petrinja and Zagreb her own sculptures and those of fellow sculptor Mila Wod hr 8 17 Her long range goal was to create a series of exhibitions featuring works from women s folk art associations for Slavic artists in Ljubljana Lviv Prague and other capitals of Eastern Europe The outbreak of World War I halted her plans 5 and instead she began doing studio work painting portraits and working on an unpublished autobiography Sjene svjetlo i mrak Shadows Light and Darkness 1918 1919 6 8 Her first commissioned portrait was of the actress Marija Ruzicka Strozzi in 1914 11 Rojc participated in a group exhibition at the Strossmayer Gallery of Old Masters in 1917 18 and held a solo exhibition in Zagreb in 1918 13 She also hung works in 1920 and 1921 in the exhibitions of the Lada Association sr 8 the first artists organization to be founded in Belgrade 19 nbsp Na cesti On the road painting by RojcAt the time Rojc focused on both male and female nudes painting such works as Kupac s leđa u vrtu Hietzing kraj Beca Bather from Behind in the Garden of Hietzing near Vienna 1904 05 Molitelj i Zenski akt Women s Act of Prayer 1907 Klececi zenski akt Act of Woman Kneeling 1908 and portraits of friends including Tanne Hernes 1907 Zoe Borelli 1909 She painted numerous self portraits and became interested in portraying images of the New Woman 8 Rojc s self portraits rejected the ideas of traditional femininity focusing instead on androgyny 8 15 They are characterized as having an unusual psychological depth giving the viewer a sense of the subject s loneliness seriousness and secret inner life which was not open to anyone else 20 According to scholars Vladimir Bjelicic and Dragana Stojanovic her Autoportret s kistom Self Portrait with a Brush 1910 8 is a challenge to the stereotype of man artist genius in which Rojc deliberately painted herself in a dark interior to convey her isolation while holding the paintbrush in her left hand to confirm her non conformity 21 She also painted herself dressed in men s clothing 8 in pieces like Autoportret u lovackom odijelu Self Portrait in a Hunting Suit 1912 and Ja borac Ja Me the Fighter 1914 5 8 Her initial landscapes presented a mix of neo romantic and Symbolist painting styles and were primarily panoramic images of Croatia as in Putnik Traveler 1911 Ljetna oluja Summer Storm 1913 and Obala kod Novog Coast Near Novi 1914 In this period she also produced small etchings typically focused on the theme of sorrow These included Zena svjetionik Lighthouse Woman 1907 Glazba Agonija i Ex libris Nasta Rojc Autoakt u raljama macke Music Agony and Bookplate of Nasta Rojc Self Actions in the Jaws of a Cat 1908 and Zagrljaj smrti Embrace of Death 1912 8 War time relationships edit During World War I a group of British suffragists led by the Scottish doctor Elsie Inglis came to the Balkan peninsula under the auspices of the Scottish Women s Hospitals for Foreign Service 22 As women were not allowed to serve as military personnel and were restricted to specialties in women and children s health Inglis organized the Scottish Women s Hospitals to allow women to serve as ambulance drivers cooks doctors nurses and paramedics at the front 23 24 Turned down by the War Office Inglis negotiated with allied governments and was allowed to establish hospitals initially in France and in the Kingdom of Serbia 25 The first unit arrived in Serbia in December 1914 and by the spring of 1915 Evelina Haverfield was appointed as administrator of the unit In turn Haverfield brought her partner Vera Holme to organize the ambulance and transport services overseeing both horses and motorized vehicles Holme had been involved in theater before the war and was the chauffeur of Emmeline Pankhurst She and Haverfield had a network of lesbian friends in the Scottish Women s Hospitals service 24 nbsp Rojc painting in her studio circa 1925 photo by OnslowWhen they were not working the personnel organized sing alongs guessing games and theatrical performances 26 When the Germany Army invaded Serbia the Scottish Women s Hospital was forced to evacuate but in 1916 and 1917 another unit operated in Dobrudja Romania where Alexandrina Onslow wikidata was stationed 27 28 Notes 2 after her previous service in Belgium and France 30 31 Notes 3 At the end of the war Haverfield and Holme returned to Serbia and established an orphanage at Bajina Basta Inglis had died in 1917 and Haverfield died three years later Onslow became the president of the Haverfield Fund for Serbian Children and joined Holme at Bajina Basta through 1922 27 28 As they had during the war in their off hours the former workers of the Scottish Women s Hospitals met for social evenings and took sailing excursions in the Mediterranean Sea 32 On one such excursion in the Adriatic Sea which probably occurred in 1919 Notes 4 Rojc and Onslow met 15 33 They began living together as a couple in 1923 35 Rojc designed and had built a house at 6 Rokov perivoj lit Roko s Park 5 which had more studio space than living areas 6 They lived openly as a couple there 35 sharing the home with Rojc s husband until his death in 1939 36 37 Notes 5 It served as her art studio and a salon in which other artists and writers like Brlic Mazuranic and Marija Juric Zagorka gathered 35 United Kingdom 1924 1926 edit nbsp Rojc with opera singer Maja Strozzi Pecic hr in London 1926In 1924 Rojc and Onslow moved to England where Rojc painted depictions of the estates of Onslow s friends and landscapes in Scotland 5 34 Many of the works from this period were painted in a post impressionist style Among the landscapes were Duke of Wellington Park 1924 Loch Tay 1924 and London Park 1924 25 She also painted the first ever image of a car by a Croatian painter in Nas auto u Skotskoj Our Car in Scotland 1924 8 In June 1926 she exhibited at the Gieves Art Gallery A review in The Studio called her landscapes commendable particularly those with snow scapes and described them as having a delicacy of tone adjustment and a truth of effect According to the reviewer her portraits and figure studies were more tentative 39 The success of the exhibition led to an invitation to exhibit the following year with the Women s International Art Club 5 Notes 6 Yugoslavia 1926 1940 edit The couple returned to Zagreb at the end of 1926 and Rojc exhibited the paintings that had been successful in London in November The reception was the opposite of her British success with Croatian critics deriding her work 34 She accepted the invitation to exhibit with the Women s International Art Club once they agreed to include works by Lina Virant Crncic and Zdenka Pexidr Srica hr and participated in their London annuals in 1927 1928 and 1929 5 40 Inspired by the London art club Crncic and Rojc invited fellow artists to form the Klub likovnih umjetnica Women Artists Club in 1927 16 The first association of women artists in Croatia 5 16 34 it set out to foster all women exhibitions promote the development of similar clubs throughout Yugoslavia and provide public education about art Proceeds from the exhibitions were used for public lectures 41 Approved by the Yugoslav Interior Affairs Ministry in November the club organized its first exhibition in 1928 at the Art Pavilion Zagreb 42 Once again Croatian critics publishing reviews in Narodne novine and other media wrote scathing and misogynistic critiques not only about the exhibits which they qualified as outdated and not serious art but about how the works and participants were selected 35 Rojc wrote a reply which was published in Zenske listy Women s Pages countering that the exhibition was organized through a collaborative and respectful process using a modern method instead of obsolete hierarchical structures and rules 43 She exhibited at each of the eleven events held by the Women Artists Club between 1928 and 1940 8 44 Because of her openly lesbian relationship Rojc refused to serve as president of the Women Artists Club fearing that it might impact the club s reputation or result in negative publicity Instead she served as the organization s secretary 36 Onslow whose family were British peers 45 used her influence with nobles including Maria of Yugoslavia to garner patrons for the club organize international networks and secure commissioned works for Rojc one of which was a portrait of King Alexander I 46 Rojc was also involved with the Little Entente of Women and helped to organize an exhibition in 1938 to show the works of Eastern European women artists in Zagreb 47 Simultaneously with the event a retrospective of Croatian women artists who had painted between 1800 and 1914 was set up next to the main exhibit in the Art Pavillian Rojc was the youngest of the Croatian painters who included Marija Strumer Bedekovic and Slava Raskaj 48 That year the Women Artists Club also hosted a solo exhibition of Rojc and another for the Austrian painter Trude Waehner 49 By the end of the 1920s Rojc s work focused more on nationalistic expression with landscapes depicting romantic vistas and villages She also began painting still lifes and animal portraits Drawing on Dadist and New Objectivity traditions her 1928 work Nase doba Our Age was a social commentary on class gender ideology and race 8 That year she also made a bronze sculpture Seljak i Seljanka Peasant Man and Woman 1928 and a wood carving Vjetar Wind 1928 Representative of her work in this period are Zima s gavranima Winter with Ravens 1926 Moje ruze My Roses 1934 Zima u Jurjevskoj Southern Winter ca 1935 Otok Prvic Prvic Island ca 1935 Konj u staji Horse in the Stable ca 1936 and Morski pejzaz Seascape 1938 8 Later life 1940 1964 edit When World War II broke out Rojc and Onslow joined the resistance movement They were reported to the Ustase arrested and sent to prison in 1943 Although afraid they would be shot Rojc berated their guards as cowards 6 Both women became ill and were sent to the prison hospital Unable to find evidence against them the couple were released after a few months but could not return to their home until 1945 when some of their property was returned to them 7 50 They continued supporting the resistance and opposing the spread of fascism 6 7 In her later life Rojc enjoyed gardening and in particular tended a large rose garden 37 She continued to produce art works such as the bronze Sestincani Sestinians 1940 and paintings Vjesanje u Dubravi Hanging in Dubrava ca 1945 Portret Nadice Portrait of Nadica 1948 and U jeseni In Autumn 1949 8 She also wrote a second autobiography which she completed about 1949 15 Onslow died at their home on 2 February 1950 51 Notes 7 Elene Puskarsky served as Rojc s carer in her later years which were overshadowed by her poverty 6 5 Death and legacy editRojc died on her birthday in 1964 and was buried beside Onslow in a joint tomb in Mirogoj Cemetery 5 Five years after her death a retrospective showing of her work was presented in Bjelovar 13 Despite her prominence and dedication to civic works the historian Leonida Kovac stated that Rojc was forgotten and erased from the history of modern art in Croatia 5 After her death Rojc s work was preserved by Puskarsky and then protected by the collector Josip Kovacic hr Along with her house and furnishings her manuscripts were purchased by the family of the artist Davor Preis who uses her studio lives in the house and cared for Puskarsky until her death 6 37 Almost immediately following the breakup of Yugoslavia Rojc s writings and those of other Croatian lesbians began to be discussed by scholars although her autobiographies have not been published 52 In 2019 plans were underway to publish Rojc s first autobiography with the Miroslav Krleza Institute of Lexicography when editing was completed by Ana Separovic 7 Her photographic albums have been preserved but are not available to the public Her photographs document women active in the women s suffrage movement in the Balkans Romania and Serbia from the late Belle Epoque to the interwar period They also provide insight into women s other political activities and lesbian history in Britain and Yugoslavia in the era 9 Similarly her correspondence with Holme which took place over decades provides tangible proof of queer history in the region and has offered scholars clues to historic terminology and codes used by lesbians in their relationships 53 Scholars Catherine Baker and Olga Dimitrijevic said that analyzing the letters also has the potential to change what is known about British lesbians in the period 54 In 2006 a postage stamp designed by Danijel Popovic was released bearing Rojc s image 55 Rojc s paintings Autoportreta s lovackom puskom Self Portrait with a Hunting Rifle and Autoportreta s konjem Self Portrait with a Horse are owned by the Modern Gallery Zagreb 6 Other works are held by the City Museum of Bjelovar in the Josip Kovacic Collection owned by the City of Zagreb and in the Croatian National Theater of Zagreb as well as in the private Kovacic Mihocinec Collection among others 12 A retrospective of her work was assembled in the mid 1990s by Đurđa Petravic Klaic 6 and another at the Art Pavilion in 2004 Kovac published Anonimalia normativni diskurzi i samoreprezentacija umjetnica 20 stoljeca Anonymalia Normative Discourses and Self Representation of 20th Century Artists in 2010 in which she confirmed Rojc as one of the Munich Circle recaptured her place as an important Croatian painter and evaluated the avant garde elements of her works 8 In 2014 on the fiftieth anniversary of her death her body of work was featured at the Art Pavilion and then toured at the Varazdin City Museum and the Dubrovnik Art Gallery The golden jubilee featured over a hundred works painted from 1902 to 1949 Many of the predominantly oil paintings in the exhibit had been presumed lost until assembled by curator Jasminke Poklecki Stosic of the Art Pavilion 12 Stosic worked for two years to locate pieces in private collections in Croatia and abroad many of which had never been exhibited 11 A smaller collection of fifty three paintings was exhibited at the Palais Porcia Vienna between March and April 2017 in honor of the Year of Croatian Culture and Art in Austria festivities 12 In 2019 the Museum of Contemporary Art Zagreb dedicated a month long exhibit Nasta Rojc Me the Fighter to her which featured a biographical collage with text created by Kovac and art by Ana Muscet Kovac an art historian studied the unpublished autobiography from the end of World War I and letters written by Rojc held in private collections and then invited graduate student Muscet to illustrate the text 6 In 2020 in the first all woman exhibition held in Croatia since its independence her works were featured along with those of other Croatian painters in a two month long show at the Art Pavillion 50 Rojc s artistic work is now recognized for its early modernist approach Not content to merely replicate what she saw she produced works actively questioning and redefining socio cultural norms 56 She is widely acknowledged to be one of the most significant Croatian painters of the early twentieth century 8 7 Notes edit The 2009 article on Senoa in Allgemeines Kunstlerlexikon Online gives the marriage date in 1909 14 Dimitrijevic identified the location as Dobrinja which is a neighborhood of Sarajevo in her 2014 work on Rojc 27 Her 2017 article with Baker identifies the unit as being stationed in Dobruja Romania 28 Cornelis states there were a total of fourteen Scottish Women s Hospital units located in Belgium Corsica France Greece Macedonia Malta Russia Romania and Serbia 29 Onslow served as a driver with the Australian Voluntary Hospital and staff at the Belgian Field Hospital operated by the British Committee of the French Red Cross 30 31 She was awarded the Victory Medal and British War Medal for her service 31 Josip Kovacic noted that this meeting took place in 1924 33 34 however Dimitrijevic and Baker surmise it was earlier because of the notes in Rojc s 1918 1919 autobiography 15 Stolz states in his biography of Senoa that Onslow and Rojc met in England in 1923 and that Rojc and Senoa divorced in 1925 when she returned to Zagreb 14 However this conflicts with Dimitrijevic and Baker s timeline that they met on the Adriatic in 1918 1919 and began living together in Zagreb in 1923 38 Kovacic s and WOW Places editors statements that they did not return from England until 1926 34 5 and Alujevic Nekic and Balija s reports that they did not divorce 36 37 WoW Places states the Gieves exhibit occurred in 1924 5 but all other sources consulted give the year as 1926 8 13 39 Croatian sources routinely show Onslow died in 1949 5 50 although a few sources show 1946 37 References editCitations edit a b Rojc 2011 p 13 a b c d e f g h Degener 1914 p 1397 a b c d e f g h i Zorko 2019 p 34 Rojc 2011 p 7 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Cajdo et al 2021 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Terbovc 2019a a b c d e f g Terbovc 2019b a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x Croatian Encyclopedia Online 2020 a b Roban 2020 p 9 Rojc 2011 p 17 a b c Vujanovic 2014 a b c d e HINA 2017 a b c d Domljan 1995 p 172 a b Stolz 2009 a b c d e f Dimitrijevic amp Baker 2017 p 57 a b c Alujevic amp Nekic 2019 p 168 Johnson 2012 p 272 Jugoslavenska akademija znanosti i umjetnosti 1917 p 140 Danas 2005 Corak 2008 p 21 Stojanovic amp Bjelicic 2014 p 306 Dimitrijevic 2014 p 71 Morrison amp Parry 2014 p 337 a b Dimitrijevic 2014 p 72 Morrison amp Parry 2014 pp 337 338 Dimitrijevic 2014 pp 73 76 a b c Dimitrijevic 2014 p 76 a b c Dimitrijevic amp Baker 2017 p 54 Cornelis 2020 p 176 a b The National Archives 1914a a b c The National Archives 1914b Dimitrijevic 2014 p 77 a b Dimitrijevic 2014 p 78 a b c d e Kovacic 2002 a b c d Dimitrijevic amp Baker 2017 p 58 a b c Alujevic amp Nekic 2019 p 171 a b c d e Balija 2016 Dimitrijevic amp Baker 2017 pp 57 58 a b Holme 1926 p 47 Banic 2015 Alujevic amp Nekic 2019 pp 168 169 Alujevic amp Nekic 2019 p 169 Dimitrijevic amp Baker 2017 pp 58 59 Alujevic amp Nekic 2019 pp 169 170 Burke 1895 p 542 Alujevic amp Nekic 2019 p 170 Alujevic amp Nekic 2019 pp 177 178 Alujevic amp Nekic 2019 p 179 Alujevic amp Nekic 2019 p 181 a b c Vodopija 2020 Probate Registry 1950 p 167 Stepanovic 2020 pp 35 36 Dimitrijevic amp Baker 2017 p 50 Dimitrijevic amp Baker 2017 p 51 Hrvatska posta 2006 Kolesnik 2000 p 188 Bibliography edit Alujevic Darija Nekic Dunja Spring 2019 Women s Art Club and Women s Group Exhibitions in Zagreb from 1928 until 1940 Artl s Bulletin Paris France Ecole normale superieure 8 1 166 182 ISSN 2264 2668 OCLC 8521423928 Archived from the original on 27 July 2020 Retrieved 15 June 2023 Balija Petra 2 May 2016 Cuvamo rukopis Naste Rojc koji otkriva sve njezine intimne tajne We Keep Nasta Rojc s Manuscript That Reveals All Her Intimate Secrets Vecernji list in Croatian Zagreb Croatia Archived from the original on 21 September 2021 Retrieved 16 June 2023 Banic Mia Njavro 19 February 2015 Nasta Rojc dokaz je kako se umjetnost ne smije dijeliti na musku i zensku Nasta Rojc Is Proof That Art Should Not Be Divided into Male and Female DuList in Croatian Dubrovnik Croatia Archived from the original on 29 November 2020 Retrieved 15 June 2023 Burke Bernard 1895 Burke Ashworth Peter ed A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Colonial Gentry Vol II London UK Harrison and Sons OCLC 180529779 Cajdo Marino Đurđevic Nina Gudovic Tara Ivanov Gabrijela Vuckovic Zeljka Zlatovic Natasa 2021 Bertek Tihana ed Nasta Rojc WoW Places Translated by Marcetic Marija Sarnavka Nikola Zadravec Toni Zagreb Croatia Expanse of Gender and Media Culture Common Zone Archived from the original on 31 January 2023 Retrieved 14 June 2023 Corak Zeljka 2008 Nasta Rojc jedna nova slika sebe Nasta Rojc A New Self Portrait Kvartal in Croatian Zagreb Croatia Institute of Art History 5 4 20 21 ISSN 1334 8671 OCLC 1363315780 Retrieved 9 June 2023 Cornelis Marlene E 2020 The Scottish Women s Hospitals the first World War and the careers of early medical women Medicine Conflict and Survival London UK Routledge 36 2 174 194 doi 10 1080 13623699 2020 1748320 ISSN 1362 3699 OCLC 8570500946 PMID 32249598 S2CID 214811345 Retrieved 22 June 2023 Degener Herrmann A L 1914 Rojc Nasta Frau Malerin Rojc Nasta Wife Painter Wer ist s Who Is Who in German VII ed Leipzig Germany Verlag H A Ludwig Degener p 1397 OCLC 465569169 Dimitrijevic Olga Baker Catherine 2017 2 British Yugoslav Lesbian Networks During and After the Great War In Baker Catherine ed Gender in Twentieth Century Eastern Europe and the USSR London UK Palgrave Macmillan pp 49 63 ISBN 978 1 137 52803 2 Dimitrijevic Olga 2014 Neocekivani savezi Britanske lezbejke u srbiji i prvi svetski rat Unexpected Alliances British Lesbians in Serbia and World War I In Blagojevic Jelisaveta Dimitrijevic Olga eds Među nama Neispricane price gej i lezbejskih zivota Between Us Untold Stories of Gay and Lesbian Lives PDF in Serbian Belgrade Serbia Hartefakt Fond pp 68 83 ISBN 978 86 914281 4 3 Archived PDF from the original on 29 March 2023 Domljan Zarko 1995 Rojc Nasta Enciklopedija Hrvatske Umjetnosti Encyclopedia of Croatian Art in Croatian Vol 2 Novi Z Zagreb Croatia Miroslav Krleza Institute of Lexicography p 172 ISBN 978 953 6036 48 6 Holme Geoffrey ed July 1926 London The Studio London UK The Studio Ltd XCII 400 37 48 ISSN 0963 5092 Retrieved 15 June 2023 Johnson Julie 2012 The Memory Factory The Forgotten Women Artists of Vienna 1900 West Lafayette Indiana Purdue University Press ISBN 978 1 55753 613 6 Jugoslavenska akademija znanosti i umjetnosti 1917 Akademijska galerija Strossmayerova Strossmayer s Academic Gallery in Croatian 5 ed Zagreb Yugoslavia Tisak Nadbiskupske Tiskare OCLC 65983276 Kolesnik Ljiljana 2000 Autoportreti Naste Rojc stvaranje predodzbe naglasenog rodnog identiteta u hrvatskoj umjetnosti ranog modernizma Self Portrait of Nasta Rojc Creating the Notion of an Emphasized Gender Identity in Croatian Art of Early Modernism Radovi Instituta Za Povijest Umjetnosti in Croatian Zagreb Croatia Institute of Art History 24 187 204 ISSN 0350 3437 OCLC 1362565112 Archived from the original on 20 June 2022 Retrieved 17 June 2023 Kovacic Josip 2002 Nasta Rojc Croatian Women Painters Born in the 19th Century Zagreb Croatia Muzejski dokumentacijski centar Archived from the original on 20 April 2023 Retrieved 14 June 2023 Morrison Elaine Parry C 2014 The Scottish Women s Hospitals for Foreign Service the Girton and Newnham Unit 1915 1918 PDF Journal of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh Edinburgh Scotland Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh 44 4 337 343 doi 10 4997 JRCPE 2014 419 ISSN 1478 2715 OCLC 5712669011 PMID 25516907 Retrieved 14 June 2023 Roban Sandra Krizic March 2020 Minor Photography Women Photographers in Yugoslavia Pre and Post WWII Photography and Culture London UK Routledge 13 3 4 299 321 doi 10 1080 17514517 2020 1769446 ISSN 1751 4517 OCLC 8842666770 S2CID 225695733 Retrieved 10 June 2023 via Taylor amp Francis subscription required Rojc Milan 2011 Karaula Zeljko ed Oko mene Milan Rojc i Bjelovar 1876 1906 Around Me Milan Rojc and Bjelovar 1876 1906 in Croatian Bjelovar Croatia Faculty of Medicine University of Zagreb ISBN 978 953 97958 3 0 Stepanovic Natalija Iva 2020 Anakronizam hrvatske lezbijske knjizevnosti Anachronism of Croatian Lesbian Literature PDF Genero in Croatian Belgrade Serbia Center for Women s Studies 24 25 52 doi 10 5937 genero2024025S ISSN 1451 2203 OCLC 8861430115 S2CID 234907651 Retrieved 15 June 2023 Stojanovic Dragana Bjelicic Vladimir 2014 Mapiranje kvir identiteta i motiva u modernoj istoriji umetnosti u Srbiji I Hrvatskoj Mapping Queer Identity and Motifs in Modern Art History in Serbia and Croatia In Blagojevic Jelisaveta Dimitrijevic Olga eds Među nama Neispricane price gej i lezbejskih zivota Between Us Untold Stories of Gay and Lesbian Lives PDF in Serbian Belgrade Serbia Hartefakt Fond pp 296 309 ISBN 978 86 914281 4 3 Archived PDF from the original on 29 March 2023 Stolz Steffen 2009 Senoa Branko In Beyer Andreas Savoy Benedicte Tegethof Wolf eds Allgemeines Kunstlerlexikon Internationale Kunstlerdatenbank in German Munich Germany K G Saur Verlag doi 10 1515 AKL ISBN 978 3 598 22740 0 Terbovc Patricia Kis 6 February 2019a Izdanje Muzeja Suvremene Umjetnosti Strip o slavnoj slikarici Nasti Rojc Edition of the Museum of Contemporary Art Strips about the Famous Painter Nasta Rojc Jutarnji list in Croatian Zagreb Croatia Archived from the original on 17 September 2020 Retrieved 14 June 2023 Terbovc Patricia Kis 24 March 2019b Ljubavi Naste Rojc Love of Nasta Rojc Jutarnji list in Croatian Zagreb Croatia Archived from the original on 25 October 2021 Retrieved 16 June 2023 Vodopija Mia 16 February 2020 Sa stavom With Attitude Libela in Croatian No 525 Zagreb Croatia Centar za edukaciju savjetovanje i istrazivanje ISSN 1848 5898 Archived from the original on 6 February 2023 Retrieved 16 June 2023 Vujanovic Barbara 17 April 2014 Nasta Rojc Kriticka retrospektiva Umjetnicki paviljon Zagreb travanj lipanj Snazna licnost hrvatskoga slikarstva Nasta Rojc Critical Retrospective Art Pavilion Zagreb April June A Strong Personality of Croatian Painting Vijenac in Croatian No 525 Zagreb Croatia Matica hrvatska ISSN 1330 2787 Archived from the original on 16 June 2023 Retrieved 16 June 2023 Zorko Katarina 2019 Zene slikarice u Hrvatskoj na prijelazu 19 i 20 stoljeca Women Painters in Croatia at the Turn of the 19th and 20th Centuries Diplomski rad in Croatian Rijeka Croatia University of Rijeka Retrieved 9 June 2023 Hommage Izlozba Naste Rojc u Becu Hommage Exhibition Nasta Rojc in Vienna Jutarnji list in Croatian Zagreb Croatia HINA 24 March 2017 Archived from the original on 14 June 2023 Retrieved 14 June 2023 Izlozba drustva umetnika lada Exhibition of the Artists of Lada Danas in Serbian Belgrade Serbia 27 September 2005 Archived from the original on 27 July 2008 Retrieved 16 June 2023 Medal card of Onslow Alexandrina Corps Australian Volunteer Hospital Women s Services Distinguished Conduct Medals and Military Medals London UK The National Archives 1914 WO 372 23 31514 Archived from the original on 16 June 2023 Retrieved 16 June 2023 National Probate Calendar England and Wales Index of Wills and Administrations Ancestry com London UK The National Archives 1950 p 167 Retrieved 16 June 2023 Onslow Alexandrina Maria of 6 Rokov Perijov Zagreb Yugoslavia spinster died 2 February 1950 Probate Winchester 30 May to Cicely Frederica Page Jeffrey married woman and Arthur Prescott Barker solicitor Effects 7590 13s 9d subscription required Number 616 Croatian Modern Painting Nasta Rojc 1883 1964 Hrvatska posta Zagreb Croatia Republic of Croatia 2006 Archived from the original on 1 January 2018 Retrieved 14 June 2023 Rojc Nasta Croatian Encyclopedia Online Zagreb Croatia Miroslav Krleza Institute of Lexicography 2020 Archived from the original on 21 April 2023 Retrieved 10 June 2023 Roll Belgian Field Hospital Onslow Alexandrina Ancestry com London UK The National Archives 1914 p 568 Retrieved 16 June 2023 subscription required Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nasta Rojc amp oldid 1183893824, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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