Nadeà ¾da Petrovià(; 11/12 October 1873 â 3 April 1915) was a Serbian painter and one of the women war photography pioneers in the region. Considered Serbia's most famous expressionist and fauvist, she was the most important Serbian female painter of the period. Born in the town of ÃÂaÃÂak, Petroviàmoved to Belgrade in her youth and attended the women's school of higher education there. Graduating in 1891, she taught there for a period beginning in 1893 before moving to Munich to study with Slovenian artist Anton Aà ¾be. Between 1901 and 1912, she exhibited her work in many cities throughout Europe.
In the later years of her life, PetroviÃÂ had little time to paint and produced only a few works. In 1912, she volunteered to become a nurse following the outbreak of the Balkan Wars. She continued nursing Serbian soldiers until 1913, when she contracted typhus and cholera. She earned a Medal for Bravery and an Order of the Red Cross for her efforts. With the outbreak of World War I she again volunteered to become a nurse with the Serbian Army, eventually dying of typhus on 3 April 1915.
Her works include almost three hundred oils on canvas, about a hundred sketches, studies and sketches, as well as several watercolors. Her works belong to the currents of secession, symbolism, impressionism and fauvism.
Nadeà ¾da Petroviàwas born in ÃÂaÃÂak, Principality of Serbia on 11 or 12 October 1873 to Dimitrije and Mileva PetroviÃÂ. She had nine siblings, including Rastko Petroviàthe writer and diplomat. Her mother Mileva was a school teacher and a relative of prominent Serbian politician Svetozar MiletiÃÂ. Her father taught art and literature and was fond of collecting artworks and later went on to work as a tax collector and write about painting. He fell ill in the late 1870s, forcing the family to move to the town of Karanovac (modern-day Kraljevo) before their eventual relocation to Belgrade in 1884. The home in which they lived was later destroyed by the Luftwaffe during World War II. Showing signs of being a talented artist, Petroviàwas later mentored by ÃÂorÃÂe Krstiàand attended the women's school of higher education, from where she graduated in 1891.
In 1893, she became an art teacher at the school and later taught at the women's university in Belgrade. Afterwards, she obtained a stipend from the Serbian Ministry of Education to study art in the private school of Anton Aà ¾be in Munich. Here, she met painters Rihard JakopiÃÂ, Ivan Grohar, Matija Jama, Milan MilovanoviÃÂ, Kosta MiliÃÂeviÃÂ, and Borivoje StevanoviÃÂ. She also encountered modern art pioneers such as Wassily Kandinsky, Alexej von Jawlensky, Julius Exter, and Paul Klee, and was deeply moved by their work. While in Munich, she regularly sent letters to her parents in Serbia and always asked for them to send her newspapers and books detailing the latest happenings in the country. Her dedication to her artwork took a toll on her personal life, and in 1898 she called off her engagement to a civil servant after the man's mother sought an unacceptably high dowry. Petroviàreturned to Serbia in 1900 and regularly visited museums and galleries, attended concerts and theatre productions. She also dedicated much of her time to learning foreign languages. Her first individual exhibit took place in Belgrade that same year. She also helped organize the First Yugoslav Art Exhibit, and the First Yugoslav Art Colony. In 1902, Petroviàbegan teaching at the women's school of higher education. The following year she co-founded of the Circle of Serbian Sisters, a humanitarian organization dedicated to helping ethnic Serbs in Ottoman-controlled Kosovo and Macedonia. In 1904 Petroviàretreated to her family home Resnik, where she focused on her paintings. One of her most famous works, Resnik, was completed during her stay here. Over the next several years, she became involved in Serbian patriotic circles. She gathered material help for the poor people in Old Serbia and protested the Austro-Hungarian annexation of Bosnia and Herzegovina. In 1910, she travelled to Paris to visit her friend, the sculptor Ivan Meà ¡troviÃÂ. Staying in France until she heard the news of her father's death, she returned to Serbia in April 1911. Upon her return, she resumed teaching at the women's school of higher education. She exhibited her artworks as a part of Kingdom of Serbia's pavilion at International Exhibition of Art of 1911.
In 1912, PetroviÃÂ's mother died. With the outbreak of the Balkan Wars soon after, PetroviÃÂ volunteered to become a nurse and was awarded a Medal for Bravery, Order of St. Sava and an Order of the Red Cross for her efforts. She continued nursing Serbian soldiers until 1913, when she contracted typhus and cholera. In the later years of her life, she had little time to paint and produced only a few canvases, including her post-impressionist masterpiece The Valjevo Hospital (). Professor Andrew Wachtel praised the painting for its "bold brushstrokes and bright colours" and its depiction of "a series of white tents against an expressionistic, almost Fauvist, landscape of green, orange, and red." PetroviÃÂ found herself in Italy when Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia in July 1914. She immediately returned to Belgrade to assist the Serbian Army. Having volunteered to work as a nurse in Valjevo, she died of typhoid fever on 3 April 1915 in the same hospital depicted in The Valjevo Hospital.
Following her death, her likeness has been depicted on the Serbian 200 dinar banknote. Nadeà ¾da PetroviàMemorial, held in her hometown of ÃÂaÃÂak, is one of the oldest fine arts manifestation in the region, dedicated to keeping the memory and work of the artist.
In 1955, a monument to Nadeà ¾da Petroviàwas made by Ivan Meà ¡troviÃÂ. The square in the center of ÃÂaÃÂak, where the monument is located, has been carrying her name since 2024. A monument to Nadeà ¾da PetroviÃÂ, created by Angelina Gatalica, was erected in Pioneers Park in Belgrade in 1989.
150 years since the birth of Nadeà ¾da Petroviàwas marked in cooperation with the United Nations Organization for Science, Education and Culture. At the session in Paris, the Executive Council of UNESCO adopted the recommendation for the General Conference of that organization on anniversaries to mark the 150th anniversary of the birth of Nadeà ¾da Petroviàin connection with this institution.