Zoran MuÃ
¡ià(12 February 1909 â 25 May 2005), baptised as Anton Zoran MusiÃÂ, was a Slovene painter, printmaker, and draughtsman. He was the only painter of Slovene descent who managed to establish himself in the elite cultural circles of Italy and France, particularly Paris in the second half of the 20th century, where he lived for most of his later life. He painted landscapes, still lifes, portraits, and self-portraits, as well as scenes of horror from the Dachau concentration camp and vedute of Venice.
Life
Early life and education
Zoran MuÃ
¡iàwas born in a Slovene-speaking family in Bukovica, a small village in the lower Vipava Valley near Gorizia, in what was then the Austrian County of Gorizia and Gradisca (now in Slovenia). MuÃ
¡iÃÂ's father Anton was the headmaster of the local school, and his mother Marija (née BlaÃ
¾iÃÂ) was a teacher there. Both parents were Slovenes from the Gorizia region: his father was from the village of Ã
 martno in the Gorizia Hills, and his mother was born in the hamlet of Kostanjevica in the village of Lig.
MuÃ
¡iÃÂ's father was mobilized and served on various battlefields during the First World War. In 1915, during the Battles of the Isonzo, the family (his mother with two children) was forced to flee to ArnaÃÂe, a village near Velenje in the Duchy of Styria, where Zoran attended elementary school. In the spring of 1918, toward the end of World War I, the family moved back to Gorizia, but they were expelled again in late August 1919 by the Italian authorities, which had occupied the region. They moved to Griffen in Carinthia, but were expelled once again by the Austrian authorities after the Carinthian Plebiscite in late October 1920. They finally settled in Lower Styria, then part of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes.
MuÃ
¡iàattended two high schools in Maribor until September 1928. Afterward, he visited Vienna for a short time. Between 1930 and 1935, he continued his studies at the Academy of Fine Arts in Zagreb. MuÃ
¡iàspoke Slovene, German, Croatian, Italian, French, and some Friulian.
Career
After graduating in 1934, he travelled extensively around Europe. He spent three months (April to June 1935) in Spain, mainly Madrid. He served his obligatory army service in BileÃÂa (November 1935 to July 1936) in Yugoslavia. Later he spent each summer in Dalmatia and painted there. He lived, painted and exhibited in Maribor and the nearby village of HoÃÂe. In 1940, he moved to Ljubljana permanently. During this period (1942), he painted in two churches in his native Gorizia region, together with his friend, the painter Avgust ÃÂernigoj (in DreÃ
¾nica and Grahovo) and later one in the village of Gradno with another Slovenian painter, Lojze Spacal. In October 1943, he moved to Trieste and for some weeks for the first time to Venice. He had his first one-man show (outside Yugoslavia) in Trieste and several months later in Venice. In early October 1944, he was arrested by the Nazi German forces because he was in a group of Slovene anti-fascists. The group had hidden a transmitter and was connected with the British IS. His drawing and painting in Venice raised suspicions that he was a spy, and a month later he was sent to the Dachau concentration camp, where he made more than 180 sketches of life in the camp, some under extremely difficult circumstances. From the drawings, mainly created in May 1945, he managed to save around one hundred (some more with his friends).
After liberation by the Americans on April 29, 1945, MuÃ
¡iàreturned to his hometown of Ljubljana in early June. There, he was sent to the hospital in Golnik. A month later he was subjected to pressures by the newly established communist regime and moved to Gorizia at the end of July 1945. In the following months he travelled in the Trieste and Istria area, spending some time in Pinguente (Buzet). In October 1945, he settled in Venice with the help of the Cadorin family and returned to painting. In September 1949, he married the Venetian painter Ida Cadorin Barbarigo there. He also painted a room in Vila Dornacher near Zurich during the same period. He exhibited extensively in Rome, more than in Venice.
He prepared a huge tapestry,'Marco Polo on his way to China' for the passenger ship Augustus in 1950âÂÂ51. At the same time he won the Gualino prize and in 1956 the Grand Prize for his printmaking at the Venice Biennale. In 1951 he was awarded the Prix de Paris (jointly with Antonio Corpora) for his colorful paintings of Dalmatia. After 1952 he lived mainly in Paris, where the 'lyrical abstraction' of the French Informel determined the art world. He was a part of the third Ecole de Paris and exhibited at the Galerie de France. During this period he kept his studio in Venice and exhibited again at the Biennale in 1960, when he was awarded the UNESCO Prize. The much acclaimed series We Are Not the Last, in which the artist transformed the terror of his experiences in the concentration camp into documents of universal tragedy, was made in the 1970s. His last achievement was a series of Selfportratis and Double portraits. He had problems with his eyesight in his old age. Partly blind, he signed his last drawings in 2000.
In 1981 MuÃ
¡iàwas appointed Commandeur des Arts et des Lettres in Paris. MuÃ
¡iÃÂ's work has been honoured in numerous international exhibitions, such as the large retrospective exhibition at the Grand Palais in Paris in 1995, opened by the French and Slovenian presidents François Mitterrand and Milan KuÃÂan. At the same time Austrians promised him a permanent exhibition in Klagenfurt. It was never established. A huge part of his works were taken from his studio and never returned, to the painter or his wife.
In 1991, a permanent collection of 134 graphic works donated by Zoran MuÃ
¡iàwas opened at Dobrovo Castle in Brda. It was curated by Nelida SiliàNemec, director of the Museum () in Nova Gorica. A catalog was published with a list of the donated works, a biography with some quotations from Zoran MuÃ
¡iÃÂ, and three introductory studies by N. S. Nemec (The Permanent Collection of Graphic Works by Zoran MuÃ
¡iÃÂ), Nace Ã
 umi (Zoran MuÃ
¡iàin Slovenian Painting), and Zoran KrÃ
¾iÃ
¡nik (The Graphic Creativity of Zoran MuÃ
¡iÃÂ). In 1991, MuÃ
¡iàreceived the PreÃ
¡eren Award for lifetime achievement, the highest recognition in the arts in Slovenia. Some of MuÃ
¡iÃÂ's works have been featured at Piran Coastal Galleries. Gallery Zala from Ljubljana prepared seven exhibitions (four in Ljubljana, and one each in Belgrade, Vienna, and London). A large, important retrospective was presented at the Modern Gallery in Ljubljana in November 2009. The Slovene Academy of Sciences and Arts published a volume written by 20 authors from Slovenia, Croatia, Austria, Italy, and France (Vizije Zorana MuÃ
¡iÃÂa) in November 2012. The only permanent exhibition of his various works (paintings, prints, and drawings) was opened at the National Gallery in Ljubljana in 2016. Jean Clair, Vanda MuÃ
¡iàand Gojko Zupan wrote a catalogue for the permanent exhibition. A large temporary exhibition of selected works was prepared at Lugano's Collezione Braglia in October 2016. Another exhibition took place in Venice at the Fortuny Museum in spring 2018: A Tribute to Zoran MuÃ
¡iÃÂ, The Zurich Room. The Leopold Museum in Vienna opened a large retrospective exhibition in April 2018 with 167 selected works. A large exhibition was opened in Gorizia in May 2025.
The first doctoral thesis related to MuÃ
¡iàwas prepared by Aurora Fonda at the University of Padua: L'opera giovanile di Zoran Music, Padova, 2011, which dealt with the painter's early oeuvre, with a detailed inventory of his works. Subsequent studies about periods of Music's work were written by MiklavÃ
¾ Komelj, Asta VreÃÂko, Daniele d'Anza, Dolores del Giudice, Marko Jenko and others. MuÃ
¡iÃÂ's painting and Merleau-Ponty's philosophy of painting were brought together in a PhD in 2016 by Nelida Nemec. She juxtaposed philosophical views on painting and the perception of the philosopher with the artistic practice and some views of the painter MuÃ
¡iÃÂ. From Merleau-Ponty's thesis that both share the similar problem, the research mirrors the similarities between MuÃ
¡iÃÂ's painting and the philosopher's conception of painting. This study was followed by a French, extensive and more detailed doctorate by Etienne David. It deals with the key works of the Slovenian painter and compares his oeuvre with that of Jean Fautrier.
MuÃ
¡iàdied in Venice in 2005 at the age of 96. He is buried in the local St. Michele cemetery.
Exhibitions (selection of personal presentations)
- 1942: Zoran MuÃ
¡iÃÂ. Galerija Obersnel, Ljubljana, (February)
- 1944: Zoran Music. 25 oeuvres exposées. Piccola Galleria, Venice (June 17 â July 8)
- 1960: Music. Peintures et gouaches. Galerie_de_France, Paris (February 26 â March 20)
- 1964: Music. Zeichnungen und Graphik. Kunstmuseum Basel (May 9 â June 14)
- 1967: Zoran Anton Music. Retrospektivna razstava. Moderna Galerija, Ljubljana (April 14 â May 7)
- 1978: Music, le temps d'une mémoire. Rétrospective: Toiles â Aquarelles â Gouaches â Dessins de 1951 à1977. Galerie de France, Paris (April 4 â May 20)
- 1991: Collection of graphic works by Zoran. Gallery of Zoran Music. Dobrovo Castle. Slovenia.
- 1992âÂÂ93: Music, Arbeiten auf Papier von 1945 bis 1992. Graphische Sammlung Albertina, Vienna (November 25 â January 31)
- 1995: Zoran Music. Galeries nationales du Grand Palais, Paris (April 4 â July 3)
- 1995: Zoran Music. Nous ne sommes pas les derniers, Peintures, Dessins, Gravures. Musée des Beaux-Arts de Caen, Caen (May 18 â August 16)
- 1995âÂÂ96: Zoran Music: Die späten Jahre. Bayerische Akademie der Schönen Künste, Munich (November 24 â January 14)
- 1997: Zoran Music. Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt, Frankfurt Main (April 24 â June 29)
- 1997: Zoran Music. MMG Gallery, Tokyo (August)
- 1998: Zoran Music: gli acquerelli veneziani 1947âÂÂ1949. Museo Morandi â Instituzione Galleria d'Arte Moderna, Bologna (January 22 â April 13)
- 2006: Music in Slovene private Collections (1935âÂÂ1997). Galerija Zala, Ljubljana (November 24 â December 22)
- 2009: A Spanish vision, February. National Gallery of Slovenia, Ljubljana (12. February â March)
- 2009: Zoran MuÃ
¡iàin private and public collections, November 2009 â February 2010. Modern Gallery of Slovenia, Ljubljana
- 2009: Zoran MuÃ
¡iàv slovenskih zasebnih zbirkah III. Galerija Zala, Ljubljana (February)
- 2016: Zoran MuÃ
¡iÃÂ, Permanent collection. National Gallery of Slovenia, Ljubljana
- 2018: Omaggio a Zoran Music. La Stanza di Zurigo. Museo Fortuny, Venezia (Febbraio)
- 2018: Zoran Music. Poesie der Stille. Leopold Museum, Vienna (April 13 â August 6)
- 2019: Zoran Music. Gallery W&K â Wienerroihter & Kohlbacher, Vienna (May 22 â September 13)
- 2019: Music in Slovene private Collections VII. Galerija Zala, Ljubljana (June 6 â June 25)
- 2019: Zoran MuÃ
¡iÃÂ. Galerija in antikvitete Novak, Ljubljana (October 24 â November 9)
- 2020: Zoran MuÃ
¡iÃÂ. "The fascination of painting". Klagenfurt, (January 23 â March 1)
- 2020: Zoran MuÃ
¡iÃÂ. "111 catalogues for the 111 Anniversary". National Gallery, Ljubljana. (February 11 â May 30)
- 2020: Zoran MuÃ
¡iÃÂ. "Drawings from Dachau," Modern Gallery, Ljubljana. (February 27 â July 1)
- 2022: Zoran MuÃ
¡iÃÂ. Il viaggio della vita, Galleria Comunale, Monfalcone. (8 Ottobre â 27 Novembre)
- 2022: Zoran MuÃ
¡iÃÂ. La Stanza di Zurigo, Chur, Kunstmuseum Bündner
- 2025: Zoran MuÃ
¡iÃÂ. Nove pridobitve, Galerija Novak, Ljubljana (February 12)
- 2025: Zoran MuÃ
¡iÃÂ. Pokrajina teles, Dobrovo (May 15 - September 5)
- 2025: Zoran MuÃ
¡iÃÂ. LA STANZA DI ZURIGO, L'ATELIER, LE OPERE, Gorizia / Gorica, (May 25 - 2 November)
Museums and galleries
Austria
- Albertina, Vienna
- Essl Museum â Contemporary Art, Klosterneuburg/Vienna
- StadtGalerie, Klagenfurt, Klagenfurt
- Gallery Magnet, Völkermarkt/Carinthia
Chile
- Museo de la Solidaridad Salvador Allende, Santiago de Chile
Croatia
- Galerija Moderne umjetnosti, Zagreb
- Muzej moderne i sodobne umjetnosti, Rijeka
France
- Musée des Beaux-Arts, Caen
- Musée National d'Art Moderne, Paris
- Musée National du Louvre, Paris, prints
- Centre National Georges Pompidou, Paris, 10 drawings from Dachau
- Musée Malraux, Le Havre
- Musée de Valence, Valence
- Musée des Beaux-Arts, Dijon
Germany
- Museum Abteiberg, Mönchengladbach
- Museum Folkwang, Essen
- Neue Pinakothek, München
Italy
- Galleria d'Arte Moderna, Bologna
- Galleria internazionale d'Arte Moderna Ca' Pesaro, Venice
- Museo Fortuny, Venice
- Galleria Nazionale, Rome, tapestry
- GaMeC galleria, Bergamo, painting
- Musei Provinciali di Gorizia, Gorizia, paintings
- Museo Morandi, Bologna
- Musei Civici, Treviso
- Museo Revoltella, Trieste, 24 drawings from Dachau
- MAGI '900- Museum of Artistic and Historical Excellence, Pieve di Cento (BO)
Israel
- Yad Vashem museum, Jerusalem
Netherlands
- Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam
Slovenia
- Nova Gorica Regional Museum / Castle Kromberk, Zoran MuÃ
¡iàGallery, Dobrovo, exhibition: prints
- Veno Pilon Gallery, AjdovÃ
¡ÃÂina: drawings
- City Museum of Ljubljana, Ljubljana
- Museum of Modern Art, Ljubljana, drawings, prints, paintings
- Museum of Contemporary History, Ljubljana, print
- National Gallery of Slovenia, Ljubljana, permanent exhibition: paintings, sketches, prints
- Maribor Art Gallery, Maribor, paintings, prints
- Museum of White Carniola (Bela krajina), KambiÃÂ Collection, Metlika, part of the permanent exhibition in the KambiÃÂ Gallery; paintings, prints, drawings
- Carinthia Art History Gallery, Slovenj Gradec
Spain
- Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid
- Collecio IVAM, Valencia
Sweden
Switzerland
- Kunstmuseum, Basel
- Fondazione Braglia, Lugano
- Musée Jenisch, Vevey
United Kingdom
- Estorick Collection, London
- Tate Modern, London
United States
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh
- Cleveland Museum of Art
- Dallas Museum of Art
- Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco
- List Visual Arts Center, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Mass.
- Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
- Museum of Modern Art, New York
- Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia
Vatican
- Vatican Museums, Collection of Contemporary Art
References
Further reading
- René de SOLIER:Music, Rome: L'Obelisco, settembre 1955.
- Giuseppe MARCHIORI, Zoran MUSIC, Novembre 1961, Milan: Galleria Lorenzelli, 1961.
- Jean GRENIER, Zoran KRÃ
½IÃ
 NIK, Zoran Music, Paris, 1970.
- Taja VIDMAR BREJC, Zoran MUÃ
 IÃÂ, Ljubljana : Filozofska fakulteta, (1972).
- Music, opere 1946-1985, Museo Correr, Venezia, 1985
- Zoran KRÃ
½IÃ
 NIK, TomaÃ
¾ BREJC, JeÃ
¡a DENEGRI, Meta GABRÃ
 EK PROSENC, MiklavÃ
¾ KOMELJ, Ivana SIMONOVIàÃÂELIÃÂ, Gojko ZUPAN, Jana INTIHAR FERJAN, Breda ILICH KLANÃÂNIK, ZORAN MUÃ
 IÃÂ, V javnih in zasebnih zbirkah v Sloveniji, Moderna galerija Ljubljana, Ljubljana, 24. November 2009
- TomaÃ
¾ BREJC, Dalmatinski motivi Zorana MuÃ
¡iÃÂa, Prilozi povijesti umjetnosti u Dalmaciji, l 33, 1992, p. 635-644) - ISSN 0555-1145
- Nelida NEMEC, Nace Ã
 UMI, Zoran KRÃ
½IÃ
 NIK, Galerija Zorana MuÃ
¡iÃÂa, Grad Dobrovo, Stalna zbirka grafiÃÂnih del Zorana MuÃ
¡iÃÂa, GoriÃ
¡ki muzej, Nova Gorica, 1991.
- Ziva AMISHAI_MAISELS, Depiction and Interpretation, Pergamon Press, Oxford, New York, Seoul, Tokyo, 1993.
- Jean CLAIR et alii,Zoran Music, Galeries nationales du Grand Palais, Catalogue, Paris, 1995.
- Gojko ZUPAN, Zorenje Zorana MuÃ
¡iÃÂa med 1909 in 1935, offprint, Ljubljana, 2006.
- Gojko ZUPAN, ZORAN MUÃ
 Iàv slovenskih zasebnih zbirkah, MuÃ
¡iàdalle collezioni private Slovene, MuÃ
¡iàin Slovene private collections (1935âÂÂ1997), november 2006, Ljubljana, Galerija Zala.
- Gojko ZUPAN, Umetnik na tujem: Zoran MuÃ
¡iàâ slovenski izseljenec, Mohorjev koledar, Ljubljana, 2006. pp. 177âÂÂ182.
- Gojko ZUPAN, Apel je na pogled postavil portret: doslej neznani PreÃ
¡ernov portret Zorana MuÃ
¡iÃÂa, Delo 50(30) (6 February 2008), Ljubljana, p. 20.
- Gojko ZUPAN, Zoran MuÃ
¡iÃÂ, Iz slovenskih privatnih zbirk II, Grafika (1931âÂÂ1984), Ljubljana, 2008.
- Nelida NEMEC, Karst landscape as an inspiration for creative opuses of Lojze Spacal and Zoran MuÃ
¡iÃÂ. Annales: analiza istrske in mediteranske Ã
¡tudije, Koper, 2008. (Let. 18, st. 1, 2008, pp. 193-206)
- Gojko ZUPAN, Life and Work, Zoran MuÃ
¡iÃÂ, catalogue, editor Breda Illich KlanÃÂnik, Moderna galerija Ljubljana, 2009.
- Gojko ZUPAN, Dachauske risbe Zorana MuÃ
¡iÃÂa, Zbornik za Staneta Bernika, Ljubljana, 2009. pp. 274âÂÂ301.
- Gojko ZUPAN, GoriÃ
¡ki utrinki, Zoran MuÃ
¡iàna GoriÃ
¡kem, Zoran MuÃ
¡iànel Goriziano, Ajdovski zbornik, AjdovÃ
¡ÃÂina: 2009. p. 5âÂÂ26, 65âÂÂ75.
- Lydia HARAMBOURG, Dictionnaire des peintres de l'ÃÂcole de Paris, 1945âÂÂ1965, ÃÂditions Ides et Calendes, Neuchâtel, 1993 (); nouvelle édition, 2010, p. 39, 355âÂÂ358 ()
- Gojko ZUPAN, Biography, Videnja Zorana MuÃ
¡iÃÂa, SAZU, Ljubljana, 2012.
- Jean CLAIR, Vanda MUÃ
 IÃÂ, Gojko ZUPAN, Zoran MUÃ
 IÃÂ, From Ljuban, Milada and Vanda MuÃ
¡iàCollection, National Gallery, Ljubljana, 2016. English Edition,
- Zoran Music, Boualem Sansal, Pascal Bruckner, Michael Prazan, Skira, Applicat-Prazan, 2016.
- Nelida NEMEC, MuÃ
¡iÃÂevo slikarstvo in Merleau-Pontyjeva filozofija slikarstva; doktorska disertacija; Koper, 2016; later published as: Pokrajina telesa. MuÃ
¡iàv vidu Merleau-Pontyja. ZaloÃ
¾ba Annales ZRS Koper, Koper 2017.
- Hans-Peter WIPPLINGER, Ivan RISTIÃÂ, Gojko ZUPAN, Jean CLAIR, Marilena PASQUALI, Zoran MuÃ
¡iÃÂ: Poesie der Stille = poetry of silence [Leopold Museum, Wien, 13. April bis 6. August 2018]
- Gojko ZUPAN, Zoran MuÃ
¡iÃÂ, Iz slovenskih privatnih zbirk VII / Music in Slovene private collections VII,, Catalogue, Ljubljana, 2019.
- Zoran MuÃ
¡iÃÂ: KriÃ
¾ev pot po piranskih cerkvah. /The Via Crucis at the Churches of Piran /. Nelida Nemec: MuÃ
¡iÃÂeva sakralna tematika in kriÃ
¾ev pot v Gradnem. / Sacred themes and the stations of the cross in Gradno by Zoran Music / Piran, Slovenia, 1.4. - 16.4.2023.
- Jean CLAIR, LE LIVRE DES AMIS, Gallimard, Paris, 2024. p. 301.
- Daniela FERRETTI, Paola CADORIN, Jean CLAIR, Gojko ZUPAN et alii, Zoran MUSIC, Arte, Stanza di Zurigo, Atelier, Gorizia 2026.
External links