The Prague Post - Naively brilliant: Serbia's world-famous village painters

EUR -
AED 4.255898
AFN 77.068095
ALL 96.472366
AMD 441.663584
ANG 2.074416
AOA 1062.671531
ARS 1683.470289
AUD 1.776585
AWG 2.088838
AZN 1.973406
BAM 1.952214
BBD 2.327315
BDT 141.46014
BGN 1.955799
BHD 0.43694
BIF 3412.416726
BMD 1.158856
BND 1.500038
BOB 8.009998
BRL 6.180619
BSD 1.155472
BTN 103.502224
BWP 15.451549
BYN 3.946733
BYR 22713.581539
BZD 2.323921
CAD 1.627208
CDF 2549.483765
CHF 0.933163
CLF 0.02734
CLP 1072.553561
CNY 8.205168
CNH 8.204235
COP 4329.927132
CRC 577.736216
CUC 1.158856
CUP 30.709689
CVE 110.672697
CZK 24.173625
DJF 205.771114
DKK 7.469043
DOP 72.316843
DZD 151.124131
EGP 55.196889
ERN 17.382843
ETB 177.862303
FJD 2.634428
FKP 0.87621
GBP 0.876849
GEL 3.131537
GGP 0.87621
GHS 12.89227
GIP 0.87621
GMD 84.596381
GNF 10037.517943
GTQ 8.880385
GYD 242.535113
HKD 9.013613
HNL 30.421984
HRK 7.531405
HTG 151.201593
HUF 381.889394
IDR 19288.002609
ILS 3.793614
IMP 0.87621
INR 103.459782
IQD 1513.719324
IRR 48802.33226
ISK 147.012612
JEP 0.87621
JMD 185.069232
JOD 0.821667
JPY 181.203395
KES 150.361585
KGS 101.342159
KHR 4625.48311
KMF 493.092987
KPW 1042.969355
KRW 1694.421951
KWD 0.355815
KYD 0.962877
KZT 599.225622
LAK 25089.80221
LBP 103487.648453
LKR 355.774913
LRD 205.691065
LSL 19.799743
LTL 3.421801
LVL 0.700981
LYD 6.300399
MAD 10.713621
MDL 19.678766
MGA 5186.450202
MKD 61.412187
MMK 2433.549406
MNT 4129.367695
MOP 9.255797
MRU 46.012278
MUR 53.411253
MVR 17.858611
MWK 2003.710573
MXN 21.267462
MYR 4.788419
MZN 74.08149
NAD 19.79872
NGN 1672.275658
NIO 42.521705
NOK 11.830137
NPR 165.07405
NZD 2.028473
OMR 0.445579
PAB 1.159307
PEN 3.896442
PGK 4.894987
PHP 68.112912
PKR 326.43294
PLN 4.230695
PYG 8083.116578
QAR 4.219506
RON 5.090738
RSD 117.351556
RUB 90.442464
RWF 1680.106424
SAR 4.346304
SBD 9.54593
SCR 16.177947
SDG 697.052697
SEK 11.010623
SGD 1.504155
SHP 0.869442
SLE 26.596056
SLL 24300.632951
SOS 659.186242
SRD 44.574212
STD 23985.983639
STN 24.454971
SVC 10.109861
SYP 12813.357626
SZL 19.798545
THB 37.346458
TJS 10.751074
TMT 4.055997
TND 3.405589
TOP 2.790248
TRY 49.162969
TTD 7.843558
TWD 36.354826
TZS 2853.683684
UAH 48.910042
UGX 4201.805669
USD 1.158856
UYU 46.064244
UZS 13793.66128
VES 281.912897
VND 30565.411729
VUV 142.137302
WST 3.273634
XAF 654.751408
XAG 0.021597
XAU 0.000279
XCD 3.131867
XCG 2.082458
XDR 0.814301
XOF 654.751408
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.213071
ZAR 19.903877
ZMK 10431.097743
ZMW 26.461277
ZWL 373.151224
  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    23.47

    -0.13%

  • RELX

    -0.1900

    40.18

    -0.47%

  • SCS

    -0.0400

    16.2

    -0.25%

  • NGG

    1.4400

    75.51

    +1.91%

  • BTI

    1.1500

    57.81

    +1.99%

  • GSK

    0.4700

    48.02

    +0.98%

  • RYCEF

    0.1900

    13.9

    +1.37%

  • RBGPF

    -1.1800

    76.32

    -1.55%

  • CMSC

    -0.0300

    23.39

    -0.13%

  • RIO

    1.1300

    72.2

    +1.57%

  • BP

    0.2400

    35.93

    +0.67%

  • BCC

    0.2900

    75.73

    +0.38%

  • JRI

    0.1400

    13.64

    +1.03%

  • BCE

    0.1800

    23.2

    +0.78%

  • VOD

    0.2600

    12.48

    +2.08%

  • AZN

    0.0800

    93.32

    +0.09%

Naively brilliant: Serbia's world-famous village painters
Naively brilliant: Serbia's world-famous village painters / Photo: Andrej ISAKOVIC - AFP

Naively brilliant: Serbia's world-famous village painters

Pavel Hajko never tires of painting roosters. Inside his home studio in Kovacica -- a sleepy town in northern Serbia famous for its style of naive art -- the brightly coloured creatures cover the walls.

Text size:

"From the beginning, even in elementary school, I painted only roosters," the 73-year-old artist told AFP, as he worked on an unfinished canvas in the afternoon light.

Outside, a cockerel obligingly crowed.

Hajko and his fellow artists have become world-famous for their childlike renderings of the traditional village life of the Slovak minority in the flatlands of the Banat region, north of the Danube.

"In naive painting, everything is done as you learn. It's not a school where the colour has to be this or that... we can put any colour," Hajko said.

The naive painting movement of self-taught artists first emerged in the 1930s, depicting everything from harvests to the traditional dress of the region.

Last year UNESCO recognised the Kovacica painters on its list of Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity, a milestone for a movement shaped by unschooled artists.

- Preserving identity -

In the leafy centre of town, Pavel Babka runs a gallery showing the art, which he said is key to preserving the traditions of the ethnic Slovaks who settled in the Vojvodina region more than two centuries ago.

"I think the Slovak minority preserves its identity in this way, by painting what the previous generation did," Babka said.

The style quickly spread to other Slovak communities, and the first major exhibitions of work began in the 1950s.

But Babka said its beginnings lie in the folk art of the region, from the decoration of everyday objects to the murals in homes, mostly painted by women.

A key figure in the foundation of the style is Zuzana Chalupova, who Babka credits with giving naive painting its bold colours.

"Today, more women paint than men. And what women paint is more authentic than men," he said.

Across the walls of his gallery, Babka traces the symbols and signature "handwriting" of each artist through the decades.

"They paint life here, but they have not forgotten where they come from," he said.

The curator sees a discernible style through the early days of peasant painters in the Austro-Hungarian empire through the movement's boom in 1970s Yugoslavia, and even in today's crop of artists.

"The youngest generation paints according to the stories of their grandparents," he said.

- 'There must be sincerity' -

But with UNESCO's recognition comes a new challenge -- the over-commercialisation of the art form, driven by tourists' tastes rather than authenticity.

"When we say Kovacica, it should evoke Kovacica," Babka said.

Since founding his gallery 35 years ago, he has helped promote the movement, and now urges painters to preserve their style and keep the region's Slovak culture at its core.

"There must be sincerity and no deception."

The Slovak minority accounted for less than one percent of Serbia's population in the 2022 census, with the vast majority living in the multiethnic northern Vojvodina region.

A 2024 study found the community has declined over the last three decades, partly due to its ageing population and migration to Slovakia.

- Global recognition -

For art historian Elenka Djuris, this makes preserving the paintings of the unique culture "tied to the area of Kovacica" all the more critical.

"In this way, we actually ensure the longevity of our identity, traditions and customs, especially in this time when traditions and customs are truly being lost, everything is becoming globalised," the 36-year-old academic said.

But Djuris hopes that global recognition of the movement's value will also spur renewed efforts to preserve it at home.

"Unfortunately, it often takes someone from outside to show us the wealth we have, and then we realise that our culture is truly valuable and worthy of attention."

Y.Blaha--TPP