Mira Klobučar Explained

Mira Klobučar
Birth Name:Mira Ehrlich
Birth Date:1888 7, df=yes
Birth Place:Zagreb, Austro-Hungarian Monarchy, (now Croatia)
Death Place:Zagreb, SFR Yugoslavia .
Nationality:Croat
Education:City and Guilds of London Art School
Field:Painting
Relations:Herman and Marija Ehrlich
(parents)
Hugo Ehrlich
(brother)
Marta Ehrlich
(niece)

Mira Klobučar (born Mira Ehrlich; July 28, 1888 – died July 10, 1956) was a Croatian painter.

Klobučar was born in Zagreb on July 28, 1888, to a wealthy Jewish family of Herman and Marija (née Eisner) Ehrlich, and was raised with four siblings; Adolf, Ernest, Đuro and Hugo. After the death of her father, her mother sent her away to gymnasium Sacré Cœur in Vienna. After gymnasium, she was educated at the City and Guilds of London Art School. Klobučar's body of work was small, because she painted only in particular moments of inspiration. From 1933 to 1940, she held exhibition as a member of the Artists' Club, and as a member of the Croatian Association of Artists. Klobučar was married to Viktor Klobučar, with whom she lived in the villa which was designed by her brother Hugo Ehrlich, a known Croatian architect.[1] Although she was forced to wear yellow star of David on her clothes, Klobučar survived the Holocaust.[2] She died in Zagreb in 1956.

Notes and References

  1. News: Hrvatske slikarice rođene u 19. stoljeću, Biografija Mira Klobučar. Donacije Gradu Zagrebu. 2012-12-23. hr.
  2. Hrvatski državni arhiv; Mirjana Jurić; Analitički inventar, Ravnateljstvo ustaškog redarstva – Židovski odsjek 1941-1942; stranica 11; 2005.