Nikola Pešić | |
Birth Place: | Belgrade, Yugoslavia |
Nationality: | Serbian |
Style: | Sculpture |
Alma Mater: | State Academy of Fine Arts Stuttgart |
Nikola Pešić (born 1973) is a Serbian sculptor and painter.
Pešić was born in Belgrade in 1973. He graduated from the Academy of Fine Arts in Belgrade with the degree of painting, although he completed his master's degree in sculpture in class of Professor Mrđan Bajić in 1998.
In 1999, he got the scholarship from German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD) when he went to Stuttgart, where he finished his post-graduate studies at the State Academy of Fine Arts in the class of Professor Micha Ullman.
Pešić's works (sculptures, objects) have been represented at many important exhibitions in Serbia (Oktobarski salon)[1] and at different art fairs in Europe (Viennafair[2] in Vienna and Art Fair[3] in Cologne) by Zvono Gallery.[4]
Nikola Pešić is a member of ULUS[5] (Visual Artists Association of Serbia).
Nikola Pešić's art consists of highly esthetic objects which hide and generate at the same time different meanings by means of their simple pleasing forms and lines. The interpretation of Pešić's art is based on symbolic models of Christianity, gnosticism and non-Christian religions. According to Nikola, art must be attractive "at first sight". His sculptures are made of transparent and dim polyesters, epoxy and acrylic resins, magnifying glasses, mirrors, brass and other polished and reflecting materials. Even though Pesic tries to achieve perfection, he rarely uses machines when manufacturing his sculptures, and he usually does everything manually. As he himself says: "My sculptures should reflect my wish to make something perfect, and at the same time the impossibility to do it. I think that the manually shaped forms have special enchant and power.[6]
One of the characteristics of Pesić's art is absolute absence of politics in his works. Pesić, if looks some political idol at all, he looks for it in bogumils, cathars and gnostics, because like them, he does not have any need to belong to any state, political option or church.[6]