Lovro Artuković


Lovro Artuković is a contemporary Croatian painter and graphic artist who primarily paints large scale figurative canvases. He lives and works in Berlin, Germany.

Artistic career

For nine years, until 2003, he worked as an assistant professor at the Academy of Fine Arts, University of Zagreb. He then moved to Berlin where he still works as a freelance artist.
His painting style is based on the theme of intimism and explores the figurative using the iconography of urban civilisation. In the 1980s many of his works focused on portraiture and the artist's wife figures as the most prominent sitter. His works then developed through the 1990s, although never directly painting the war which he experienced, his self-portraits and portraits of couples of this period reflected an atmosphere of war. After 2000, Artuković created a series of "Votive Paintings", which used real characters reconfigured into allegorical scenes. The characters in these Votive Paintings would wear written messages on their clothes for example, in the painting 64,, Artuković paints himself wearing a T-shirt upon which is written "God How I Love Botticelli". One of the artist's best known, and most controversial works is called, the Signing of the declaration of the unification of Western Herzegovina and Popovo Polje with the Republic of Croatia . The making of this painting features in Igor Mirković's film L.A. Unfinished.
His works are kept in gallery institutions and many private collections such as that of Neda Young, New York, the Filip Trade Collection, Zagreb and the Essl Museum of Contemporary Art, Vienna.

Exhibitions and awards

He has had numerous group and solo exhibitions, including:
Awards:
Lovro Artuković's father is a cousin of Andrija Artuković, minister in the government of Independent State of Croatia, sentenced for war crimes.