Are you looking for hidden gems in Belgrade? Discover three elegant interiors within the walking distance.

In these house museums you’ll get familiar with three important figures of Serbian culture. These talented men made us know ourselves better, introduced us to the world and brought the world to us. Visit the Belgrade homes of geographer Jovan Cvijić, writer Ivo Andrić and artist Paja Jovanović, to combine the pleasure of discovering hidden gems with getting to understand Serbian and Balkan mentality and culture.

Authentic designer 1905 decoration of Belgrade home of Serbian geographer Jovan Cvijić

Authentic 1905 Belgrade home of the scientist who negotiated Serbian borders

Start with the original home of the scientist Jovan Cvijić, located in the atmospheric quarter called Kopitareva Gradina. The neighborhood was developed in the first decade of 20th century and is still quite untouched. 

Jovan Cvijić (1865 – 1927) was the pioneer of geography and ethnology in Serbia. He was twice elected the head of the Royal Academy and Belgrade University. His geographic and ethnographic maps were used to draw the official borders of the new Yugoslav state at the end of WWI. 

The decoration of the house built for Cvijić in 1905  was done by the pioneer of decorative arts in Serbia, Dragutin Inkiostri Medenjak. Its custom-made combination of traditional local styles with art nouveau is aesthetically intriguing and illustrative of the spirit of Belgrade. Always melting and balancing between the East and the West.

Notice the al secco decoration of the walls and ceilings. The eagle carrying a geologist’s hammer over a sphere symbolizes the house-owner’s profession and his grasp.

The custom furniture designed by Medenjak was upholstered in the ethnic hand-woven materials Cvijić brought from his field explorations in the Balkans. The devoted explorer spent 40 years in the field. He would simply walk for tens of miles or ride a little horse. His explorations of the earth made him conclude that “all truths are temporary”. One of my favorite quotes to resort to.

To understand Serbia and the Balkans, observe Cvijić’s original map of the civilizations and cultures in the peninsula. Explains a lot!

To hear about Cvijić’s typology of Balkan psychological types, in which many of us recognize ourselves, book your private tour.

Apartment where you can see the Nobel prize medal and diploma

After grasping the geography of Serbia at Cvijić’s home, call on another authority on Balkan region and its types.

Ivo Andrić (1892 – 1975), a Bosnian-born writer and a royal Yugoslavian diplomat, received the Nobel prize for literature in 1961. His apartment that shares the address with the seat of the President of Serbia (once a Royal Court) is elegant and a bit austere. As was the author himself.

Nobel medal and diploma awarded to Ivo Andrić in 1961, on display at his Belgrade home

This is the perfect setting to hear about the subject matter of Andrić’s novels and see his Nobel diploma. Find out about his interesting diplomatic path that ended at the position of the Yugoslavian Royal Ambassador to the Nazi Germany and why he was seen as a homme fatale in 20th century Belgrade.

Andrić lived in the apartment from 1958 until his death in 1975. He lived with his wife, a theatre costume-designer Milica Babić, a lady whom he had been in love with years before they married, and with his mother-in-law.

The year 1961 when Yugoslav writer Andrić received the Nobel prize for his novels about the pre-Yugoslav history of the central Yugoslav republic Bosnia and Herzegovina, was the year of peak tensions of the Cold War and the building of the Berlin Wall. To hear more about Andrić’s life and work and political history of Serbia and Yugoslavia relevant for his Nobel prize book the private tour.

Lavish artist’s studio from 1890ies

To complete the experience visit the legacy museum of Paja Jovanović, in Kralja Milana Street.

Original Viennese studio of artist Paja Jovanović, reinstated in Belgrade

Jovanović (1859 – 1957) was a prolific artist. His works have been reaching their all time highs at world auction houses in recent years. This is caused by the growing interest of Arab collectors for the so called orientalists. These artists depicted genre scenes from cultures influenced by Middle East traditions,  flowing across the Ottoman Empire. Jovanović was already enjoying the benefits of the art market’s taste  before the age of 30. The demand for orientalists was coming from England and US then and he had a dealer in London.

Jovanović was a cosmopolitan who socialized with international high society.  Sought-after portretist, master of nudes but also the artist who painted the glorious historical compositions of Serbian past and folklore scenes, which copies became staples in Serbian homes.

If you’d like to observe the artwork accompanied by a Belgrade art historian, book your private tour.