Among the sculptor Misrad Begić’s depictions of larger-than-life Slovenian personalities in a range of artistic media and material, he also has a series of self-portraits and portraits of other elite members of society, including one of the realist painter and artistic educator Anton Ažbe. Ažbe wrote himself into the annals of Slovenian art history not just as an important painter, but also as a teacher of many other talented painters, including Slovenians, who attended his private academy in Munich.
In June 2004, in Munich’s Leopold Park, not far from where his renowned school was located, a monument to Ažbe was unveiled, produced by sculptor Mirsad Begić. The following year, Begić again portrayed the famous artist in his series depicting famous painters.
Contrasting with the imposing bust in Munich, this sculpture is more intimate, centering only on the artist’s head, cocked slightly to the left. The portrait radiates with Begić’s artistic range, refinement, attention to detail, and capacity for perception. He shows the artist in his eminent pose, handlebar mustache groomed upwards, circular spectacles, and a tophat, echoing the gilded halo of a saint. The sculptor captured the painter’s facial features in a vividly rugged form, attempting to capture in the process Ažbe’s majestic characteristics.