Dobrosav Živković

Dobrosav “Bob” Živković (Serbian Cyrillic: Добросав Боб Живковић; born 7 May 1962) is a Serbian illustrator living in Belgrade.

Dobrosav Živković in 2011.

Biography

Živković was born at in Pirot, then part of Yugoslavia. He graduated in 1987 at the Faculty of Applied Arts in Belgrade.

His works were acknowledged early during his studies, and were published in student magazines Student (1982) and 'Vidici (1982).

In early 1980s he worked as a science fiction and fantasy illustrator. His illustrations were published on the covers of novels of "Znak Sagite" imprint, science fiction and fantasy flmanac "Monolit" and magazine "Alef", later in Politikin Zabavnik.

His career shifted to artwork for children, in magazines "Tik-Tak" and "Zeka" (1987–1998). He created the children's comic strip Jajzi, that ran in "Tik-Tak".[1] His true breakthrough came as he became a regular illustrator for "Politikin zabavnik".

In the late 1990s Živković was Art Director and premier illustrator of Saatchi & Saatchi offices in Serbia and Slovenia. He continues working in advertising business as well as a freelancer illustrator.

He is a promoter of environment awareness, children's rights, and often draws for humanitarian non-profits.

Most of his work in the last two decades was forCreative Centre publishing house (more than hundred books, translated into over 40 languages).

Selected works

Awards

  • Three “Lazar Komarčić” awards for best science-fiction related artwork (1985, 1986. and 1988.)[3]
  • Five “Neven” awards for best illustrated children's book (given by “Prijatelji dece Srbije”, a children’s rights organisation)
  • Two “Zlatno pero Beograda” Awards (an award given by ULUPUDUS, An Assosciaton of visual and applied artists and designers)
  • Nominated for 2011 Hans Christian Andersen Award given by IBBY

References

  1. Biography from now defunct bobzivkovic.com
  2. UNICEF Serbia "UNICEF Serbia - Resources - Publications". Archived from the original on 2011-10-06. Retrieved 2012-02-18.
  3. List of "Lazar Komarčić" award winners Archived July 27, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.