An exhibition by Adis Fejzić dedicated to the Sarajevo music scene and the greats who marked it was opened today in the Collegium Artisticum gallery in Sarajevo. The first series is dedicated to musicians who have passed away and whose names are written in history. The exhibition was organized as part of the 3rd international festival GRAD and as a prelude to the future museum of Sarajevo's pop-rock scene, for which all those present expressed the hope that it will be opened. "This is my small attempt to contribute to one segment of that museum. I think that people who work on culture and enrich our reality and history, which gives us a better position for a better future, should be honored during their lifetime," said Fejzić. In the first series, about 10 personalities were presented, including Adi Lukovac, Jadranka Stojaković, Slobodan Vujović, Kemal Monteno, etc. Fejzić said that there are still plenty of quality people among the living, and he hopes that they too will have their place in the collective memory and be "recorded" with monuments. "The works were not created by processing existing photos, but I collected materials from videos, and then it is a specific type that is a drawing preparation or digital drawing and works with textures. So you get something that is not an old photo or a digital modern work that we meet in everyday life," Fejzic said. Ibrahim Spahić said that even after 15 years, Fejzić got the opportunity to present the sculpture of Davorin Popović and that he marked the GRAD festival with his works. He pointed out that this is a quality artist who will mark a period and whose works will remain on display with numerous significant historical works and documents found in the Collegium Artisticum. The opening of the exhibition was also attended by Goran Bregović, to whom Fejzić handed over a graphic with his image and gave him and Spahić a map of graphics on which there are Abraham's seal and the Hebrew prayer in Bosnian, Our Father in Latin and Old Slavonic, and el Fatiha.
"I believe that Abraham's seal should be a symbol of this city and country and that we send a message about how to live because it contains a cross, a crescent moon, and a Star of David," said Fejzic. Spahić handed Bregović a copy of the Charter of Kulin ban, telling him that "he can see where the borders are" and that he can see the original version in St. Petersburg. "When we look at the 20th century, a lot of things that characterized the culture came from the subculture. The same is the case with Sarajevo. The subculture of this city gave rise to big names. The idea of a museum of Sarajevo's pop-rock music scene is nice, and I hope it will be realized, said Bregović. (https://www.klix.ba/)