Jump to content

Sergej Mironović Golovčenko

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by GregorB (talk | contribs) at 13:59, 26 October 2016 (removed Category:Russian people; added Category:Russian expatriates in Croatia using HotCat). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Sergej Mironović Golovčenko (Irkutsk, 1898 - Zagreb, November 10, 1937) was a Croatian-Russian caricaturist, comic book author and writer. He is the author of the series "Maks i Maksić", first published in 1925 in the magazine "Kopriva", as the first permanent characters of Croatian and Yugoslav comic books.[1]

Biography

Early years

Maks and Maksić

Maks and Maksić (1927)

The creation of the strip series "Maks and Maksić" was prompted by the then-publisher and owner of the weekly magazine "Koprive" Slavko Vereš, who attempted to catch up with similar moves by other competing publications such as Jutarnji list, aware that the publication needed a reading section that would appeal to younger audiences. Work on the series was bestowed on Golovčenko, a Russian immigrant, who already had affirmed himself as a fertile and interesting author of caricatures in the magazine.

The comic series drew inspiration heavily from the well-known illustrated German children's book Max und Moritz, created by Wilhelm Busch in the 1860s. Altogether, the series ran from 1925 to 1934 on a weekly basis.

As much as naive as they were, the adventures of Maks and Maksic attained a faithful audience among children, which made the magazine publish a completely separate volume in 1926., containing all the comics published previously in the magazine (altogether 32 color pages). This was followed by the second volume titled "S. Mironović – Nove pustolovine Maksa i Maksića" (Mirinović - New Adventures of Maks and Maksić), published in 1928. The third volume was published in 1929 and the fourth in 1937, only a week before the author's death.

This represented the one of the earliest publishing of comics in their separate volume in Europe.[1]

Later years

References