Nina Bunjevac
Nina Bunjevac (born 1973) is a Serbian Canadian cartoonist.[1]
Nina Bunjevac | |
---|---|
Born | 1973 Welland, Ontario, Canada |
Occupation | Cartoonist |
Biography
Bunjevac was born in Welland, Ontario, Canada, in 1973[2] to Serbian immigrant parents from Yugoslavia. At age two her mother moved with her two daughters back to Zemun in Yugoslavia to get away from her radical Serbian nationalist husband Peter, who accidentally died in Toronto in 1977 while building a bomb with Rade Panić and Pavle Kljaić who were also killed when the bomb exploded.[1]
Bunjevac attended the Djordje Krstic School for Applied Arts. She returned to Toronto in 1990 where she attended the Central Technical School and graduated from OCAD in 1997. She worked as a painter, illustrator, and art teacher before turning to comics in pen and ink. Her comics have appeared in a number of international comics publications. She won The Golden Pen of Belgrade at the 11th International Biennale of Illustration in Belgrade for her cover to the anthology Ženski strip na Balkanu ("Balkan Women in Comics"), which appeared in English in 2012 under the title Balkan Comics: Women on the Fringe.
Bunjevac's first collection of comics, Heartless, appeared in 2012. It won a Doug Wright Spotlight Award at the 2013 Doug Wright Awards. She followed with the memoir Fatherland in 2014, which won the 2015 Doug Wright Award for Best Book. Nina’s third book, Bezimena, made the official selection at Angoulême International Comics Festival 2019, won Artemisia prize in the category of Best Drawing in France, and was awarded Best Book Jury Prize at 2019 Lucca Comics and Games in Lucca, Italy.[3]
List of works
- Heartless (2012)
- Fatherland (2014)
- Bezimena (2018)
References
- Ulinich 2015.
- Reiterer 2015.
- "About". Nina Bunjevac. Retrieved 17 December 2020.
Works cited
- Reiterer, Martin (12 March 2015). "Atem, der zu lange angehalten wurde". Wiener Zeitung (in German). Archived from the original on 13 March 2015. Retrieved 6 March 2016.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Ulinich, Anya (15 February 2015). "Fatherland, by Nina Bunjevac". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 6 September 2015. Retrieved 6 March 2016.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)