Excerpt:
...The self-taught Yugoslav painter
known as ‘Ilija’ had the pseudonymous surname of Bosilj
and the official surname of Basicevic. Born on August
2, 1895, the ninth child of a patriarchal Serbian peasant
family in Sid, a small town west of Belgrade, he attended
elementary school for only four years then spent his
childhood and youth as a shepherd in the meadows and
forests of the Bosut. He passed most of his adult life
as a farmer, cultivating maize and wheat, tending vineyards
and raising cows, horses, sheep, pigs and poultry. He
spent a good deal of World War II with his sons, in
Vienna, avoiding being conscripted to the army, but
during that time, he fell ill with tuberculosis. According
to family legend, Ilija was an extremely authoritarian
but just man, and a non-conformist.
After the War, Ilija returned home to Yugoslavia and
created his first drawings and gouaches at the end of
the 1950s when he was already in his fifties. Because
of the Yugoslavian government’s consolidation of land
at the time, he lost part of his property, and was anyway
prevented by illness from doing the more demanding jobs
around the farm. He began painting with oils on wood,
canvas, hardboard, paper and glass, working under the
mentorship of his older son Mica (1921–1987), an artist,
art historian, critic, poet. At that time, Mica was
director of the Gallery of Primitive Art in Zagreb.