[1][2] Raičević undertook commissions for the Patriarchate of Peć and went to Bosnia and Herzegovina to paint icons for the iconostasis in the Church of the Holy Archangels Michael and Gabriel in Sarajevo.
[2] The Monastery of the Holy Trinity of Pljevlja, also known as Vrhobreznica, was the largest rewriting center (Scriptorium) in Montenegro during the period of Ottoman rule.
In the monastic brotherhood of the Holy Trinity, some of the most important achievements of Serbian manuscript literature from the Ottoman era were created.
John the Exarch's Hexameron (a 15th-century Russian translation) and Cosmas Indicopleustes's Christian topography, hand-copied by Gavrilo Trojičanin in 1649 and then illustrated by painter Andrija Raičević, were a remarkable and significant undertaking of miniature painting in the seventeenth century.
Raičević was a relative of Mojsije, the abbot of the Monastery of the Holy Trinity.