Today his still-life paintings and icons are on display in the National Museum in Belgrade.
[1] Painters educated in the Academy of Fine Arts in Munich during the 1870s and after like Antonije Kovačević, Miloš Tenković, Djordje Milovanović (artist) and Đorđe Krstić brought fresh new ideas and showed new interests in the art world.
His designs integrated the scenic elements into the storytelling instead of having them separate and indifferent from the play's action.
Antonije's style was referred to as realism, a combination of bold use of colour and dramatic lighting.
[3] He also painted icons with his contemporary colleagues Steva Todorović and Nikola Marković.