Zenitism

Zenitism (Serbo-Croatian: Zenitizam / Зенитизам) was an avant-garde art movement in Yugoslavia that lasted from 1921 until 1926, first appearing in Zagreb from 1921 to 1924 and from 1924 in Belgrade.

[1] It primarily involved visual arts, graphic design, poetry, literature, theatre, film, architecture and music.

[2] Like other avant-garde movements at the time, it held anti-war, anti-bourgeois and anti-nationalist views and rejected traditional culture and art.

Barbarogenie was capable of recovering Europe using his barbaric strength of a man from the Balkans, unsoiled by the legacy of European civilization which collapsed after WW1.

He created the new magazine where he proclaimed the "Serbianhood manifest", promoting Serbian integralism and unitarism, and Serbia as the unifying center of all Serbs.

Zenit , a monthly periodical about Zenitism, ran from 1921 until it was forbidden in 1926
Ljubomir Micić was the founder of the movement. He was one of the leading avant-garde socialists in Europe after World War I .