'', Matica Srpska Gallery, Novi Sad Stevan Aleksić produced around 230 canvas paintings, decorated more than 20 churches with 100 icons and a number of wall frescoes, and made 60 sketches and drawings. Since his early career, Aleksić dealt in decorating churches; he was especially skilled at making monumental compositions with religious or historical context and decorated a number of sacral objects around
Vojvodina. At the same time, in the first decade of the 20th century, he worked as a
portraitist. One of Aleksić's most notable works is the "Merry People of Banat". He exhibited it at the 4th Yugoslav Art Exhibition in Belgrade in 1912, but received a lot of negative criticism, especially by the communist politician turned art critic
Moša Pijade, who wrote that "Some fellow from Modoš, named Aleksić, produced an incredibly bad painting of the people of Banat". After this fiasco, Aleksić never again exhibited in
Belgrade, and remained a marginal figure on the Belgrade art scene over the next half-century. Even after the failure of the "Merry People of Banat" Aleksić continued to explore and vary the motive. In 1922, a year before he died, he made his last version of the painting putting himself on the canvas and thus becoming one of the participants in the festive atmosphere. Scenes from the pubs were a popular motive in his days. However, while some painters used this setting to express certain morality issues, it is believed that Aleksić had no such intentions. Among his most notable works is a series of self-portraits produced between 1895 and 1922 It is the largest such series in Serbian painting and can be used to track his artistic, mental as well as physical development. Aleksić often depicted himself sitting at a table in a pub, but in the years prior to his death the paintings become more macabre and ominous; he is often accompanied by the figure of
Death, sitting at his table, playing the
violin or looking at his plate. The largest collection of Aleksić's paintings can be seen in the
Matica Srpska Gallery in Novi Sad, while the
National Museum of Serbia and the National Museum in
Zrenjanin also exhibit extensive collections. ==Criticism==