bg Osijek

Ogrizek Family House

- Ulica Stjepana Radića 32 -
The two-story corner building, which features both a residential and commercial function, was built in 1895 for the Ogrizek family from Osijek by the project of the Austrian architect and builder . A particularly significant period for this house was when Đuro Tarnik's superb artistically equipped pharmacy was opened in it, for the decoration of which he engaged numerous excellent artists of his time. The furniture of the pharmacy was made in the Neo-Gothic style by Osijek carpenter and carver Josip Szép, the leading Croatian painter , who decorated the pharmacy with paintings and the bronze reliefs on the entrance doors of the pharmacy was a representative work of the Croatian sculptor Slavko Brüll, cast in 1924 at the Oblak foundry in .
The interior of the pharmacy
In addition to Tarnik's pharmacy, a well-known Osijek printing house operated in this house until the beginning of the , owned by Bela Frank, who was born in Osijek in 1877 and killed in in 1942. The printing house was founded in 1901, and in addition to printing books and magazines, it also performed bookbinding activities and included a bookstore and a paper shop. In 1922, Frank's printing house started printing the Frank's Library edition, in which cheap editions of short novels were published. Frank's printing house printed leaflets and publications for the needs of the Club of Croatian Writers and Artists in Osijek and the newsletter of the Croatian People's Party Hrvatski Glas. Over the long years of its existence, the building also housed the Consulate of the Republic of Albania for some time.
Part of the building when still in use as a pharmacy
The most eye-catching feature of the Neo-Renaissance building is the on the corner, which is covered with a hip roof that's topped with containing a . The that support the oriel window are lavishly decorated with and foliage. Underneath the roof , that moves along with the oriel window you can admire an motif. A pointed, a broken pointed, or a straight adorned with volutes is placed above the second floor windows. Underneath these pediments, you can see two supportive corbels, some of which are adorned with . In some cases, you can admire a , which can also be admired above the first floor windows. The second floor windows, some of which have a with incorporated underneath them, are flanked by pilasters topped by a Doric .
An old photo that shows the building on the left