bg Sofia

Savov Family House

- Budapeshta Street 7 -
The construction of the residential building, designed by the Bulgarian architect , began in 1914 and was finished in 1916. The building was built for the construction entrepreneur Georgi Grigoriev Savov, who was born in , in 1868.

His daughter Ekaterina Savova-Nenova, which also lived in the house, was a famous Bulgarian artist and was born in 1901 in Sofia. In 1925 she graduated in painting from the under . In 1928, she married her fellow student from the academy, Ivan Nenov. She was a member of the Society of Independent Artists. In 1937 she won a silver medal for women's portraits at the World's Fair in Paris. From 1942 to 1962 she was a teacher of drawing at the Institute for the Training of Children's Teachers in Sofia. From 1943 to 1958 she had several solo exhibitions. She died in 1980 in Sofia, at the age of 78.
Ekaterina Savova-Nenova
In this house, she lived together with her husband Ivan Vassilev Nenov, who is also a Bulgarian artist, as well as a sculptor. He was born on May 17, 1902, in Sofia and was also a member of the National Academy of Arts. He is known for his portraits and nude paintings of women. In the early 1940s, his studio was destroyed in the of Sofia during the . In the 1950s he was prohibited from exhibiting his paintings and dismissed from the National Academy of Arts for being a Formalist. After that, he started working with clay. He died on September 4, 1997, in Sofia, at the age of 95.
Ivan Vassilev Nenov
The most eye-catching part of the Neo-Baroque and Art Nouveau building are the two . One of them is placed on the southeastern corner at a 45 degree angle and has a dome with a on top of it. The two supportive cone-shaped underneath this oriel window give the oriel window a harmonious connection with the walls below. The corbels are decorated with four and the two corbels underneath the other oriel window are decorated with floral ornamentation, , and . Even more volutes, corbels, guttae, as well as a can be seen in the frame above the windows on the second floor. On the third floor, you can see a decorative that's interrupted by a , which is surrounded by a garland. On top of the oriel windows, you can see a pointed , which one of them includes a cartouche.
An old photo from the 1970s showing the building