Background
Murat was born in Luka Šipanska near Dubrovnik in a Catholic family, as his uncle Vice Palunko was a noted priest and assistant bishop, and his older brother Andro Murat also became a priest.
Murat was born in Luka Šipanska near Dubrovnik in a Catholic family, as his uncle Vice Palunko was a noted priest and assistant bishop, and his older brother Andro Murat also became a priest.
After finishing primary school in Dubrovnik in 1883, Marko Murat attended the seminary in Zadar.
In 1886 he submitted a drawing to Vijenac which was noticed by Baron Lujo Vranyczany, who financed a scholarship for him to study at the Munich Art Academy. After graduation in 1893, he went to Rome and Paris. In 1894 he moved to Belgrade, where he finally settled in 1898, employed at the Second Belgrade Gymnasium.
In 1905 he was one of the founders of the Art&Craft school, the predecessors to the Academy of Fine Arts, Belgrade.
Murat was a proponent of Yugoslavism who wrote in his autobiography about Serb and Croat tribes of the Yugoslav nation. At the outbreak of World War I, he was in Dubrovnik, where Austrian authorities arrested him and held him in Hungary until May 1916.
After the war, Marko Murat had a major role as an art conservator in Dubrovnik, from 1919 to 1932. Marko Murat was one of the first impressionists in the South Slavic region.
Landscapes, portraits and historical compositions were his trademark.
He died in Dubrovnik. The manuscript of his unfinished autobiography was lost after his death and found only recently. lieutenant presents a rare description of everyday life in Dubrovnik in the 1860s and 1870s.
lieutenant was published in 2007 in the Croatian literary magazine Kolo.
Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts]
In 1920 he became an honorary member of Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts, and from 1940 he was a regular member.