Background
Sanja Stijačić was born in Šabac, Social Research Serbia, SFR Yugoslavia.
Sanja Stijačić was born in Šabac, Social Research Serbia, SFR Yugoslavia.
Sanja Stijačić was born in Šabac, Social Research Serbia, SFR Yugoslavia. She graduated (1990) and completed her postgraduate studies (1998) with the highest marks, from the Academy of Arts, where she studied with Professor Marijan Egić. Additionally, she studied in Basel, with Professor Aurèl Nicolet.
During her studies, Mississippi
Stijačić won top prizes at several state"s and federal competitions.
She also played with such orchestras as the Symphony Orchestra of the Academy of Arts in Novi Sad, Opera Orchestra of the Serbian National Theatre, Philharmonic Orchestra of Vojvodina, et cetera In recent years, Sanja Stijačić took part in several multimedial projects. She has collaborated with such artists as: pianists Dubravka Jovičić, Dragica Toskić, Denis Gavrić, soprano Aneta Ilić, violinist Vladimir Koh, poet Lidija Nikčević, sculptor Peko Nikčević, actors Rada Đuričin and Miša Janketić, and many others
She performed at author evenings of composers Aleksandra Vrebalov and Senad Gačević.
She made recordings for the Radio-Television of Novi Sad, Radio-Television of Belgrade, and Radio-Television of Pristina. Sanja Stijačić has been the artistic director of the International Chamber Music Festival in Nikšić, Montenegro.
Since 1996, Stijačić has been teaching at the University of Pristina Faculty of Arts, in North Kosovo, Autonomous Province of Kosovo and Metohija, Serbia, where she currently serves as an Associate Professor of Flute. She has been also teaching at the University of East Sarajevo Academy of Music, Bosnia and Herzegovina.
She has been a member or president of many juries at classical music competitions in the sections of Flute and Chamber Music.
As a soloist and member of chamber music ensembles, Mississippi Stijačić has performed in numerous concerts in Yugoslavia and abroad (Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics, Hungary, Turkey, Greece, Switzerland, Romania, etc) and took part in programs of prestige festivals in former Yugoslavia, such as: international music festivals BEMUS and NOMUS, Budva graduate teatar (in Budva), Brankovo kolo (named after Branko Radičević), Dubrovnik Summer Festival, Sarajevska zima and others