Šatrija art circle
The Šatrija art circle was a Lithuanian art society focused primarily on literature. It was established in 1926 by various students belonging to the Ateitis movement. Its component members included some of the most notable intellectuals of Lithuanian literature. It was also contemporary to other movements like the Žemininkai and Trečiafrontininkai.
History
Founding
The origins of the circle date back to literary gatherings hosted by Juozas Eretas and Vincas Mykolaitis-Putinas from 1924 to 1926. Putinas sought to create a more liberal alternative to the conservative line of the faculty of theology-philosophy and Lithuanian Catholic culture in general. In 1924 Putinas told Juozas Paukštelis and Ignas Petrušaitis to gather various literates. The gatherings would include the reading of original fiction, translations, and literary criticism. They would take place in nature, in universities, and sometimes in Putinas's apartment. The gatherings lacked formality and strict convention, as the members feared it would impact creative thinking.The Šatrija art circle itself was established in 1926. It was made official by the senate of the Vilnius University on 10 March 1927. The name was chosen by Putinas as well, in reference to the writer Šatrijos Ragana. An official celebration of the group was first organized on 29 May 1927 in a manor near Kaunas, in which everybody received special caps, seen usually in photos taken of the group. The chairman of the group was chosen to be Petrušaitis, and Putinas would be an honorary member and also patron of the group. Literature and academic life, as well as Catholic culture and aesthetic modernism were present in the works of the members. Members would also usually discuss classical music by Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven.