Milka Trnina (1863–1941) was a soprano of international acclaim. Born in Vezišće, she studied singing in Zagreb and graduated from the conservatory in Vienna. She was a member of the opera companies in Leipzig, Graz, Bremen, and Munich, and from 1900 onwards, she worked as a freelance artist. She frequently performed at London’s Covent Garden and the Metropolitan Opera in Boston. A standout among her many roles is Puccini’s Tosca. Upon returning to Zagreb, she became an honorary professor at the Academy of Music. 

She donated items to the Ethnographic Museum, which she had received from her friend William Sturgis Bigelow, a collector of Japanese and Chinese art whose extensive collection is housed in the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston. In the 1880s, Bigelow lived in Japan, which had recently opened up to international trade, sparking a wave of interest in Japanese art and design in the West. Since there were no laws restricting the export of cultural heritage items at that time, valuable objects were sold off in large numbers. Affordable ukiyo-e woodblock prints were also in high demand, inspiring European Impressionist and Post-Impressionist painters. However, the adoption of Japanese artistic concepts was often based on European perceptions of Japanese culture.