There
are two superb guidebooks on cultural Romania – The Pallas Guide to Romania (2009) edited by John Villiers who
worked for the British Council here for 3 years; and Caroline Juler’s Blue Guide Romania (2000) – curiously out of print already. (Her blogsite Carpathian Sheep Walk gives a good sense of the life of one of the many sections of people still trying to life off the land here).
Villier’s
book has chapters on the country’s history; the painted monasteries; the wooden
churches and fortified churches of Transylvania; art and architecture; and
Bucharest. But its section on art only lists about 10 painters in a couple of
lines – very curious treatment for a book which purports to be about culture!
Having
been so bowled over in recent years ago by Bulgarian realist painting of the first part of the 20th Century that I produced a booklet about it, events seemed to conspire against a similar
appreciation of Romanian painters of the same period. Bulgarian galleries and
books, somehow, were more evident and accessible in Sofia than their
equivalents in Bucharest
I
have, however, made some effort in the past year to track down the full beauty of the Romanian
painting which were in such evidence a hundred years ago (it’s amazing how many
superb Romanian painters were born around 1880!). Not easy since so many were
secreted in private collections during the Communist period – some even before
then eg the Zambaccian collection.
And quite a few of the nouveaux riches after 1989 have developed their own private collections - which have been captured in a huge book in 2012 by painter Vasile Parizescu. One of the collectors is "businessman" Tiberiu Posteinica who was so brazen as to produce a sizeable book to glorify his ill-gotten collection. I was lucky enough to find a copy in a second-hand bookshop here.
And quite a few of the nouveaux riches after 1989 have developed their own private collections - which have been captured in a huge book in 2012 by painter Vasile Parizescu. One of the collectors is "businessman" Tiberiu Posteinica who was so brazen as to produce a sizeable book to glorify his ill-gotten collection. I was lucky enough to find a copy in a second-hand bookshop here.
The
national art galleries here (and various publishing houses) have, of course, published
various books on Romanian painters but making no concessions in recent years to
those without the Romanian language and focussing on a favoured few such as Nicolae Grigorescu, Theodor Amman, Camil Ressu and Theodor Pallady.
Things were actually better in the 1960s when the Meridian publishing house
produced a great series of affordable booklets on Romanian painters (with attractive
pasted prints). From the second-hand bookshops here I have slowly acquired many of these – eg Nicolae Darescu, StefanPopescu, JeanSteriadi and Josef Iser.
And last year I came across two great websites which have allowed me to access the
Romanian painting tradition – a personal one ; and ArtIndex
– a Romanian Art Review. So I now have a list of 75 classic Romanian painters (compares with a list of 150 Bulgarian for a country one quarter of Romania's size).
My initial selections have been posted here
My initial selections have been posted here