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ARTS & ARCHITECTURE
This section is courtesy of
Romanian
National Tourism Office for North America.
Visiting Romania gives you the chance to see
Constantin Brancusi's works in the marvelous setting of
a park in Targu Jiu, near Hobita, his home village. "The
Endless Column" (Coloana Infinita), "The Gate of
the Kiss" (Poarta Sarutului), "The Table of Silence"
(Masa Tacerii) and "The Alley of Chairs" (Aleea
Scaunelor) are displayed among trees and lawns as Brancusi
wanted them to be.
Romania has a great diversity of museums preserving every
facet of its history and arts. Some are small museums, catering
to enthusiasts with a taste for special interests such as
pharmacy, clocks, railway trains, folk arts and architecture,
wine making and traditional crafts. Larger museums host
regular exhibitions from around the world, as well as housing
permanent collections of paintings and sculptures. Prominent
museums include Romania's National Museum of Art, the Art
Collections Museum, the Village Museum, the Museum of the
Romanian Peasant in Bucharest, and the Bruckenthal Museum
in Sibiu. For a listing of Websites offering more information
on Romania's Museums.
Romanians' vivid imagination and intense spirituality have
always been expressed through their architecture. Fortunately,
they also have strong preservation instincts, resulting
in village museums that display bygone ways of life through
found and restored peasant houses, elaborately carved gates,
barns and other architectural elements. The best and most
comprehensive of these is the Village Museum (Muzeul
Satului) in Bucharest. Constructed by a visionary during
the 1930s on a large tract within the city, this is a fascinating
collection of more than 300 houses and other structures
from every region of Romania. It also has a small museum
and shop of fine Romanian crafts. Other such village museums
well worth visiting are Museum of Wood (Muzeul Lemnului)
in Campulung Moldovenesc and Museum of Peasant Techniques
(Muzeul Tehnicii Populare) in Sibiu. Both have collections
of early farm tools and household implements.
Monasteries, churches, synagogues, castles and palaces throughout
the country, some dating from the 12th Century, depict the
country's tumultuous history. Even its Communist era is
expressed through Ceausescu's master planning and rebuilding
of Bucharest. The best example of his testament to secularity
is the Palace of Parliament — the world's second largest
building after the U.S. Pentagon — whose 1,000 rooms
reflect the country's best architects, artisans and building
materials. Among the best examples of Romanian's Orthodox
religion are the painted monasteries of Southern Bucovina,
acclaimed as masterpieces of art and architecture, "perfectly
in harmony with their surroundings and unique in the world
for their painted exteriors." They hold UNESCO's Prix d'Or
for "artistic, spiritual and cultural value." Of the five
best known, the most famous is Voronet, also called the
"Sistine Chapel of the East" whose blue exterior background
lent its name to the color "Voronet Blue." These are essential
sights for anyone interested in religious architecture,
but they are only a few of Romania's architectural treasures.
Romania's Architectural Treasures,
by location:
Bucharest
Palace of Parliament, Cotroceni Palace, Royal Palace, Patriarchal
Complex, St. Joseph's Roman Catholic Cathedral, Italian
Church, Russian Church, Anglican Church, Armenian Church,
Great Synagogue, Choral Temple, Sutu Palace, Mogosoaia Palace.
Wallachia
Peles and Pelisor Castles (Sinaia), Iulia Hasdeu Castle
(Campina), Hurez Monastery, Dinu Mihail Palace (Craiova).
Moldova
Painted Monasteries of Southern Bucovina (Voronet, Sucevita,
Moldovita, Humor and Putna), Ruginoasa Palace, Metropolitan
Cathedral, Great Synagogue, Palace of Culture (Jassy).
Transylvania
Black Church (Brasov), Bran Castle (Bran), Brukenthal Palace
(Sibiu), Hunedoara Castle (near Deva), Sighisoara Medieval
Town, Sibiu — Old Town, Brasov — Old Town, Fortified
Churches in Biertan, Harman and Prejmer.
Maramures
Wooden Churches, Wood Museum, Sighet Synagogue (Sighetu
Marmatiei), Satu Mare Synagogue
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