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European & Russian Folklore & Mythology, Religion & Mythology in Art, General & Miscellaneous Sculpture, Folklore - General & Miscellaneous, Abstract Art, Modern Art, Eastern European & Russian / Soviet Art
Brancusi & Romanian Folk Traditions by Edith Balas β€” book cover

Brancusi & Romanian Folk Traditions

by Edith Balas
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Overview

Brancusi's Romanian heritage is an important subject for those who study the sculptor. He was 28 years old in 1904 when he arrived in Paris, where he spent the rest of his life. He considered himself Romanian, he dressed like a Romanian peasant, and lived like one. (He was in fact a sophisticated intellectual.)

When he arrived in Paris, the avant-garde was searching for original sources of inspiration. For many, African art filled that role. Brancusi found African art a trigger which released the reminiscences of his Romanian folk tradition. Brancusi used his heritage for formal and iconographical inspiration; however, his working method was inspired by the French avant-garde. Edith Balas shows that the pedestals and homemade furniture were for the artist as important an artistic product as his sculptures; he exchanged them occasionally. There are several new iconographical interpretations of sculptures previously not linked with the Romanian folklore.

About the Author, Edith Balas

EDITH BALAS has been Professor of Art History at Carnegie Mellon University for the past twenty-eight years, as well as Research Associate at the University of Pittsburgh. In addition to more than twenty articles in American and European journals, her publications include Brancusi and the Romanian Folk Tradition (East European Monographs, 1987; also available in Romanian translation), Michelangelo's Medici Chapel: A New Interpretation (American Philosophical Society, 1995), Joseph Csaky, a Pioneer of Modern Sculpture (American Philosophical Society, 1998), The Holocaust in the Painting of Valentin Lustig (Carnegie Mellon University Press, 2002), The Mother Goddess in Italian Renaissance Art (Carnegie Mellon University Press, 2002), The Early Work of Henry Koerner (Frick Art & Historical Center, 2003), and Brancu i es Brancusi (with Passuth Krisztina, Noran, Budapest, 2005). Dr. Balas has curated a number of exhibitions at the University of Pittsburgh, Carnegie Mellon University, Duquesne University, the Frick Art & Historical Center, the Institut Hongrois de Paris, and the Ernst Muzeum Budapest.

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Book Details

Published
January 28, 2006
Publisher
Carnegie-Mellon University Press
Pages
144
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780887484599

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