Tag: Horia

  • Horia, the debut feature of Ana-Maria Comănescu

    Horia, the debut feature of Ana-Maria Comănescu

    “Horia” is the title of Ana-Maria Comănescu’s debut feature film, which has recently been premiered in cinema halls across Romania. The film premiered at world level in November 2023, on the sidelines of the Black Nights Film Festival in Tallinn, Estonia. Romanian audiences could watch the film for the first time at the Films de Cannes à Bucarest Film Festival, a selection of films premiered at Cannes Film Festival, in the Premiers of the Fall competition, where it won the Public Award. A road and coming-of-age movie, using a script written by Ana-Maria Comănescu herself, the film tells the story of Horia, an 18-year-old teenager in a Romanian village, who falls in love with a girl on the other side of the world. After an argument with his father, Horia makes an impulsive gesture and leaves home, taking his father’s old motorcycle. On the road he meets Stela, a clever little girl, and the two are forced by circumstances to travel together and overcome a series of obstacles. Before Horia, Ana-Maria Comănescu directed three shorts (In the House, Te mai uiți și la om and Pipa, sexul si omleta), each obtaining various awards and selections in student and international film festivals as well as two nominations at the Gopo Awards. With every film, Ana-Maria Comănescu tried to get out of her comfort zone and take risks. She did the same with Horia, picking Vladimir Țeca and Angelina Pavel, two debutante actors, for the main roles. The two cross the country on a Mobra motorcycle manufactured in Romania in the 1970s. Ana-Maria Comănescu told us more.

     

     

    “I also did a road movie in college, but then the characters drove a car, not a motorbike, that’s why it was a little simpler, technically speaking. I love this kind of shooting where you’re always on the go, moving from one place to the next. It’s complicated, indeed, but it’s also fun, and you’re left with a crazy but lovely experience. From the beginning, I wanted my debut film to be a road movie. It’s one of my favorite genres, and it’s always a pleasure to play with a genre that is already out there, because you can spice it up with all kinds of elements from other genres. So, initially, we started from this idea of ​​making a road movie. Then I thought about the transformation Horia, the main character, undergoes during his journey. Because it is obvious that, at first, Horia is less mature compared to the end of the film. This trip, which lasts no more than a week, succeeds in making him a man. And I found this aspect of the story very interesting to explore: the fact that Horia leaves his village located somewhere in Dobrogea for the first time, thinking that this journey will be a short one, that it would last a day at most. But his journey is an initiation, a journey that turns out to be much longer and more complicated than he had anticipated. And, very importantly, once he leaves his village, Horia discovers the world for the first time. Which is precisely what I wanted viewers to discover together with him, to somehow accompany him on this journey so important for him. As I said before, the film also appeals to nostalgia and I think that through Horia we can also relive that period, the period in which we make the transition from adolescence to adulthood. I think most of us have done crazy things in our teens, taken risks when we were in love and hoped that our love was reciprocated. I thought Horia’s story is one that many of us can relate to”.

     

     

    Ana-Maria Comănescu, the screenwriter and director of Horia, told us what prompted her to cast Vladimir Țeca and Angelina Pavel as the male and female leads and how she built the relationship between the characters:

     

     

    “I worked on this script for many years, I rewrote it many times and it became clear to me that the Horia-Stela relationship is, in fact, the backbone of this film. It is the relationship with Stela that helps Horia change and embark on his transformational journey. That’s why it was important for the story that there were some differences between the two, that they somehow completed each other. Whereas Horia is an introverted and anxious character, scared of the world around himself, Stela is the opposite. She is open, very flexible, she can adapt to any situation. And I think each of the characters learns something from the other. In addition, I really wanted not to fall into the trap of a romantic plot. That’s why I chose to make the age difference between Horia and Stela still significant. And a thirteen-year-old girl like Stela can often be a lot more mature than an eighteen-year-old boy like Horia”.

     

     

    Liviu Cheloiu, Daniela Nane, Mihaela Velicu, Dragoș Olaru and Robert Onofrei are also cast in the film. The film was shot in spectacular areas in Romania, which the public will have the opportunity to discover from a fresh perspective. (VP)

     

  • Expoziția „Horror Vacui” de Horia Roșca la Muzeul Național al Țăranului Român

    Expoziția „Horror Vacui” de Horia Roșca la Muzeul Național al Țăranului Român

    Muzeul Național al Țăranului Român (MȚR) a
    prezentat din a doua jumătate a lunii decembrie 2023 și până în a doua jumătate
    a lunii ianuarie 2024 o expoziție a unui artist contemporan român stabilit în
    Germania: Horia Roșca în expoziția Horror Vacui. Horia Roșca a absolvit
    Institutul de Arte Plastice din București și în 1982 a plecat din România în
    Italia, ca din 1983 să fie stabilit în Germania. Din 1983 până în prezent a
    avut 25 de expoziții personale în Germania, Suedia, Belgia, Italia, Franța,
    Statele Unite ale Americii, Canada și Japonia. Este prima sa expoziție
    personală în țara natală. Despre expoziție și despre artistul Horia Roșca am
    stat de vorbă cu managerul MȚR, Virgil Ștefan Nițulescu:


    Horia Roșca este un pictor
    care a fugit, cum se spunea pe vremuri, din România, evident înainte de 1989,
    și s-a stabilit în Germania. Din păcate, nu s-a prea auzit de el în România și
    asta este păcat. El nu a mai expus la noi în țară. Este un pictor care s-a
    format într-o școală ce amintește în bună măsură de pictura occidentală care se
    practica acum câteva decenii: o manieră uneori constructivistă, o manieră care
    amintește uneori de un pictor precum Braque, să spunem. Dar sigur că orice
    pictor este original și eu nu am dat aceste repere decât pentru a face ca un
    ascultător care nu a apucat să vadă expoziția, să știe cam la ce să se aștepte.


    Termenul de Horror Vacui este un termen de
    sorginte latină ce definește o teorie propusă de filosoful grec Aristotel, care
    a sugerat că natura are oroare de vid, cu alte cuvinte definește frica de
    spațiul gol. Teoria a fost adoptată și în fizică de Galileo Galilei, iar în
    artele plastice este un fenomen în care întreaga suprafață sau spațiu al unei
    lucrări de artă este umplută cu conținut, lăsând liber pe cât de puțin loc
    posibil.


    Despre ce înseamnă titlul expoziție din
    perspectiva teoriei lui Artistotel și despre ce a propus artistul Horia Roșca
    în cadrul acesteia, ne spune tot Virgil Nițulescu:


    Expoziția este interesantă,
    zic eu, și este practic, pe înțelesul fiecărui vizitator. Nu este o expoziție
    complicată. Te poți uita însă cu grijă la fiecare dintre tablouri și poate că
    unul dintre motivele pentru care autorul a ales acest titlu Horror Vacui este
    acela că într-adevăr este o mare aglomerare de lucrări pe pereți. Este vorba
    despre Sala Irina Nicolau, a doua sală ca mărime pentru expoziții temporare a
    muzeului nostru, în care practic nu a lăsat niciun loc liber. A fost dorința
    lui să aibă o asemenea expoziție așa ușor aglomerată, în care poți să stai însă
    mult timp fără să te plictisești, pentru că nu este o expoziție cu tablouri
    trase în serie. Știți, există în momentul de față mulți artiști contemporani
    care fac serii de lucrări și poți să vezi diverse variante ale aceluiași
    subiect. Nu este cazul lui Horia Roșca. Fiecare lucrare este individualizată în
    comparație cu toate celelalte. Temele sunt diverse, de la peisaje la portrete
    și foarte multe lucrări. Toate sunt într-o manieră abstractă și cred că această
    frică de spațiu de care autorul amintește încă din titlu poate să fie de
    interes pentru oricare vizitator.


  • March 28, 2021

    March 28, 2021

    MEASURES A new series of measures aimed at fighting the Covid-19 pandemic
    are coming into effect in Romania as of today. The new measures include a weekend
    night curfew starting at 20 hours in regions with an infection rate that exceeds
    four per thousand. In these regions shops are to close down at 18 hours while
    in areas with an infection rate over 7.5 per thousand, restrictions will be in
    force during the entire week. According to the latest data published by the
    authorities, over 44 hundred new infections have been reported in Romania in
    the past 24 hours most of them in Bucharest. A year on from the onset of the
    pandemic, 930 thousand infections have been reported in Romania with a death
    toll over 23 thousand. The number of Romanians who got at least a dose of the
    anti-Covid vaccine has exceeded 1,900,000. Half of them have also been given
    the booster dose.






    HOLIDAY Catholic believers are today celebrating Palm Sunday
    marking our Lord’s triumphal entry into Jerusalem, where people welcomed him
    with palm branches. This year in Italy, a country, which imposed some of the most
    severe anti-Covid measures, religious services, including at the Vatican, will
    be attended by a smaller number of believers. Palm Sunday also marks the
    beginning of the Passion Week, when Christians are getting ready to celebrate
    the Resurrection of Christ. According to Radio Romania correspondent in Rome,
    this Passion Week is almost similar to that last year when Pope Francis prayed
    alone in San Pietro square. This year, Catholic believers are celebrating
    Easter on April 4th whereas the Orthodox, who are a majority in
    Romania will mark the resurrection of Christ on May 2nd.






    DST
    Daylight Saving Time began in Romania last night when clocks were set one hour
    forward and the difference between the local time and GMT became of three
    hours. DST was first introduced in Romania back in 1932 but this might be the
    last hour change as the European Parliament in 2019 voted in favour of
    scrapping this measure inside the EU. Each member state is to decide whether to
    keep implementing the DST or not. Countries willing to keep the summer hour
    made the change last night, whereas those preferring the winter hour are to
    make the final change in the last Sunday of October.






    FOOTBALL Romania’s national football side are today playing their second
    game in the World Cup 2022 preliminaries against Germany. Our footballers on
    Thursday clinched 3-2 home win against North Macedonia and are to take on
    Armenia in an away game on the last day of March. Romania’s group also includes
    Iceland and Lichtenstein and the first side in the ranking qualifies for the
    final tournament. Sides on the second position are to play tie matches. On
    Saturday night, Romania’s under-21 side secured a 2-1 win against Hungary in
    Budapest, in a game counting towards the Group A of the European Under-21 Championship.
    On Wednesday Romania ended in a one-all draw their game against the strong side
    of the Netherlands and will be up against Germany on March 30th. The
    first two sides in the group will qualify for the final tournament due over May
    31st and June 6th.






    TENNIS Romanian tennis player Horia Tecau and Marcelo Arevalo of
    Salvador have qualified for the round of 16 of the Miami Open ATP Masters 1000,
    a competition with over three million dollars in prize money. The two secured a
    6-4, 6-3 win against Henri Kontinen of Finland and Edouard Roger Vasselin of
    France. This new pair will be up against top-seeded Juan Sebastian Cabal and
    Robert Farah in the eighth finals.




    (bill)



  • Architect Horia Creanga

    Architect Horia Creanga

    Two names stand out among Romania’s modernist architects: Marcel Iancu, an avant-garde fine artist who rose to fame in Israel after having designed several gorgeous villas in Bucharest, and Horia Creanga, who designed some of the best known landmarks in the Romanian capital city. A descendant of the great Romanian prose writer Ion Creanga, Horia Creanga managed in a brief, but intensive period to modernise a major boulevard in Bucharest and the interwar industrial outskirts. Ana-Maria Zahariade, a professor with the Bucharest Architecture University and co-author of a book entitled “Horia Creanga: A monograph,” gave us a few details about the architect’s life:



    “He was born in 1892 and was the grandson of writer Ion Creanga. His family was not wealthy, they were lower middle class living in Bucharest. At the end of WW1, in which he took part, Horia put together an exhibition of his watercolour works, at the Romanian Athenaeum, and sold them in order to pay for his studies at the Fine Arts School in Paris, where a lot of Romanian architects at that time used to go. Although the first Romanian school of architecture was founded in 1892, many young Romanians would further their education in Paris. After he graduated, he worked in the workshop of his university professor for a while. In Paris, he was living with his wife, Lucia Dumbraveanu-Creanga, one of the first Romanian women architects, together with whom back in Romania Horia opened their first architecture office, joined by his brother Ion Creanga as well. The office became quite successful. In the meantime Horia was also working for the City Hall, with the New Building Directorate, which was an opportunity for him to meet a lot of people who would later be his clients.”



    Not many details are known today about Horia Creanga’s personal life. But his works are well known, and many are still standing today. One of his first designs was the home of politician Petru Groza, who became a prime minister in 1945 and later a high-level member of the communist government. In the early 1920s, Horia Creanga built an avant-garde, Cubist-style mansion for Groza’s family. Then he started working with major private companies and industrialists for whom he designed most of his projects in Bucharest.



    “His first major project, a huge one in terms of importance and magnificence, was the ARO building. It was well known abroad as well, after its coverage in the Paris-based magazine L’Architecture. Horia Creanga won a competition organised by the members of the ARO Society. This building, which was known as the Patria building in the communist years and which is now in a terrible condition, was the first modernist building on the boulevard known today as Magheru, and previously as Bratianu, which was under construction at that time. This building was the talk of the town in those years, it was seen as a skyscraper, kind of shocking. It remained shocking for a while, but the people of Bucharest were also very fond of it. It had a gorgeous cinema hall, a bar and a restaurant. In the interwar years, it hosted outstanding performances, such as one by the violinist Yehudi Menuhin or the singer Maria Tanase. It was a representative place for the modern, progressive Romanian society after the Great War. Later on, Horia Creanga designed another building on the same boulevard, the Malaxa-Burileanu building, also presented in a major foreign magazine. At present we know of 78 projects by Horia Creanga, most of which have actually been built.”



    These projects include the Giulesti Theatre, currently the Children’s Comic Opera building, the Malaxa industrial works, later renamed “23 August,” in the eastern part of the city, and the Obor Halls. All these buildings were regarded as innovative not only in Romania, but in Europe as well. What drew Horia Creanga towards modernism was the simplicity and elegance of the lines. His ideal was to find the essence that gave a building its refinement and beauty. Ana-Maria Zahariade told us more about the last part of his life and about his legacy:



    “He gained recognition quite quickly, although it is hard for us today to find documents to prove this. The main architecture magazine at the time in Romania, published by the Architecture Society, did not promote modernism and hardly ever featured modernist projects. But Horia Creanga was highly appreciated, and we know this because he was commissioned works and his office expanded. A lot of talented young architects worked for him, such as Haralamb Georgescu, who later rose to fame in the US. Horia Creanga’s popularity came exclusively from his works. He never taught at the Architecture University, which focused mainly on the traditional or neo-Romanian style, and his office essentially created a parallel school of architecture. Horia Creanga worked primarily for private clients, such as the ARO Society, but he was also appreciated by the authorities, and some of his works were commissioned by the municipality. He was appointed as head of the Exhibition Department and worked for national exhibitions since the end of the 1930s. And his publicly-funded works confirm the official recognition gained over the years by the modernist style.”



    Today, the best-known work by Horia Creanga, the ARO-Patria building, in downtown Bucharest, is abandoned and in desperate need for immediate consolidation and repair.


    (translated by: Ana-Maria Popescu)

  • April 5, 2019

    April 5, 2019

    VISIT Romania’s Prime Minister Viorica Dancila is paying a formal visit
    to Slovakia at the invitation of her Slovakian counterpart, Peter Pellegrini.
    According to a communiqué of the government in Bucharest, the visit is meant to
    contribute to deepening cooperation between the two states, from a bilateral,
    European and regional perspective. Dancila will be traveling to Banska Bystrica
    for talks with the head of the Slovakian executive and will lay a wreath in the
    National Insurrection Square. The Romanian official will next travel to the
    city of Zvolen for a visit to the local military cemetery where the remains of 10
    thousand Romanian soldiers, who fought for the liberation of Czechoslovakia in
    WWll, are buried.












    MEETING An informal meeting of the EU finance ministers is taking
    place in Romania’s capital Bucharest on Friday and Saturday, against the
    backdrop of Romania’s holding the EU presidency. The meeting hosted today under
    the name Eurogrup, is bringing together Finance Ministers from the Eurozone and
    the first working session of the informal meeting of Finance Ministers and
    central bank governors, chaired by Romania’s field minister Eugen Teodorovici. Saturday
    will see the second informal meeting of EU Finance Ministers. Issues such as
    the impact of labour force mobility upon local economies and the role of
    taxation in fostering economic growth are high on the agenda of the session on
    Saturday.












    DEFENCE Romania’s Defence Minister Gabriel Les is in Warsaw to
    attend a meeting of Defence Ministers from countries, which are members of the Bucharest
    9 Initiative. The meeting, staged jointly by field ministries from Poland and
    Romania, is being attended by Defence Ministers from Bulgaria, the Czech
    Republic, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Hungary as
    well as by NATO officials and representatives of the US Department of Defence.
    According to the Romanian Defence Ministry, the meeting in Warsaw is an
    opportunity for tackling topical issues on NATO and EU agendas from the
    perspective of NATO anniversary summit and from Romania’s holding the EU
    half-yearly presidency.








    DRILL Between April 5th and 13th the
    Romanian navy is staging the biggest international drill in Romania’s
    territorial waters and in the international waters of the Black Sea. 14
    Romanian warships and six from Bulgaria, Canada, Greece, the Netherlands and
    Turkey are taking part in the drill during which over 2000 servicemen will be
    training to respond attacks coming from under the sea, air or surface. The
    drill’s scenario implies a coordinated crisis response carried out under a UN
    Security Council resolution. The aforementioned drill also involves the
    participation of the NATO Permanent Black Sea Force.










    TENNIS Marius Copil and Benjamin Lock are today opening the
    series of Davis Cup matches pitching the tennis sides of Romania and Zimbabwe in
    Piatra Neamt, north-eastern Romania towards Group Two of the Europe-Africa
    zone. The second game today is pitching Dragos Dima against Takanyi Garanganga,
    while on Saturday Horia Tecau and Florin Mergea will take on Benjamin Lock and
    Courtney Lock. The last two single games will oppose Copil to Garanganga and
    Dima to Lock. The two sides also met in 2000 in Harare, when Romanians secured
    a 3-2 win.










    FOOTBALL Currently signed up by Belgian team Standard Liege, the
    Romanian international footballer, 22-year old Razvan Marin has signed a
    five-year contract with Ajax Amsterdam, which begins this summer, the famous
    Dutch club has announced. Razvan Marin is the fifth Romanian footballer who got
    transferred to Ajax, after Cristian Chivu, Bogdan Lobonţ, George Ogăraru and Nicolae Mitea. Another
    Romanian, Stefan Kovacs was a headcoach for Ajax in the early 1970s. We recall
    that back then the famed Dutch team dominated European football.




    (translated by bill)