Tag: photography

  • Jeno Major’s Romania

    Jeno Major’s Romania

    We’re still early into the summer season and we’re extending an
    invitation to you all: why don’t you join us for a radio journey at the heart
    of the archaic Romanian village? Our guide is an actor with the Gong Children
    and Youth Theater in Sibiu, Jeno Major. Passionate about photography, whenever
    he has some time off, Jeno Major travels around the country, far and wide, in a
    bid to have snapshots of people and breathtaking landscapes.
    Jeno Major:


    It happened eight
    years ago, it just happened at one fell swoop. I was a very passionate angler
    and after I gave up fishing I changed my life, I began with photography. At
    present, I have also started to include human beings in the landscape since they render
    the frame livelier,
    I also took advice from Sorin Onișor, a good friend of mine, whose workshops I ‘ve
    been to when they first kicked off and from whom I learned so many things. First
    off, the relationship with the people as I was afraid to take pictures of
    people, that is why I photographed only landscapes…the relationship with the people
    is pretty difficult, as you all know, yet he had a gift, well, he still has
    that gift, as we speak, that of interacting with people, he can enter people’s
    hearts in just a few seconds and I tried to learn a little bit from him and, in
    time, I could photograph people myself, I could include people in my
    landscapes, in a bid to put life into the latter, as he also said, as he was
    saying they were barren, without people in them. And that’s how I began to
    get acquainted with the village life and make ethnographic photography. I had
    no relatives in the countryside, as a child, I didn’t have any contact with the
    livestock, with all things rustic, rural, with the villages. Now I have the
    opportunity to do that through photography. I can’t stand mingling with many
    people, I don’t like the the hullaballoo, I hate the crowds. That is why I take
    refuge, whenever I can, on the hills, in nature. I have liked nature and the trekking
    even since I was little and that’s what I do now, whenever I have some time
    off.


    Sunrises or sunsets over mountain ridges, mist lifting above a
    village, isolated trees, people mowing, an old woman fetching firewood, a
    shepherd climbing down with his sheep, a cow on a hilltop, forgotten trades, all
    of them, through Jeno Major’s photographs, tell the story of places in deep
    Romania, some of them unbeknownst to Romanians themselves. Jeno Major:

    We still have, as compared to other countries in Europe and
    beyond, the world over, that kind of archaic characteristic, the tradition,
    the traditional apparel, the church, the chaise, the wagon, the hay…you cannot find such things in other countries. Foreigners ask me, when they see the
    haystacks in my photographs, what are these…They haven’t seen something like
    that for several hundred years. They ask me if there are
    people living there. That’s what the archaic traits and the Romanian tradition consist of. We still have God-forsaken villages in the Apuseni Mountains,
    mainly, the place where you can travel a couple of hundred years back in time. If
    you take a picture there you cannot date it exactly. The most beautiful place I
    like best, in Romania, in terms of landscape photography and more, like I said
    I make ethnographic photography as well, is the Ponor Fundatura of Sureanu
    Mountains. There you can return a couple of dozen times, a couple of hundred times,
    and each time the situation is different. Mist,
    steam, frost, steaming haystacks, people with their
    livestock at every bend, in every corner…after each rock there is something to
    photograph. It is one of the most beautiful places in Romania, if you ask me…The
    hay wagon, bulls drawing a yoke, the peasant in traditional apparel, the innate hospitality
    of the villagers who live in those remote villages, deep in the mountains, who do not have very good access roads to those villages…There, people are humbler,
    closer to God, more faithful, more kind-hearted…You know how village people are
    like! That is why foreigners come over, because they cannot find something like
    that anywhere else. They had something like that a long, long time ago, only
    their great-great parents had something like that 200, 300 years ago. We still have those things.


    The Ponor Fundatura, the Ponor Dear end, is
    recurrent in Jeno Major’s stories. However, says he, and he doesn’t claim to be
    the Center of the universe, the entire archaic, traditional Romania is extraordinary.
    As for the peasants inhabiting it, elderly people, they are still hospitable,
    open and warm-hearted, something you don’t see that much of, in today’s world.


    I can still
    remember an old woman from Maramures, she was 92. I think she’s gone, the poor
    thing, she passed away, that’s for sure, as that happened in the early days of
    my photography undertaking, it was 6 or 7 years ago and I don’t know if she is
    still alive…I went to see her and she was working in a house made of clay
    bricks, with an earthen floor, a bulb hanging down from the ceiling with a yellowed
    newspaper around it, a table and a bed. On that table there was a crust of bread. tI was like a movie scene; it was something fantastic. Her face was reflecting
    the light from the window as she was seated in bed. It was a wonderful frame! First
    time, we had some small talk, she told me the whole story of her life, of her
    children’s life, of her nephews who were abroad, as you need to make friends
    with somebody and after that, in five or ten minutes’ time, any villager opens
    up, they are like an open book, they tell you everything straight away and offer
    everything. What I’m trying to say is that, actually, that woman, that old
    woman, when we left, she had six eggs under a broody hen, they were the only
    ones, I don’t think she had something else around the house, it was the only
    food she had but she deprived herself of it and gave them to me. There were more of us photographers,
    we refused her, we didn’t want to take them, but she insisted so much that we
    left accepting the eggs, and other things as well…


    According to the connoisseurs, Jeno Major’s
    photographs are not just landscapes or mere portraits, they are priceless
    testimonies of a world gradually disappearing in the grinder of modernity. He
    admits that himself.


    Unfortunately, yes, I think that, given the
    pace things are moving at, I think that in one, maybe two generations at the
    most, the entire archaic and traditional traits will become extinct, because
    there are many people from all over the country who have left, from Maramureș,
    Bucovina, Transylvania, from everywhere. If you talk to the village people,
    there isn’t a single family without at least one member, a child, a nephew, a
    brother, who are gone abroad, and they return with a tiny bit, with a little bit of money,
    I don’t know how much money they make the years they’ve been hanging out there to
    make a buck, they bring down those very beautiful houses they have and
    build some…how shall I put it…some kitschy houses. It is incredible, what happens,
    and the traditional houses disappear, unfortunately. Something should be…I don’t
    know, something should be done about that so we can keep them, but I don’t
    know how something like that should be done.


    Let us make the most of all these beautiful things while we can because,
    gradually, they will become extinct! Or at least that’s what Jeno Major says. All
    the beautiful things will only remain in the photographs of those who, just
    like him, might be nostalgic as they say, in a couple of years’ time: That
    used to be my Romania!

  • The early days of photography in Romania

    The early days of photography in Romania



    Western foreigners who travelled to Romania and settled here brought the art and craft of photography with them. In the mid-19th century, photography became popular rather quickly. After the 1850s, actually, the Romanian photography market boomed, with photo studios cropping up in every major city, and with a clientele eager to benefit from the new services. Foreign photographers made history in Romania. Their legacy is an important documentary source about how the cities and the people looked like, at that time. Carol Popp of Szathmary, Franz Mandy, Franz Duschek, Adolphe A. Chevallier are some of the noted foreign photographers of the 19th century. However, the Romanians Ioan Spirescu and Iosif Berman are also among the pioneers of Romanian photography.



    One of the most prolific Romanian photographers was Stelian Petrescu. He left a great number of photo films and photographs. Petrescu was born in Giurgiu, in 1874, into a well-to-do family and died in Bucharest, on July 23rd, 1947. For his secondary education, Petrescu took a math and sciences track, being attracted by science in primary school. Then he graduated from the Faculty of Chemistry and Physics Sciences in Bucharest. Petrescu was appointed teacher with the Gheorghe Șincai high-school. In a couple of years time he went to Germany to get a second degree, in Geodesy. Stelian Petrescu returned to Romania in 1901. He resumed his teaching activity and had a stint with the Higher Vocational School in Iasi. In 1909 Petrescu was employed as an engineer with the Romanian Railway Company and kept his job until he retired, in 1930. Stelian Petrescu never renounced his teaching profession. Concurrently, he taught sciences in Bucharest.



    One of the greatest events in the early 20th century was the Jubilee Exhibition staged in 1906 in Bucharest. The exhibition was meant to pay tribute to Carol I of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringens four decades of reign, which began in 1866. The exhibition was mounted according to a French pattern. It benefitted from the attention of all domestic institutions, also enjoying international presence.



    The exhibition was also an opportunity for photographers to make themselves visible. Attending were renowned names of that time, such as those of Alexandru Antoniu, Franz Mandy or Adolf Klingsberg, the owner of the famous “Julietta” photo studio in Bucharest. Less well-known names also participated, such as Marko Klein, the owner of a photo studio in Braila. Petrescu also participated and even scooped the 1st prize and the gold medal, Based with the National Library of Romania, the historian Adriana Dumitran documented Stelian Petrescus passion for photography, as well as his presence at the Jubilee Exhibition in 1906.



    Adriana Dumitran:



    “His first presence in a major international exhibition was in 1906, at the Romanian General Expo, where he represented the School Department. His participation was noted by the media. He showed photographs with military themes, Romanian landscapes, portraits, animals. He had quite a large number of works on display, although we dont know precisely how many.” Stelian Petrescu rose to fame, his talent was in high demand and he started looking for more areas in which he could use his knowledge.



    Adriana Dumitran again:



    “He started working with the Committee on Historical Monuments. In 1908, when the Committee launched a Bulletin, he had his works published there at least until World War I, in several issues until 1912. He worked a lot with architect Nicolae Ghica-Budești and illustrated a number of books, including, in 1909, an album on the religious artefacts at the Probota monastery, and that same year another one on items from the Neamț and Secu monasteries. One of his most interesting contributions was photographing the paintings of Nicolae Grigorescu for a monograph by Alexandru Vlahuță devoted to this great painter, in 1910.”


    Stelian Petrescu remained a scientist nonetheless, and this was evident in his newfound passion for photography.



    Adriana Dumitran:



    “His interest in the railways converged with photography. In 1913 he published a visual guide of the Romanian Railways. At that time, România had 3,500 km of railways crossing the entire country. He travelled that distance, took photos, illustrated this guide with them, and for each railway hub he presented the cultural, historical and other landmarks. The guide features over 350 photographs.”



    He also continued to photograph major public events. On 16th October 1922, he took snapshots of King Ferdinand, Queen Marie and senior politicians at Bucharests Arch of Triumph.



    After his retirement in 1930, he published his photos in technical magazines. He switched to a modernist style, with photos of railway construction hall interiors, engine components, bearings and other pieces used in the railway industry. He photographed the Malaxa Plant and published an album with the products made there. He was regarded as a “niche” photographer, and his work remains to this day of exceptional value for the history of industry in Romania. (EN, A.M.P)




  • Photographer Adolphe A. Chevallier

    Photographer Adolphe A. Chevallier

    Foreigners and Romanians immortalized landscapes, people, places and everyday situations, in the first half of the 19th century. Romanian war photography is associated with names such as that of Carol Popp of Szathmary, who took part in the Crimean War of 1853-1856. Franz Duschek was the author of some of the oldest photographs of Bucharest. The photographer of the Romanian War of Independence from 1877-1878 was Franz Mandy, Ioan Spirescu introduced color photography, and Iosif Berman was, at the beginning of the 20th century, the father of Romanian photojournalism. Adolphe A. Chevallier, a photographer of Swiss-Romanian origin from the city of Piatra Neamț, made a name for himself among all these personalities.



    Born to a Swiss father and a Romanian mother in 1881, in northern Moldavia, Chevallier decided, as a child, that he would become a visual artist. He studied photographic art in Lausanne, Switzerland, where he was sent by his father. He obtained a license as photographer of the Royal Court and opened a photography workshop in Piatra Neamț where he made photographs. Some of them became illustrated postcards. Professor Sergiu Găbureac and Ilie Gînga are the authors of the volume Chevallier, the photo-chronicler of the German lands.



    One of the two authors, Sergiu Găbureac, referred to the support that Chevallier enjoyed in his profession: “A forestry engineer at the time, especially as Adolphe Chevallier – the father was called by King Carol I to return to the country to deal with the forestry area of Moldavia, did not have financial problems. What sets Chevallier apart from the multitude of photographers of the time? First of all, all the photographers of the time were focused on earning a living. Of course, Chevallier was also concerned about earning a living, but he was very inspired to take photographs of public interest. These photographs of public interest became, over the years, a real ethnographic treasure for researchers and even in his time Chevalier was very much appreciated. Many of his photos turned into postal messengers.



    What did Chevallier photograph? Sergiu Găbureac structured his book into eight chapters in which he answers this question to the reader: In the chapter ‘On mountain paths he describes Mount Ceahlău, Rodna mountains, Bistrița valley. The chapter ‘Hearths of Light includes everything related to spiritual light, churches and monasteries in the area of Moldavia, reaching as far as Cernăuți where he received an order to make a set of photographs for the Romanian Patriarchate in 1938. In the chapter entitled ‘The Brosteni and Bicaz Crown Estates, the photographs we have are almost unique in their kind, since they capture the development of that particular area. Chapter 4, ‘The Royal family and Bicaz is yet another one-of-a-kind thing, and that because he was the only photographer accepted by the royal family when they took a group photo while being stranded in Bicaz during the first World fatality. Chapter 5 is very interesting, since it includes almost all daily trades of the Bistrita Valley dwellers. In Chapter 6, the traditional apparel is presented in all its splendor and beauty, not only the traditional apparel of Moldavia, but also that OF other regions across the country. With Chevallier we can eventually take a stroll around Piatra Neamt, in Chapter 7, as well as around other places, thanks to the document-images, given that quite a few of the edifices built at that time were brought down during the communist regime. Chapter 8 focuses on Romanias first scouts jamboree, which was held in Piatra Neamt.“



    World War One was looming large over Europe around 1914. In 1916, Romania took sides as a belligerent country. As for Chevallier, he volunteered in the army. He had a stint with the Military hospital in Piatra Neamt, and continued to photograph.



    Sergiu Gabureac once again:



    Chevallier turned out to be much more patriotic than quite a few of the patriots of that time, when it comes to people involved in politics. Sometimes he was indignant at the way the Romanian issue was being dealt with. We have many letters and fragments that are illustrative of that. He had always asserted his Romanian origin and did not deny it even when he lay dying.“



    During the inter-war years, in Greater Romania, Chevallier was thriving, personally and professionally. In 1925, he got married and his two daughters were born. However, the Second World War would change his life. After the war ended, in 1945 he returned to Bucharest, only to notice that the world was different.



    Sergiu Gabureac explains:



    He arrived in Bucharest and was certainly indignant at the fact that his profession was forcibly included in a handicraft cooperative. Such cooperatives of Soviet origin would crop up in all walks of life. He was a very free spirit, so he was totally against that, therefore chicaneries directed at him were quick to appear. Chevallier reached the conclusion that his place was no longer in Romania and retired in Lausanne, Switzerland, with his daughters.“



    On April 23, 1963, after 13 years of Swiss exile, the photographer died in Baden, at the age of 81. A rich photographic work is his legacy, and his photo cliches are extremely sought after by collectors, even to this day. (LS, EN)


  • 26 July, 2020

    26 July, 2020

    Coronavirus
    Romania.
    The number of coronavirus cases in Romania hits 44,798, with
    more than 1,000 new cases for the fifth day in a row. More than 25,600 people
    have recovered and over 6,600 are in hospital, including 351 in intensive care.
    22 new deaths were reported on Sunday, taking the death toll to 2,187. In another move, Romanians will no longer be able to
    travel to Cyprus for tourism, and if they travel for different purposes, they will
    be ordered to isolate for 14 days. It is now also obligatory to produce a
    negative Covid-19 test for travellers arriving in Greece from Romania by plane,
    not just for those arriving by road. The test must have been conducted no more
    than 72 hours prior. Travellers who have not had time to do the test before the
    new measure was introduced will be tested at the airport in Greece on Tuesday
    and Wednesday. New entry conditions are also in place for travellers arriving
    in Austria from Romania. A negative Covid-19 test must now be produced that was
    conducted 72 hours prior instead of 4 days prior, and the isolation period has
    been reduced from 14 to 10 days. These measures will remain in place at least
    until the end of September. Italy has also changed the rules for travellers
    from Romania and Bulgaria, who are now ordered to isolate for 14 days on arriving
    in Italy.





    Travel. Around 96,000 persons, both Romanian and
    foreign nationals, crossed the Romanian borders on Saturday, by 32,100
    different means of transport, including 10,000 road freight vehicles, says the
    Romanian Border Police. Some 54,500 entered the country and 42,400 left the
    country. The Hungarian border with 11 crossing areas was the busiest. No
    waiting time was reported.




    Coronavirus world. New records are being reached
    around the world in terms of the number of infections with the novel
    coronavirus. Statistical figures show that more than a third of all cases were
    reported since 1st of July, in less than a month. The United States
    is the worst hit in terms of the death toll, with more than 1,000 deaths for
    four consecutive days. Mexico is also seeing a spike in cases while the death
    toll passes 43,000. South Korea, a country held as an example for it kept the
    pandemic in check, has announced more than 100 new infections. Even in North
    Korea, the communist regime reported the first case, in a man who the regime
    says fled to South Korea three years and returned to North Korea crossing the
    border illegally. European nations are also faced with a massive rise in the
    number of new infections, being caught between containing the new outbreaks and
    restarting their economies. A spike in cases in Spain has led to new measures
    amid fears of a second wave. Catalonia closed its nightclubs for two weeks.
    Other cities in Spain are also seeing a rise in cases, prompting the UK to
    remove Spain from the list of safe countries. France, where cases are also
    soaring, has issued a travel alert and Norway has imposed quarantine on
    travellers from Spain. Germany has also reached a record number of infections
    in the last two m




    Exhibition. Four works by the Romanian photographer
    Felicia Simion are on display as part of the Visage(s) d’Europe exhibition held
    by the Paris branch of the Network of European Union National Institutes for
    Culture, EUNIC. The exhibition, which is in its second year, brings together
    artists from 13 countries. Simion’s photographs are from a collection entitled
    Ethnography, which captures rural practices and customs
    in contemporary Romania amid the depopulation of villages and migration.






    Weather. The weather service in Romania has
    issued a yellow code alert for unstable weather for the western part of the
    country in place until this evening. Torrential rain, thunderstorms, wind and
    hail storms are expected, with precipitation expected to pass 25 litres per
    square metre and even reaching 50 in some areas. Elsewhere around the country, the weather
    remains hot and in the east and south-east the humidity and heat ratio is
    forecast to go beyond the critical threshold of 80. Temperatures are expected
    to hit 34 degrees today, with 28 in Bucharest at noon.













  • 24 July, 2020

    24 July, 2020

    Coronavirus Romania. Hospital beds and staffing are
    the main focus of concern for the Romanian authorities, amid a sharp increase in the
    number of new coronavirus cases. Romania is approaching 42,400 cases, with a
    new daily record of 1,119 new infections. Almost 6,000 people are in hospital
    with coronavirus, almost 301 in intensive care. 24 new deaths were also
    reported, taking the death toll to 2,150. In another move, the government
    approved yesterday new social protection measures for the staff of companies
    hit by the coronavirus crisis. The healthy employees of the companies closed
    down by the public health authorities will be on furlough by the end of the
    year. An official statement says financial support is needed to prevent job
    loss, more social exclusion and wider social and economic gaps between the
    people whose jobs were directly affected by the epidemic and the rest of the
    population.




    Coronavirus world. Coronavirus cases are
    on the rise around the world. More and more governments are considering
    reintroducing restrictions. At least 15.6 million cases have been confirmed
    globally, while the death toll passed 630,000. The United States, who recorded
    the first coronavirus death at the beginning of February, has 4 million cases,
    most of them in California, Texas and Florida. Europe has also seen a rise in
    the number of new cases. Spain is making efforts to isolate the outbreaks that
    have appeared since lockdown was lifted a month ago. New outbreaks have also
    been reported in Italy, in Lombardy and the Lazio area where Rome is located.
    Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Montenegro and North Macedonia have also seen
    new cases. The UK, with 45,000 deaths, Italy, with 35,000, France with 30,000
    and Spain with 28,000 are the worst hit countries in Europe.




    Corruption. The former anti-corruption prosecutor
    Mircea Negulescu was arrested for thirty days on Thursday following a
    ruling to this effect by the Supreme Court. He was working for the Ploiesti
    branch of the National Anticorruption Directorate. Last year, Negulescu was
    expelled from magistracy as a disciplinary measure following a number of
    scandals linked to controversial cases. He is now accused of abuse of office,
    unfair repression and forgery for making up evidence in two cases, including
    the so-called Tony Blair case, in which the former Social Democratic prime
    minister Victor Ponta was accused of organising a visit by the former British
    prime minister to Romania to score electoral points in the 2012 elections.




    Border police. The border police was on the front line
    of the authorities’ efforts to limit the spread of the novel coronavirus, said
    prime minister Ludovic Orban in a statement made on Friday on the anniversary
    of the Romanian Border Police Day. He added that the work of the border police,
    which he described as very complex and demanding, involves constant
    training, professionalism, courage, moral integrity and a huge sense of
    responsibility with respect to citizens and their country. Orban congratulated
    the border police for the exemplary way in which they mobilised to secure
    Romania’s land, sea, river and air borders in the context of the current health
    crisis, at the standards required of a EU member state and an aspiring Schengen
    area country.




    Helicopters. Ten Americal Black Hawk helicopters are
    arriving today in Romania at the military base in Mihail Kogălniceanu, in the
    south-east of the country, on a mission as part of the Atlantic Resolve
    operation. The aircraft are from the 101st Aviation Brigade, the US
    army’s most decorated unit of its kind. The Atlantic Resolve operation involves
    regular rotational deployment of US troops to Europe aimed at enhancing
    interoperability between NATO member states and improving links between allied
    and partner troops by means of cross-border training.




    Photography. Four works by the Romanian photographer Felicia Simion are
    on display as part of the Visage(s) d’Europe exhibition held by the Paris branch
    of the Network of European
    Union National Institutes for Culture, EUNIC. The exhibitions, which is in its second year, brings together artists from 13 countries. Simion’s photographs are from a collection entitled Ethnography, which captures rural practices and customs in contemporary Romania amid the depopulation of villages and migration.




    Weather. The weather remains unstable in Romania, with
    the weather service issuing two yellow-code alerts. One is for Friday and
    refers to the centre, south-west and areas in the north, where torrential
    rains, storms and even hail are expected. An alert has also been issued for
    Saturday and Sunday in the western half of the country and the neighbouring
    counties, where highly unstable weather is also expected, with heavy rain and
    storms. Temperatures will remain, however, high, with the humidity and heat
    ratio hitting the critical level 80. The high of the day are between 24 and 34
    degrees Celsius, with 26 degrees in the capital Bucharest at noon. (CM)

  • Photographer Aurel Bauh

    Photographer Aurel Bauh

    Known in particular
    for literature and fine arts, the Romanian avant-garde is also represented by
    some outstanding names in the field of photography. One such example is Aurel
    Bauh, who is better known in western Europe and the US than in his home country
    Romania. A Romanian-born Jew, he studied in Berlin in the 1920s with the
    Ukrainian sculptor Alexander Archipenko and then in Paris with Fernard Leger,
    one of the first French painters to exhibit cubist paintings. The work of Aurel
    Bauh focused less on documentary photography and more so on art photography. He
    moved to Bucharest towards the end of the 1930s, where he lived until 1960.
    Academy member Emanuel Badescu tells us more about the work of Aurel Bauh
    created in Romania:




    Aurel Bauh
    comes from Oltenia, in southern Romania. He was born in Craiova in 1900. We
    know little of his early school years, but we do have records about his time in
    Paris while he was in his early 20s. He was in close contact with the Romanian
    artists who lived and worked in the French capital at a time when the
    avant-garde movement was flourishing. He was familiar with the exhibitions of
    the artists who represented this artistic movement, including photographers
    like Man Ray. Towards the end of Carol II’s rule, Aurel Bauh returned to
    Romania, moving to Bucharest. He had one studio on Popa Rusu Street and another
    on the Victory Boulevard, called Studio 41.




    This studio
    became a meeting place and inspiration for several avant-garde artists, such as
    Sasa Pana, Jules Perahim, Harry Brauner, and Geo Bogza. In 1938, Bauh had his
    firs exhibition of ‘photo paintings’, titled Same Age as Brassai and Man Ray.
    In the 1950s, when the terrible communist regime in Romania was just beginning,
    Aurel Bauh managed to publish a surprising album with photos. It is now in the
    archives of the Romanian Academy Library, and Emanuel Badescu described it
    for us:




    Remarkably, in
    1957 he gathered together all his works about Bucharest, and created a
    singularly beautiful album, because it is the only one, or one of the few
    albums about Bucharest that has as its theme the beauty of the city. It is no
    wonder that the album has a short but superb foreword written by another pariah
    of early communism in Romania, Tudor Arghezi. These two great artists joined
    hands in this album entitled ‘Bucharest’, an album, which, aside from the
    poetry of the images, has another feature, which you could not find even in the
    work of Christian photographers of the time. In its pages we find a great
    number of photos depicting worshippers entering Christian Orthodox churches.
    Perusing the album, we easily notice that Aurel Bauh had a vast fine art
    experience. It seems he appreciated Impressionist painters, especially Monet. In
    this album there are several photos that point to the French master. He wanted
    to capture an aspect that his peers did not: the poetry of the city, its
    architectural styles – art nouveau and art deco – the monumentality of
    buildings or sculpture ensembles such as Carol Park, images from Cismigiu Park,
    and the Dambovita canal. They all have a special poetry and recall
    Impressionist painters.




    In 1960, Aurel
    Bauh managed to emigrate to Paris, where he died in 1964. His photos, highly
    valued today, can be found in private collections, in France and elsewhere. You
    can even find his work at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. In 2011, one of
    the exhibitions at the Les Promenades Photographiques Festival in Vendome was
    dedicated to his work.