RRI Live!

Listen to Radio Romania International Live

Constantin Brâncuși’s journey from Romania to Paris

Constantin Brâncuși’s journey from the humble beginnings as the son of a poor carpenter to the artistic heights he achieved in Paris

Constantin Brâncuși’s journey from Romania to Paris
Constantin Brâncuși’s journey from Romania to Paris

, 24.02.2024, 14:44

Constantin Brâncuși’s journey from the humble beginnings as the son of a poor carpenter to the artistic heights he achieved in Paris as a sculptor began in Hobița, a village in the northern part of historical Oltenia, where Brâncuși was born on 19th February 1876. It was from here that he set off, at the start of the 20th century, to Western Europe, which was more welcoming than his native Romania to his art, one that was nevertheless imbued with the traditions of his kin, and a closeness to nature. Before he left for Paris, Brâncuși attended primary school in his village and then went to the School of Arts and Crafts in Craiova, before enrolling at the Academy of Fine Arts in Bucharest, which he graduated in 1902. It was about that time that he decided to leave Romania, but nothing is certain when it comes to the artist’s personal biography. Very little is also known about his personality and way of thinking, so the man behind the artist is difficult to reconstruct. However, any endeavor to understand him has to include the journey that led to his achieving fame abroad, a journey Sorin Trâncă recreated recently and described in a book entitled ‘Constantin’s Journey, Brâncuși’s Escape from Romania, a Reconstruction’. Sorin Trâncă noticed from the start that there is very little actual information about Brâncuși’s journey:

I began with the assumption that he left in 1903 and arrived in 1904. The writer Alexandru Vlahuta wrote in 1910 that this journey lasted four months. Some said it took eight months, others 14 or 16 months, even two years. There are many things that are not clear. My intention was to try to put forward a valid theory. After doing a lot of reading and carefully considering all the arguments and sources, I concluded that he must have left in 1903, sometime in late spring or early summer, and that he most likely arrived in Paris the next summer, around Bastille Day, on 14th July 1904. The journey would have taken him more than a year, but it’s still not certain if he indeed left in 1903, and not perhaps a year earlier, in 1902.”

According to Sorin Trâncă, Brâncuși most probably left from Hobița to Petroșani, in the Romanian Kingdom, and then he went to Transylvania, which at the time was part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Via Hațeg, he entered Hungary via Nădlac, passed through Budapest, entered Austria through Heidentor im Carnutum, travelled through Vienna, Linz, and Salzburg, and then into Germany, to Munich, Konstanz and further to Switzerland, where he seemingly fell ill, more precisely in Basel. After entering France, he traveled by train from Langres to Paris, where he is believed to have arrived on 14th July, for, as the artist wrote, ‘France welcomed me with a brass band and a military salute’. But how did Brâncuși travel and how did he finance his trip? Sorin Trâncă says the answers to these questions are still not clear:

We know some important points that are validated by exegetes, by people who also knew him personally, like the lawyer and publicist Petre Pandrea. Basically, we know that he passed through Vienna, through Budapest, through Munich, through Basel, through Zurich and through Langres, on his way to France. And from here on I simply started to complete a map and make an itinerary starting from the hypothesis that Brâncusi made this journey in some way, on foot. This is another discussion. Many support this theory: that he walked like Badea Cârțan. I don’t think he did that, I think he rather went out into the world, like peasants or journeymen. (…) After finishing their apprenticeship, a journeyman is charged with taking this path to maturity, in which they must travel from one craftsman to another to learn new secrets of the trade. So, our peasant, Brâncusi, went out into the world, but he left as a journeyman, after finishing his apprenticeship in Bucharest, at the school of fine arts , a very good school by the way.”

What is known for sure, however, is that, after graduating the school, Constantin Brâncusi participated in various competitions for the creation of public monuments, all his proposals being rejected. Perhaps this rejection led Brâncusi to leave the country, but this too is only an assumption in the absence of direct testimony. Here is Sorin Trâncă.

All the public works Brâncuși ever made were rejected. But there are also exceptions. One is related to the Târgu Jiu complex, but there we are talking about a person who was already almost 60 years old. (…) So, in Brâncuși’s old age, few people could correct his works. But, until then, all his public works were rejected. Other exceptions are public monuments, but commissioned by private individuals, such as those in the Buzău cemetery, so a funerary monument. (…) Although I refuse for the moment the categorical statements that Brâncusi really left Bucharest angry before arriving in Paris, it is possible that he left angry because of the spirit of mediocrity. (…) He is not a traveler in the modern sense, let’s say. I mean, in general, he left for work. He didn’t go out to have fun. (…) And, returning to childhood, Brâncuși’s departure from Hobita to Paris, on foot, I think, it is his fifth departure from home, if not even the sixth, because he ran away several times between 7 and 11 years of age. But there are also his departures from home, the sheepfold, around the age of 5. He is a child of the sheepfold, being poor and coming from a family with many children. From a young age he is sent elsewhere to build a life for himself. First time he was sent to a sheepfold in the Parâng Mountains. It’s the reason why Brâncusi didn’t really do serious school studies as a child, and almost misses primary school.”

Eager to be himself, following his original path for this purpose, Brâncusi would succeed, in Paris, in forging the much-sought-after forms in sculpture and, in addition, in making them admired by the entire world.

The Royal Train
RRI Encyclopaedia Saturday, 16 November 2024

The Royal Train

In October of this year, the volume “The Story of the Royal Train” by Tudor Vișan-Miu and Andrei Berinde was released. A literary foray...

The Royal Train
Photographer Franz Xaver Koroschetz
RRI Encyclopaedia Saturday, 09 November 2024

Photographer Franz Xaver Koroschetz

Romanian towns had their photographers. One such photographer was Franz Xaver Koroschtz. He was the photographer of the town of Focsani, the county...

Photographer Franz Xaver Koroschetz
Theodor Aman – Founder of the Romanian Fine Arts School
RRI Encyclopaedia Saturday, 02 November 2024

Theodor Aman – Founder of the Romanian Fine Arts School

Theodor Aman (1831-1891), the first great Romanian classical artist, was a Romanian painter, graphic designer, sculptor, pedagogue, and academician,...

Theodor Aman – Founder of the Romanian Fine Arts School
banner-Pro-Memoria.-960x540-1.jpg
RRI Encyclopaedia Sunday, 27 October 2024

Colțea Street

Over 1703-1707, Mihai Cantacuzino, a member of a famous noble family, built a hospital and a school on the estate of Colțea Doicescu. The first name...

Colțea Street
RRI Encyclopaedia Saturday, 12 October 2024

The Cerchez family of architects

We’re more likely to come across the name of Cerchez, in the history of Romanian architecture, than other names of architects. The name of Cerchez...

The Cerchez family of architects
RRI Encyclopaedia Saturday, 05 October 2024

The Ratiu family, an important Romanian family in Transylvania

The Rațiu family (Rațiu of Noșlac in Turda) is one of the oldest and most respectable aristocratic families in Transylvania with a history...

The Ratiu family, an important Romanian family in Transylvania
RRI Encyclopaedia Sunday, 29 September 2024

Axiopolis

Dobrogea is considered the densest and most varied province of Romania from the point of view of the civilizations that inhabited it. On a territory...

Axiopolis
RRI Encyclopaedia Sunday, 22 September 2024

The Kiseleff Agora

Kiseleff Park in Bucharest has become a model of good practice in managing historical parks and gardens, thanks to a project called the Kiseleff...

The Kiseleff Agora

Partners

Muzeul Național al Țăranului Român Muzeul Național al Țăranului Român
Liga Studentilor Romani din Strainatate - LSRS Liga Studentilor Romani din Strainatate - LSRS
Modernism | The Leading Romanian Art Magazine Online Modernism | The Leading Romanian Art Magazine Online
Institului European din România Institului European din România
Institutul Francez din România – Bucureşti Institutul Francez din România – Bucureşti
Muzeul Național de Artă al României Muzeul Național de Artă al României
Le petit Journal Le petit Journal
Radio Prague International Radio Prague International
Muzeul Național de Istorie a României Muzeul Național de Istorie a României
ARCUB ARCUB
Radio Canada International Radio Canada International
Muzeul Național al Satului „Dimitrie Gusti” Muzeul Național al Satului „Dimitrie Gusti”
SWI swissinfo.ch SWI swissinfo.ch
UBB Radio ONLINE UBB Radio ONLINE
Strona główna - English Section - polskieradio.pl Strona główna - English Section - polskieradio.pl
creart - Centrul de Creație Artă și Tradiție al Municipiului Bucuresti creart - Centrul de Creație Artă și Tradiție al Municipiului Bucuresti
italradio italradio
Institutul Confucius Institutul Confucius
BUCPRESS - știri din Cernăuți BUCPRESS - știri din Cernăuți

Affiliates

Euranet Plus Euranet Plus
AIB | the trade association for international broadcasters AIB | the trade association for international broadcasters
Digital Radio Mondiale Digital Radio Mondiale
News and current affairs from Germany and around the world News and current affairs from Germany and around the world
Comunità radiotelevisiva italofona Comunità radiotelevisiva italofona

Providers

RADIOCOM RADIOCOM
Zeno Media - The Everything Audio Company Zeno Media - The Everything Audio Company