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Wednesday, January 8, 2025
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Bucharest

România 🇷🇴 – Neo-Romanian architecture

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Romanian National Style, Neo-Romanian, or Neo-Brâncovenesc (Romanian: stilul național român, arhitectura neoromânească, neobrâncovenească) is an architectural style that has appeared in the late 19th century in Romanian Art Nouveau, initially being the result of the attempts of finding a specific Romanian architectural style.

The attempts are mainly due to the architects Ion Mincu (1852–1912), and Ion N. Socolescu (1856–1924). The peak of the style was the interwar period.
The style was a national reaction after the domination of French-inspired Classicist Eclecticism.

Apart from foreign influences, the contribution of Romanian architects, who reinvented the tradition, creating, at the same time, an original style, is manifesting more and more strongly.
Ion Mincu and his successors, Grigore Cerchez, Cristofi Cerchez, Petre Antonescu, or Nicolae Ghica-Budești declared themselves for a modern architecture, with Romanian specific, based on theses such as those formulated by Alexandru Odobescu around 1870:
“Study the remains – no matter how small – of the artistic production of the past and make them the source of a great art (…) do not miss any opportunity to use the artistic elements presented by the Romanian monuments left over from old times; but transform them, change them, develop them …”

19th century nationalism combined without problems with Europeanism and admiration for the West, Romania wanting to prove that it is a European country.

After 1900, without abandoning European trends, the emphasis is more on values with Romanian specificity. As a result, the Parisian and Viennese buildings of the late nineteenth century are contrasted with a “Romanian style”.

The popularity of the Romanian style continues and intensifies in the interwar period.
The heyday of the style were the 1920s, when many Romanian Revival houses, churches and institution buildings were erected, both in Bucharest and in the rest of Greater România.

Dorina Cetenici     Worldwide Traditional Culture & Costumes

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