The
"Ion Vlasiu" Gallery
The
"Ion Vlasiu" Gallery is housed by the Teleki
Library, which is situated on 17 Bolyai Farkas Street.
It was founded thanks
to Ion Vlasiu's donation in 1988. This master from Târgu-Mureş
had a treble calling mainly for sculpture, but also
for painting and writing.
His paintings tried to
explain the human soul. Vlasiu has the nostalgia for
the village as a home for the national collective soul,
with whom he feels united and whose survival he would
like to preserve in the middle of this contemporary
human drama.
By following the tradition,
he manages to create elementary images, stylized appearances
and primitive vibrations, by interweaving a strong and
vegetal colouring with a rhythmical decoration.
The domains where he finds
most of his themes, presented then under the form of
the metaphor and the symbol, are: the universe of the
village, the landscape and the history. His favourite
subjects are; man's cycles of life, man's course of
life, the representation of exemplary persons taken
from the daily and anonymous universe of the village,
from history, or from the national culture.
Ion Vlasiu's sculptures
aim at those primary and forefathers' forms which resemble
the simple bodies made by nature itself. No matter what
material he used (stone, wood, plaster cast), Vlasiu
tried to recreate the pure form. As a result of having
been in an unceasing communication with his native universe,
he was able to breathe a new life into this so complex
world, creating, thus, in a laconic language, children's,
aged men's, villagers', intellectuals' and heroes' heads.
His pieces of sculpture are directly related to this
nation's traditions, through morphologies and stylistics
(especially the totemic representations and those works
inspired by fairy-tales and legends).
His novels, in which the
autobiography has some fictitious aspects (but with
an unspoiled genuineness ), define Ion Vlasiu's human
and artistic structure with an undoubted village fund
present in all its aspects.
Ion Vlasiu lives the continuous
revelation of the outside world, and also of his inner
one, with a genuine dramatic feeling, in the memorialist
prose, in sculpture and in painting.
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