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The great Romanian artist Horia Damian would have turned 96 on February 27, the day when a small but masterful exhibition of gouaches, drawings, paintings and sculptures was inaugurated at Alexandra's Gallery in Bucharest, an exhibition worthy of any of the great museums. of modern art of the world.

Despite the blizzard that took Bucharest by surprise, art lovers came to admire masterpieces signed by Horia Damian over half a century. In his opening remarks, the famous art critic and historian Radu Varia, who for decades presented Damian's creation at the Guggenheim Museum in New York, at the National Museum of Modern Art in Paris, at the Museum of Modern Art in Rio de Janeiro, at Documenting in Kassel or at the Venice and Sao Paulo Biennials, he revealed to the audience the secrets of Damian's art, a huge native talent, fully revealed in painting from the age of 14, and who would establish his own language in 1951-1964. through which he would give to his cosmogonic vision the originality of expression based on monumentality, metaphysics, mystery.

The brilliant audience featured personalities such as the great soprano Mariana Nicolesco, UNESCO Honorary Ambassador, along with an impressive number of ministers in various governments, Acad. Răzvan Theodorescu (Culture, currently President of the Arts Department of the Romanian Academy), Cristian Diaconescu ( Justice, Foreign Affairs), Cătălin Predoiu (Justice, currently senator), Ecaterina Andronescu (Education, now President of the Centenary Commission of the Romanian Parliament), or Senator Cristian Dumitrescu.

Radu Varia in front of the paintings Column, the fortified city and gouache hill at the inauguration of the exhibition Damian - 96. Alexandra's Gallery, Bucharest

In the salons of Alexandra's Gallery, Mariana Nicolesco and Cristian Diaconescu.

On the left, the collector Liviu Cioboată; on the right, Radu Varia

The opening of the Damian exhibition - 96 at Alexandra's Gallery:

Mariana Nicolesco, Radu Varia, Ecaterina Andronescu

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The exhibition remains open until March 25.

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1. Fortified City 1986 Oil on canvas 150 X 150 cm

2. Starry Sky 1951 Oil on wood 76 X 89 cm

3. Composition 1952 Watercolor, pencil on paper 27 X 42 cm

In 1990, at a time when the image of our country in the world was disastrous, I accepted the invitation to present an exhibition Brâncuşi at the Gagosian Gallery in New York, hoping that the world would see that we are in fact something else than it could have been. believe then.

The exhibition, comprising only six sculptures by the great artist, entitled Brancusi, Masterpieces from Romanian Museums, enjoyed immense success and a full page in the newspaper The New York Times, the article by the famous critic John Russell, Praise for small exhibitions, emphasizing their importance, when they are significant, like ours, as opposed to mammoth exhibitions, which often do not say much.

The three shows I did with Rareş Bogdan at the beginning of December last year on Realitatea TV, in which we talked about Constantin Brâncuşi, Salvador Dali, Horia Damian, broke all audience records, so they were resumed for three hours in a row on the evening of the second day of Christmas.

Those shows gave courage to an enthusiast coming down from the majestic hills of Bukovina, Ovidiu Obreja, to suggest this event to me. Then Pierre Larousse's words came to mind: "Je sème à tout vent". So we inaugurate this small exhibition, full of significance, on the very day when Horia Damian would have turned 96 years old. 

* The landscape since 1936, when Horia was only 14 years old, he gives the measure of his genius as a painter (9).

Arriving in Paris in 1946, at the age of 24, he leaves behind in Bucharest the masterpieces I presented in 2009 at the Mogosoaia Palace, and understands that the course of art in the world is different, as it happened to Brâncuşi in 1904. Like him, Damian from that moment on refuses to represent appearances, seeking to express what is beyond the visible horizon, to enter the invisible.

For this he had to define his own language, which happened in 1951, as Brâncuşi had made his own weapons in 1907.

In his heroic approach, which would not coincide with that of the art of the time, Damian would be a loner, whom I had been allowed to stand with since 1967, when he had just returned from Malakara, at the first to visit in search of the sources of the great teachings of Eternal India; and, among my long-forgotten documents, I recently found the French translation we made of the sacred book together. Bhagavad Gita, The Divine Song. In 1968 we prefaced his exhibition at the Stadler Gallery in Paris, taking the daring initiative, crowned with success, to make his work known in the main museums of the world.

The great loners, André Malraux tells us, often have a deep connection with the living and the dead, in whose name they express themselves. That is why I believe not only in the art of Damian, to which I dedicated myself with absolute determination, but I also believe in its great posthumous destiny.

In other words, if the art of the age tended and tends to focus on object, in damage ThreadDamian would stay on track pre-modern of the relationship between subject and object, expressing the greatness and nature of a being, always tempted by the mystery of experience and knowledge.

If Damian defines the language of his art in 1951 - followed by a period of immense success, when he paints romantic the splendor of the sky - in 1964, with the first Golden Pyramid (6), the great artist transposes his cosmic vision in terms of rigorous geometry, of monumentality, brought to life, so to speak, by an irrepressible metaphysical pulsation. It will be the case of his great architectural constructions, paintings and drawings The fortified city (1), the city of Alexander, Mastaba, Mandala, and so on.

4. 1976: Damian covering with 380,000 spheres of 14 mm diameter each Hill (2 x 4.70 x 12.60 m) that was to be exhibited in New York in the fall of that year

5. Colina and a series of gouaches and drawings in the Damian exhibition at The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, 1976. Later, with the friendly support of the great architect Philip Johnson, Mies Van der Rohe's successor, I installed Colina on the Esplanade of at Seagram's Building on Park Avenue, bringing something of our mioritic space to the heart of New York. In that context, on October 14, 1976, we launched the New York Manifesto, evoking the supremacy of the spiritual over the storm.

Starry sky since 1951 (2), a symbol of the sacred order of the Universe, it is built according to the point, which is also the center. The watercolor from 1952 brings to attention the circle (3), the development of the point, a symbol of perfection, homogeneity and celestial unity. The sphere (4), in turn, development in space of the point and the circle, is a symbol of absolute perfection, representing the Cosmos as a whole. And the multitude of small spheres arranged on well-defined paths in the works that begin with The large starry parallelepiped of 1970, of a night blue, exhibited by me in 1972 at the Museum of Modern Art of the City of Paris, as in the case of the Hill of 1976 (5), meant an inspired and infinite multiplication of light sources, increasing "by a thousand or the "beauty" of the work, to use Plato's words. All this will happily compete for decades in defining, between metaphysics and monumentality, the visionary cosmogony of Horia Damian.

If, for example, Mondrian's search for his own plastic language served him well, Damian's thinking about existence and art would find entirely different sources: Sumerian art and Egyptian art, for example.

Gilgamesh's poem - the first masterpiece of universal literature, the oldest poem of all time, written a millennium and a half before Homer - would be for him an opportunity for long reflection.

The story of the young King-Demigod of Uruk, beautiful and whimsical beyond measure, the rivalry and then the brotherhood with Enkidu, the meeting with the immortal Utnapishtim, who tells our hero to accept death, because he can not avoid it, all this was read by Damian in the key spiritual. The king, who became wise and good, would reign no less than 126 years. And the great poem, Gilgamesh's poem, would enjoy in the 50s of the last century the sublime illustrations of Horia Damian, masterpieces never revealed to the public until now.

If pyramid, in its integrity, as we have demonstrated in the case Brâncuşi's column, is meant to define the ratio between one and multiple, and if Damian's first pyramid, from 1964, is just a stepped pyramid that rises to a certain level, like Djeser's pyramid, it is still a symbol of rise.

And, moreover, it is Golden Pyramid, that is, from the most precious metal, which also symbolizes absolute perfection, being considered of a divine, solar, royal nature.

As The Golden Gate (7) of 1967, the threshold that separates and unites one world from another, the known unknown, the light of darkness, the transition from the profane to the sacred realm. Gate: a theme that will often be repeated by Damian, as an invitation to participate in the mystery, this - for example - in the great painted relief, composed of nine parts and entitled The Decline of Chaos, a work of inexpressible dramatic intensity, exhibited by me at Document from Kassel in 1992, or in that Blue gate on a white background from 1999, of supreme grace, which I exhibited in 2002 at the Karsten Greve Gallery, while Horia was hospitalized in a clinic outside Paris, where I visited him daily, comforting them as much as possible. suffering, telling him how the installation of the exhibition was going.

In that context, the images of the works of his last years are shocking, the vast painted reliefs representing in a way his own loneliness, whether we are talking about The sleeping knight, marked by a red sign indicating eternal life, by The Miracle, the Ascension, or Empty bed (8), forerunner of the departure from this world of an artist of astonishing talent, dedicated to art as a manifestation of sacredness, of an artist depository of the immemorial values of humanity, whose unjust destiny darkened his memory in the last part of his life.

Radu Varia

6. Golden Pyramid 1964 Polyester, acrylic on wood 12.4 x 10.2 cm

7. Golden Gate 1967 Polyester, acrylic on wood 22.5 x 15.5 cm

8. Bed II 2001 Wood, canvas, nails, acrylic on wooden panel 226 x 250 x 8.5 cm

9. Landscape 1936 Oil on cardboard 23 x 25.5 cm