Serban Savu "The Edge of the Empire"

David Nolan Gallery

poster for Serban Savu "The Edge of the Empire"

This event has ended.

Savu is part of a group of artists from Cluj, schooled in the tradition of Social Realism, who grew up during the overturn of the Communist regime (1989). He is one of the few painters from this group who still lives and works in Romania as it transitions into a democratic, capitalist state. As the title suggests, “The Edge of The Empire” references Romania as a country that has always been on the margins of great civilizations- the Romans (27 B.C.- 476 A.D.), the Ottomans (1299–1923), the Austro-Hungarians (1867 - 1918), and the Soviet Union (1922-1991). His paintings focus on the absurdity and uselessness of “The New Man,” the Communist model of the ideal worker, who is ill equipped to perform in Savu"s fallen utopias. His landscapes are not spectacular scenes, but daily ones in which the sociopolitical issues are hidden rather than visible.
Savu"s thousands of delicate touches of the brush to the canvas evoke a knowingness, ambition and skepticism that distance him from the figures in his paintings. The paintings are not troubled or angry, but their patient straightforwardness suggests their being motivated by a calculated dissatisfaction and a history of defeat. The palette realistically represents the Romanian landscapes, imbuing the work with an
air of nostalgia. In 2007, David Nolan Gallery featured Savu"s work in a Romanian group show Across the Trees (the English translation of Transylvannia).

Media

Schedule

from February 05, 2009 to March 28, 2009

Artist(s)

Serban Savu

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