:''For the politician, see
Gheorghe Tătărescu.''
'Gheorghe Tattarescu' (October
1818 -
October 24 1894) was a
Moldavian-born
Romanian painter and a pioneer of
neoclassicism in his country's modern painting.
Biography
Early life and studies
Tattarescu was born in
FocÅŸani in 1818. He started out as an apprentice to his uncle
Nicolae Teodorescu, a church painter. He went on to study at the Painting School from
Buzău, when Teodorescu moved there. The
Orthodox Bishop of Buzău, Chesarie, helped him obtain a
scholarship in
Rome, where he was taught by professors from the
Accademia di San Luca. While there, Tattarescu made copies paintings by
Raphael,
Bartolomé Estéban Murillo,
Salvatore Rosa, and
Guido Reni.
Political activities
Tattarascu was a participant in the
1848 Revolution in
Wallachia. After the revolution, he painted portraits of Romanian revolutionaries in exile such as
Gheorghe Magheru,
Åžtefan Golescu, and, in 1851, that of
Nicolae Bălcescu (in three almost identical versions).
Romantic nationalist ideals were the inspiration for his allegorical compositions with revolutionary (''Romania's rebirth'', 1849) and patriotic (''The
Principalities' Unification'', 1857) themes.
Later life and legacy
In 1860, being commissioned to draw up a ''National Album'' of sights and historical monuments of the country, his talent of painting vaguely
Romantic landscapes became highly valued. At the same time, showing his sympathy with various peasant uprisings, he painted ''The peasant at the
Danube'' in 1875. He was also commissioned to decorate several churches in a neoclassical manner.
In 1864, together with painter
Theodor Aman, Tattarescu founded the National School of Fine Arts in
Bucharest; he was a professor there for a long time after, and served as the School's headmaster for two years (1891-1892).
In 1865, he wrote ''Useful Principles and Studies on Proportions of the Human Body and Drawing after the Most Famous Painters''.
Tattarescu died in Bucharest. The house he bought in 1855 and lived in for almost 40 years is now home to the ''Gheorghe Tattarescu Memorial Museum''. It was opened 1951, and hosts several of his original works of art.
Gallery
''Click on an image to view it enlarged.''
External links
★
Biography at artnet.com
★
Biography at maroumanie.com
★
Biography at ici.ro
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Biography at compendium.ro