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Thursday, March 26, 2026 |
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| Constantin Brancusi exhibition opens in Rome exploring the roots of modern sculpture |
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ROME.- A major exhibition dedicated to Constantin Brâncuși, one of the pioneers of modern sculpture, has opened at Trajans Markets Museum of the Imperial Forums, offering visitors a rare opportunity to trace how the artists early influences shaped his revolutionary vision of form. Titled Constantin Brâncuși. The Origins of Infinity, the show runs through July 19, 2026, and marks the 150th anniversary of the artists birth.
The exhibition is part of the RomaniaItaly Cultural Year 2026, a bilateral initiative supported by cultural institutions and ministries from both countries. Curated by Erwin Kessler, director of the National Museum of Art of Romania, the project brings together works, historical references, and contextual material to explore how Brâncușis artistic language emerged from the meeting of tradition and innovation.
From rural Romania to the birth of modern sculpture
Rather than presenting a conventional retrospective, the exhibition focuses on the origins of Brâncușis artistic thinking. Central to the show is the idea that his sculptural revolution was rooted in two powerful sources: the folk carving traditions of Oltenia, the Romanian region where he was born, and the classical sculpture of ancient Rome, which he studied during his formative years.
Visitors encounter how the handcrafted woodcarving practices of Oltenia influenced Brâncușis embrace of direct carving, or taille directea process in which the artist shapes stone or wood himself, allowing the final form to emerge directly from the material. This hands-on approach distinguished him from many nineteenth-century sculptors who relied on assistants for execution, and it helped establish the strong sense of authenticity and physical presence that defines his work.
Historical wooden columns carved by anonymous Romanian artisans are displayed alongside Brâncușis ideas, illustrating how traditional motifssuch as twisted modular formswould later evolve into his iconic Endless Column, one of the defining monuments of twentieth-century sculpture.
Dialogue with antiquity
Equally important is Brâncușis engagement with ancient Roman sculpture, whose search for ideal form deeply influenced his artistic philosophy. The exhibition highlights lesser-known but pivotal works like Head of a Boy and Torso, which show the artist experimenting with classical inspiration while already pushing toward abstraction.
In these pieces, Brâncuși begins stripping away detail to reveal what he believed to be the essential, timeless core of a figure. This processmoving from realism toward distilled, archetypal shapeswould become the hallmark of his mature style.
The exhibition also emphasizes his fascination with mythology and archaeology. At times, Brâncuși playfully presented his sculptures as if they were ancient artifacts discovered in excavations, blurring the boundaries between past and present while reinforcing the timeless quality of his forms.
Toward pure form and modern abstraction
As the show progresses, it follows Brâncușis transformation from symbolic figuration to the radical simplicity that secured his place in art history. Landmark works such as Mademoiselle Pogany, the nearly abstract Prometheus, and elements connected to the Târgu-Jiu monumental ensemble, including the geometric forms associated with the Table of Silence, reveal his growing commitment to pure, essential shapes.
Together, these works demonstrate how Brâncuși fused archaic Romanian symbolism with classical ideals of harmony, ultimately forging a completely new sculptural language. His vision redefined how artists think about space, time, and materialtreating form not as representation, but as a path toward expressing the infinite.
A historic setting for a foundational artist
Installed within the monumental archaeological complex of Trajans Markets, the exhibition creates a meaningful dialogue between Brâncușis modernism and the ancient Roman world that helped inspire him. The setting reinforces the exhibitions central theme: that innovation often grows from deep engagement with tradition.
With its blend of sculpture, historical context, and cross-cultural perspective, Constantin Brâncuși. The Origins of Infinity positions the Romanian master not only as a giant of modern art, but as an artist whose work continues to connect ancient craftsmanship with contemporary abstraction.
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