The circumstances which
led to the establishment of the Romanian
Academy show the great importance literary
creation and theory had in the vision of the
Academy’s founders. The first attempts of
certain scholars from Wallachia and Moldavia
to gather together in order to raise the
cultural standard of the region to that of
the rest of Europe were recorded in the 16th
century. Despot Voda, the Prince of Moldavia
(1561-1563), formerly a student at the
celebrated University of Montpellier, had
planned to found a college of academic rank
("Schola Latina") at Cotnari and an Academy
in his capital city of Suceava, where he
intended to summon many of the most learned
men from Western Europe. Among the names of
the scholars invited to the Moldavian court
to establish an Academy we find, along with
those of astronomers, theologians,
physicians, mathematicians and jurists, that
of a poet, the humanist Johannes Sommer.
After a little more than a quarter of a
century, the ruler of Wallachia, Petru
Cercel (1583-1585), who was educated in
Paris and Venice, veritable wellsprings of
the European Renaissance, would also
contemplate the idea of an Academy. In order
to realize this idea, he was to bring
scholars from Italy, France and Greece
together at his Court in Tārgoviste, amongst
whom were the poet Francisco Pugiella, the
humanists Mellier from Constance, Berthier
from Lyon, Perot and Ponthus de la Planche,
and the Greek writer Nadoli. Even if the
dreams of these two Renaissance princes were
never fulfilled, it is significant enough
that there was an obvious preoccupation with
the cultivation of the "art of the written
word" within the framework of a humanist
program, which evidenced the appreciation of
the values expressed by the French term les
belles-lettres.
Much later, in the 19th century, the
importance attached to literature, while
equally as evident as in the projects of the
earlier epoch, would nevertheless reflect a
completely different cultural orientation.
It clearly bespoke the consciousness of a
national identity common to all those in the
Carpathian-Danube provinces who shared the
same language. More than a few projects of
this sort were conceived in provinces which
were under foreign government at the time, a
fact which explains the urgent (and often
passionate) argument for the cultivation of
the Romanian language.
Interestingly enough, right from the first
decades of the 19th century, the idea of an
Academy was almost synonymous with the idea
of a forum which would promote national
literature and would enrich the
possibilities of expression in the Romanian
language. In the preface of his Gramatica of
1828, Ion Heliade Radulescu proposed the
founding of "an Academy of a few men, whose
job would be only Romanian literature, and
who would, in time, regulate and perfect the
language by compiling a dictionary."
Consequently, the mission of the Literary
Society (indeed an eloquent name) of 1866
would be a continuation of Heliade’s ideas,
as well as of the attempts made in the first
decades of the 19th century to create an
academic society.
Among its first members were important
writers such as Vasile Alecsandri, Costache
Negruzzi, Ion Heliade Radulescu, the very
young Titu Maiorescu, V.A. Urechia, and the
folklorist and literary historian Ioan G.
Sbiera.
Throughout its nearly one-and-a-half-century
history, the Romanian Academy has counted
among its members the most important writers
and literary historians of the times.
However, it is equally true that in certain
moments of the Academy’s existence, mostly
during the years of totalitarian government,
pressure was exerted to accept within the
ranks of its elite membership certain minor
writers who served the purposes of the
extant regime. Thus, when the Academy
decided upon the utterly necessary righting
of some serious wrongs and began to award
posthumous Honorary Memberships to certain
outstanding personalities, the names of some
completely insignificant writers were
imposed upon the list under the pressure of
political criteria.
For example, on October 28th, 1948, Mihai
Eminescu, Ion Creanga, I.L. Caragiale, and
painters of the stature of Ion Andreescu and
Stefan Luchian were honored after their
deaths but, alongside them, the same
posthumous honors went to some honest but
insignificant versifiers.
The Academy began to receive plastic artists
amongst its members surprisingly late.
Fortunately, the first great painter to be
accepted within its membership was Nicolae
Grigorescu, the dominant figure in Romanian
art at the turn of the century, upon whom
was conferred an Honorary Membership in
1899. In the 20th century, many more
painters and sculptors whose work is truly
representative of the evolution of modern
Romanian art have received the same
well-deserved recognition.
Likewise musicians, whose creations have
represented an extremely important
contribution to defining 20th century
Romanian culture, have been accepted into
the Romanian Academy. Some were quite young
at the time of their acceptance as, for
example, George Enescu, who was 35 years old
when he became an Honorary Member in 1916
(he was to become an Acting Member in 1932).
Aside from writers, artists, musicians,
literary and artistic historians and
theoreticians from within Romania, creators
and commentators of culture from abroad have
also been elected Honorary Members. Some of
them are Romanians living in other
countries, such as prose writer Petru
Dumitriu, painter Horia Damian, graphic
artist Eugen Mihaescu and soprano Mariana
Nicolesco, while others are great
personalities of world literature and art,
such as composer Bela Bartók, literary
historians Charles Diehl and Joseph Bédier,
art historian Henri Focillon, sculptor Ivan
Mestrovic“, violinist Yehudi Menuhin and
writer Jean D’Omersson.
Many research institutes were created under
the aegis of the Romanian Academy in 1949.
The former Institute of Literary History and
Folklore was headed at first by the eminent
scholar George Calinescu, whose name it now
bears. The Institute is divided into four
departments, namely Old Romanian Literary
History, Modern Literary History, Literary
Theory and Comparative Literature. The two
most important works published by the
Institute of Literary History and Theory G.
Calinescu in recent years have been a
two-volume bibliography of critical articles
dedicated to the works of I.L. Caragiale and
a bibliography of the relationships between
Romanian and foreign literatures
(translations, adaptations and
commentaries), of which four volumes have
appeared so far, while the fifth is being
printed. Most recently, however, the efforts
of the Institute’s researchers have been
focused on the compilation of a monumental
Dictionar al literaturii romāne (Dictionary
of Romanian Literature) which will include
articles about writers, translators,
editors, literary associations and
periodicals. This is, clearly, an
undertaking of great complexity and
professional responsibility, in which
researchers from the above-mentioned
Institute are collaborating with their
colleagues from institutes and academic
centers in Iasi, Cluj, Timisoara, Sibiu,
Tārgu Mures, as well as with university
faculty members involved with teaching
Romanian literary history.
The G. Calinescu Institute is collaborating
with Cambridge University, furnishing
bibliographical data concerning translations
of Byron into Romanian. These data will be
included in a volume meant to trace the
echoes of Byronian lyrics in the poetry of
the world. Also, at this time, discussions
are under way for collaboration with the
Department of Slavic and Eastern European
Studies at the University of London to
compile a series of volumes covering the
history of Anglo-Romanian cultural
relations.
Some years ago, the Section of Literary
History from the Al. Philippide Institute of
Philology in Iasi published an excellent
Dictionar al literaturii romāne de la
origini pāna la 1900 (Dictionary of Romanian
Literature From Its Origins Until 1900), and
today scholars from this long-esteemed
institution are participating, along with
their colleagues from other institutes and
sections of literary history, in the
compilation of the new Dictionary.
The G. Calinescu Institute publishes two
periodicals: Revista de Istorie si Teorie
Literara (The Journal of Literary History
and Theory), a twice-yearly publication in
Romanian, and Synthesis, a foreign-languages
periodical which appears twice a year under
the auspices of the Institute as well as of
the National Committee for Comparative
Literature and in which are published
studies, articles, and reviews of
comparative literature.
Questions concerning the visual arts and
musicology are researched as much at the
Institute of Art History George Oprescu in
Bucharest as in the specialized sections of
the Institute of Archaeology and Art History
in Cluj-Napoca and the Institute of
Socio-Human Research in Timisoara.
Especially in the latter decades, the
horizons of research have broadened
considerably, and the George Oprescu
Institute now covers the domains of theater,
music and cinema as well. The Institute of
Folklore and Ethnography Constantin
Brailoiu, which has one of the richest
record libraries in Europe in this domain,
holds an important position in this
concerted effort to capitalize upon the
arts. Among its principal achievements, two
of the most remarkable are Atlasul
etnografic romān (The Romanian Ethnographic
Atlas) and Colectia nationala de folclor
(The National Folklore Collection).
The George Oprescu Institute publishes two
periodicals: Studii si cercetari de istoria
artei (Studies and Research in Art History)
which appears in two series, Arta plastica
(Plastic Arts) and Muzica, teatru,
cinematografie (Music, Theater and the
Cinema), as well as Revue roumaine
d’Histoire de l’Art, with the same two
series as the Romanian-language publication.
The Constantin Brailoiu Institute edits
Revista de etnografie si folclor (Journal of
Ethnography and Folklore) and Anuarul
Institutului de Etnografie si Folclor
"Constantin Brailoiu" (Yearbook of the
Institute for Ethnography and Folklore
Constantin Brailoiu).
The development of this branch of research
has become an obvious necessity, especially
after entire generations of art historians
have become over-specialized. Henri Focillon
once called Romania "a country of painters,"
and the legacy of this country must be
unfailingly well known and protected. This
is exactly the aim of the researchers
working in the institutes of art history,
for whom the words of the founder of the
Romanian school of art history, George
Oprescu, have not ceased to be a motto:
"True art history is not simple
record-keeping, but a spiritual
participation". |