Cantacuzino Palace

Coordinates: 44°26′55″N 26°05′18″E / 44.4487°N 26.0883°E / 44.4487; 26.0883
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Cantacuzino Palace
Palatul Cantacuzino
Beaux Arts & Rococo Revival
Town or cityBucharest
Country Romania
Coordinates44°26′55″N 26°05′18″E / 44.4487°N 26.0883°E / 44.4487; 26.0883
Construction started1898[1]
Completed1906[2]
Design and construction
Architect(s)Ion D. Berindey

Cantacuzino Palace is located on

Beaux Arts style, having a few Rococo Revival rooms. Today it houses the George Enescu museum.[3]

History

One of the gates of the palace (left), and a gate of the Hôtel du Rond-Point in Paris (right), both being very similar

The palace was built in 1901–1902 for

Beaux Arts style. After his death, the building was inherited by his son Mihail G. Cantacuzino, who died prematurely in 1929. Mihail's wife Maria remarried in December 1939 with music composer George Enescu. On 10 August 1913, at the end of the Second Balkan War, the Treaty of Bucharest was signed here.[4] The building – known as Cantacuzino Palace at the time – also hosted the Presidency of the Council of Ministers in the eve of World War II
.

After the death of George Enescu in 1955, his wife stated in her will that the palace would host a museum dedicated to the artist. In 1956, The National Museum George Enescu was established.[5][6]

Description

The exterior and most of the rooms are

Beaux Arts, the rest being Rococo Revival. The two lions at the entrance, and the gates and fences, in the Louis XIV style, give the building a princely look. The palace had the fame of a place in Bucharest where balls were held.[7] For the decoration of the interiors, Gheorghe Grigore Cantacuzino turned to the most famous artists of the time: George Demetrescu Mirea, Nicolae Vermont and Costin Petrescu. Nicolae Vermont made six medallions (oil on canvas embossed on the wall), three of which were signed and dated 1907. Five of the six medallions are placed above the doors in the hallway that led to the rooms to the right of the entrance. Two of them, Shepherd with Sheep (Cioban cu Oile) and Peasant Woman with Vessel (Țărăncuță cu Cofă), are directly inspired by the work of Nicolae Grigorescu, under whose influence was their author.[8]

In present day, about only five rooms can be visited, the rest being occupied by some institutions.

Gallery

  • The Palace during the Belle Époque (1877-1916), before the construction of the building at the intersection of Calea Victoriei and Strada Frumoasă
    The Palace during the Belle Époque (1877-1916), before the construction of the building at the intersection of Calea Victoriei and Strada Frumoasă
  • Detail of one of the gates
    Detail of one of the gates
  • A smaller gate of the palace
    A smaller gate of the palace
  • Detail of that smaller gate of the palace
    Detail of that smaller gate of the palace
  • View of the palace, with its pair of Louis XIV style lions at the entrance
    View of the palace, with its pair of Louis XIV style lions at the entrance
  • The glass and metal entrance of the palace
    The glass and metal entrance of the palace
  • Wall of the entrance room
    Wall of the entrance room
  • Handle of a door in the entrance room
    Handle of a door in the entrance room
  • Door in the ground floor hallway
    Door in the ground floor hallway
  • Peasant Woman with Vessel (Țărăncuță cu Cofă) by Nicolae Vermont, surrounded by Rococo Revival stuccos in the room where tickets and souvenirs are sold
    Peasant Woman with Vessel (Țărăncuță cu Cofă) by Nicolae Vermont, surrounded by Rococo Revival stuccos in the room where tickets and souvenirs are sold
  • Rococo Revival chimneypiece in the room where tickets and souvenirs are sold
    Rococo Revival
    chimneypiece
    in the room where tickets and souvenirs are sold
  • Festoon-based ornament on the same chimneypiece
    Festoon-based ornament on the same chimneypiece
  • Detail of Rococo Revival stuccos in the same room
    Detail of Rococo Revival stuccos in the same room
  • That room
    That room
  • Door of another room, filled with stuccos
    Door of another room, filled with stuccos
  • Astonishing highly decorated ceiling in a salon
    Astonishing highly decorated ceiling in a salon

References

  1. .
  2. .
  3. ^ Palatul Cantacuzino sau Muzeul George Enescu – București
  4. ^ Mihaela Stoica. "Palatul Cantacuzino, locul unde Nababul a interzis fumatul, iar George Enescu era oaspetele preferat al Marucăi. Pe Regina Maria o primea stând jos". Retrieved 12 December 2018.
  5. ^ National Institute of Historical Monuments – Cantacuzino palace Archived January 19, 2015, at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ Dan Berindei, Sebastian Boniface – Bucharest Travel Guide ', Ed. Sport-Tourism, Bucharest, 1980
  7. .
  8. ^ Oprea, Petre (1986). Itinerar Inedit prin Case Vechi din București (in Romanian). Editura Sport-Turism. p. 37.

External links