by Mirela Meiță copyright: ©Succession Brancusi - All rights reserved ADAGP, Paris / VISARTA, Bucharest, 2025.
What
specifically led you to study the artist and the man Constantin Brancusi?
Since
the beginning of my research and museographic activity in Iași, I have been
preoccupied with the art of the 20th century and especially the first half of
the period, rich in artistic events and well-known or lesser-known personalities.
If in Iași I did this research on the works of art that the Museum owned, once
arrived in Paris, I broadened my horizon given the diversity of the artists and
the dynamism of the art scene. At the same time as I was working to support myself,
I wanted to obtain the validation of my diplomas. In order to enrol in a
doctorate, I needed a diploma for the fifth year of studies that no longer
existed in our country at that time. In France, it is called DEA, meaning
“diplôme d’études approfondies” which I presented at the Sorbonne on a
peculiar subject: the contemporary playing card. It was a beautiful experience
for me, especially since at the time I was working at a museum that was
preparing to open: the “Museum of the Playing Card” in Issy-les-Moulineaux, a
museum that had opened in the meantime and had a very rich and varied
collection. I presented a series of drawings by a compatriot, one of the last
surrealists living in Paris, Jules Perahim. Then, I got a part-time job as a
documentarist at the Pompidou Center, where I began to study the archives that
were not yet up to date, with the aim to complete a doctorate. My research
coincided with the preparation of the first Brancusi retrospective exhibition
in Paris in 1995 and then with the need to reconstruct the Atelier in front of
the Pompidou Center. I put all my knowledge at the disposal of these events
and, in parallel, I continued the research work for my thesis titled: “The
artistic and cultural environment of Brancusi: an investigative essay starting
from the donation to the National Museum of Modern Art”.
It
is very possible that Brancusi wouldn’t have become the Brancusi we know today
without the support of a long line of compatriots who recognised his talent
and supported him from adolescence until he was able to support himself in
Paris. What was this path and who were those who contributed to the
development of Brancusi?
I
disagree, Brancusi was built of talent, intelligence and ambition. It is true
that he was encouraged and helped by his fellow citizens in Craiova at the
beginning, as well as by several scholarships from the Dudu Church, to attend
the School of Arts and Crafts in Craiova, where he distinguished himself
through serious work. At the School of Fine Arts in Bucharest, he was noticed
by his teachers for his dedication to his work and for the curiosity he showed
in order to learn, which led them to recommend him and help him, as did his
anatomy professor, Dr. Dimitrie Gerota, with whom he created the “Écorché” in
plaster, a multiplied work that served in the country’s medical schools. When,
after completing his studies, he wanted to go to a European art center, he
could no longer receive scholarships, given the age limit of 28. Once in Paris,
he was helped and encouraged by compatriot friends like Daniel Poiana and
resumed his work, sculpting busts that he tried to sell. Through his
compatriots he also received orders, which he completed. For example, the
painter Ștefan Popescu sent him an order from the wife of the lawyer Petre
Stănescu from Buzău to execute a funerary monument intended for the grave of
her deceased husband. In Paris, another compatriot, Dr. Solomon Marbé sent him
another order from the family of a young Russian student who died in 1910.
Brancusi thus created one of his most beautiful works: “The Kiss”. And the
opportunities multiplied because Romanian intellectuals, artists and
collectors like Victor N. Pop acquired works by the young sculptor living in
Paris. These were acts of aid, but I believe that, even if they did not exist,
his ambition was too great not to find means to overcome difficult moments and
to continue the “fight” as he called the competition at the center of European
modernity.
At
the beginning of the 20th century when Brancusi arrived in Paris, the city was
in full artistic swing, on every street corner you would probably meet artists
who would become references in modern art. What did Brancusi do, how did he
manage to find his way, his calling as an artist, in this crowded and
competitive environment?
I
come back to what I said: Brancusi arrived in Paris at a mature age determined
to succeed. His strategy was first and foremost to continue working, even if he
did not have a studio at the beginning. Thus, he began to exhibit at collective
exhibitions; at salons: in 1906, he was noticed at the Salon d’Automne by
the jury members, sculptors known at the time as Maillol, Bourdelle, and even
by the president of the jury Rodin who invited him – after the intervention of
two compatriots: the journalist Otilia Cozmuta-Bölöni and the writer Maria
Bengescu – to work in his studio, in Meudon. Brancusi began working there in
January 1907, but left Rodin in April of the same year.
After
leaving Rodin’s studio, Brancusi completely changed his working style. What
determined this change?
It should be stated from the beginning that Rodin hired apprentices or practitioners in his studio, that is, young sculptors who had to learn from the master, copy what he had created and, most of the time, render his pieces in marble. Brancusi worked and observed for four months, but realised that he was always repeating the same thing and that, committed to meeting the master’s demands, he could no longer create. Therefore, he decided to leave the studio in Meudon, maintaining the same respect for Rodin who would later say that his former apprentice was as stubborn as he was. Brancusi parted ways with Rodin, but maintained his admiration and would always praise him. His aphorism: “in the shade of old trees, nothing grows”, in which he expresses the concept of the master and the apprentice, is famous. This is probably the reason why Brancusi did not accept apprentices. He forbade those whom he accepted into his studio from working on his sculptures, such as the three young Romanian women, Irina Codreanu, Margareta Cossaceanu and Milita Petrașcu, telling them that they just had to look at them and meditate. In 1927, at the intervention of an American writer, he accepted an American-Japanese sculptor into his studio, Isamu Noguchi, who worked in the studio in impasse Ronsin for a few months, after which he left for the same reasons. Everything Noguchi did in the subsequent period was a copy of Brancusi. To free himself from Brancusi’s influence, Noguchi went to Japan, his father’s country, to gain resources and find his own path.

Miss
Pogany, attracted the attention of the public and the press for its modernity.
They mocked the Romanian artist, ironically calling it “an egg on a sugar
cube”.
Brancusi
was at the center of two scandals with great media resonance at the time;
scandals that targeted his work: one is represented by the withdrawal in 1920
of the work Princess X from the Salon des Indépendants exhibition on the
grounds that it was an obscene, provocative work, and the second in 1926 when
American customs officers considered that the work Bird in Space was not a
sculpture but an industrial object. How did Constantin Brancusi respond to
these situations?
In
one of my latest books, Brancusi, la chose vraie (Gourcuff-Gradenigo, 2022) I
mentioned that the first scandal that one of Brancusi’s works caused occurred
on the occasion of the presentation of five sculptures at “The International
Exhibition of Modern Art”, also called the Armory Show, in New York, Boston and
Chicago. Of the five sculptures, one, Miss Pogany, attracted the attention of
the public and the press for its modernity. They mocked the Romanian artist,
ironically calling it “an egg on a sugar cube”. In Boston, the public burned
effigies of Brancusi, Duchamp and Walter Pach, the exhibition organiser.
However, this entire scandal was beneficial to the artist and opened his way
to America: collectors began to acquire his works, and gallery owners offered
him solo exhibitions in their galleries.
When in 1920, the prefect of police in Paris forced Brancusi, at the instigation of envious artists such as Picasso or Matisse, to remove Princess X from the exhibition at the Salon of the Independents, Brancusi had the satisfaction of being surrounded by many artists, writers, and intellectuals of all kinds who rallied around a petition signed by 70 personalities to contest this absurd decision. Brancusi was thus able to put his sculpture back in the halls of the Salon, after explaining to journalists his artistic approach to creating this work. At the end of the trial, the attorney general proclaimed it as a victory for Brancuși, but also a victory for art. It subsequently triggered a change in the American legislation on the transport of works of art.

Brâncuși had a relationship of respect, delicacy and modesty towards all the women who crossed the threshold of his studio.
You
have repeatedly said that the ambiguity of Brancusi’s work is one of his
characteristics. Can you elaborate on this observation?
In
the in-depth analysis of Brancusi’s work, several works are examples of this
ambiguity that Brancusi cultivates. One of the first examples is Princess X,
which caused a scandal, precisely because it is an ambiguous work: the shape
of this sculpture can be interpreted as a phallus but also as a sublimated bust
of a woman – Brancusi said to journalists: that “he was attracted by the beauty
of the material and the sinuous lines that summarise in a single archetype all
the female effigies on earth”. The ambiguity also comes from one of the first
titles of this work: Portrait of Princess Marie Bonaparte, which recalls the
well known attraction of the princess to psychoanalysis and the interpretation
of female and male sexuality. Another equally ambiguous work is Leda, a title
that refers to Greek mythology with all the interpretations of the Leda myth,
but that can also evoke the elegance of the “swan”: Brancusi could have been
thinking of this enormous bird whose body is extended by a long, undulating neck
and which he filmed. To emphasise the ambiguity, he answered those who asked
him and did not know Romanian and therefore did not notice the similarity of
these two words, that he did not think of the Greek myth, because the body of a
man (Zeus) could not be so elegant and beautiful, even when transformed into a
swan.
Brancusi
uses ambiguity especially in his photographs, many of them which are blurred,
with certain shadows like distant echoes of a figure. He cultivates this blurriness to
suggest certain ideas not expressed in the main image of the photograph.
What
can you tell us about the sacredness of Brăncuși’s work?
The
sacredness of Brancusii’s work is often evoked. He himself is so respected by
his compatriots that he is regarded as a saint. Moreover, right after his
death, a novel inspired by the artist’s life was published titled The Saint
of Montparnasse, written by an American writer of Romanian origin, Peter
Neagoe. But only the title reminds of holiness, because the novel tells the
story of the life of a genius artist from Montparnasse. A few years ago, some
enthusiasts from Târgu Jiu raised the idea of sanctifying Brancusi, but I don’t
know what this act could bring to posterity. Brancusi was not a saint, but his
work, so full of the essence of life and beauty, has an elevating role, of a
mediator between the profane and the divine. It can train the spirit to
transcend profane reality and separate it from the rest of things. Brancusi
himself meditated on this and I would quote in this regard one of the fragments
from his workshop notes that I published in 2024 at L’Atelier
contemporain publishing house in Strasbourg: “Like love, art is a divine
necessity, it has nothing to do with profane desires; we must be at the same
time God to create, King to command and slave to work” This book will be
published in Romanian at the beginning of 2026 at the Polirom publishing house.
In
your most recent book Brancusi et ses Muses you talk about the artist’s
relationship with his muses. What was Brancusi like in relation to his loves
and which legends have been proven false?
This
is a very dear subject to me and I have long had a plan to write this book to
try to get even closer to the man and his work – inseparable otherwise. As you
well know, much has been written about the artist’s loves and it has been long
stated that he was a womaniser and a passionate lover. A play on this subject
has also been staged. Of course, out of admiration for the artist, we can
imagine all kinds of relationships: this is just how the legend of the love
between the artist and Maria Tănase arose, or between him and Princess Marie
Bonaparte, or between him and Peggy Guggenheim. My aim was to show Brancusi’s
relationship with women: lovers, friends, muses, collectors and writers. What
I found, having read almost all of the correspondence he kept, is that
Brancusi had a relationship of respect, delicacy and modesty towards all the
women who crossed the threshold of his studio. Of course, he had, like any
man, one or more lovers, but he always respected them. Not all relationships
with women turned into intimate relationships. That is why the story launched
by lawyer Petre Pandrea, who published a lot about the sculptor’s love with
Maria Tanase, seemed unfounded to me. The story he invented is not based on
anything: just a photograph of the two kept at the Romanian Academy Library,
which was taken in New York and not in the intimacy of the Parisian studio
where, according to Pandrea’s detailed writing, a crazy love affair would have
unfolded between the two. As for the alleged connection with Princess Marie
Bonaparte: from the research done by me and by the princess’ specialists, she
had no knowledge of Brancusi. She was from the high aristocracy who did not
frequent the studios of modern artists. She never knew the work that bears her
name. On the other hand, Brancusi knew Peggy Guggenheim well because she wanted
to buy more works by him, but his works were becoming more and more expensive.
She managed to buy a Bird in Space and then acquired Măiastra. I
bring all these arguments in the preface to my book published in 2022 by
Gourcuff-Gradénigo Publishing House and which will, I hope, be translated by
Vremea Publishing House in Bucharest.
What
intrigues you and, to the same extent, what fascinates you about the artist and
man that was Constantin Brancusi?
I have always been fascinated by his ability to have a dialogue with the material and reflect on the essence of things and beings. I am also fascinated by his intelligence in distancing himself from everyday things, withdrawing and being with himself – which allowed him to meditate, to enter a sphere that not every mortal can reach. What intrigues me is that the more I advance in analysing the work and in following the man, the more I find unknowns; details that could change long-established beliefs. I have the impression that Brancusi was cunning and knew in advance that what he leaves to posterity will give many of us something to think about, will force us to ask ourselves questions about ourselves, about our being and our relationship with the universe.

Brancusi was built of talent, intelligence and ambition. It is true that he was encouraged and helped by his fellow citizens in Craiova at the beginning, as well as by several scholarships from the Dudu Church, to attend the School of Arts and Crafts in Craiova, where he distinguished himself through serious work.
