A full mailbox is a happy mailbox! World through postcards, postcrossing and covers

Showing posts with label FDC's. Show all posts
Showing posts with label FDC's. Show all posts

Friday, 17 April 2020

0365 Europa Cept covers 2020 Romania ancient postal routes



Self prepared FDC - during Coronavirus shutdown - Bucharest 
Circulated - one day time of travel

Sent 09.04.2020
Received 10.04.2020



And on this link -  you can find also other similar cover sent to France :) To my friend Eric Contesse 

And here to Germany - Holger Kaufhold: 


Monday, 14 January 2019

0254 FDC Singapore Happy New Year 2019

Sent 01.01.2019
Received 07.01.2019
Travel time 6 days

Sender Johnny Lowis from Singapore



Friday, 11 January 2019

Monday, 7 January 2019

0197 Anniversary Cover 25 years from first Europa issue of Moldova Post

Sent: 29.12.2018
Received: 07.01.2019
Travel time 10 days

Sender: IMPS - Niall Murphy - the president of IMPS, thank you so much! Such great cover, celebrating 25 years from first issue Europa of Moldova Republic post! 





IMPS is an evolution of the highly successful project "MoldovaStamps", first developed by our President, Niall Murphy, in 2003 and developed continuously since then. MoldovaStamps succeeded in it's objective to be one of the best online single-country philatelic web sites in the world. It has enjoyed the support of people from over 160 countries and has earned a considerable reputation. MoldovaStamps is one of the most popular philatelic web sites in the world.

In March 2018, it was decided to evolve MoldovaStamps into an international philatelic society, with the primary objective of promoting world-wide awareness of Moldova, her history and culture, through the medium of philately.

Unlike traditional, formal philatelic societies with their strict rules and procedures, IMPS want to take a fresh, modern attitude. More info on link below.

You can become too member of International Moldovan Philatelic Society here http://www.moldovastamps.org/

Friday, 2 March 2018

0060 Romanian FDC - The Romanian Renaissance - February 2018



With the occasion of the 170th anniversary of the 1848 Revolution, Romfilatelia introduces into circulation the postage stamp issue “The Romanian Renaissance” in painting.
On the stamp with the face value of Lei 8, is reproduced the painting The Romanian Renaissance, by Gheorghe Tattarescu.
This year marks the 170th anniversary of the 1848 Revolution which represented the cornerstone of Romania’s birth. It was the moment when artists and intellectuals acknowledged the community of language and culture of the territories inhabited by Romanians, and began to militate to forge a unitary state. The national feeling was built even through the works of the painters of the 1848 movement, who were inspired by the artistic movements fashionable at that time in the great cities of Western Europe.
One of the most important representative painters of the 1848 movement was Gheorghe Tattarescu (October, 1820, Focsani – October 24, 1894, Bucharest). He was the nephew of the church painter Nicolae Teodorescu, his first tutor in the art of church painting, who, in 1831, founded in Buzau a school for church painting, where the great future painter enrolled as a student, at the age of 11. As a child, the artist painted churches along with his uncle, and was remarked by the Chesarie Bishop of Buzau, who offered him, in 1845, a scholarship in Rome. He completed his studies in the revolutionary atmosphere of the 1848 movement in Rome, and his first works had a powerful national charge. The Italian education also distinguished itself through the influences manifested in his work by the Christian iconography.
The artist returned to the country at the half of the 19th century. During that time, he was one of the most important churches’ painters. Over 50 places of worship bear the mark of the maestro, among which the Church of St. Spiridon, the Metropolitan Cathedral in Iasi, the Greek Church of Braila, the Church of the Ciolanu monastery in Buzau, the White, Zlatari, Coltei, Cretulescu, Enei, St. Spiridon churches and the Lady Elena Hospice in Bucharest etc.
Gheorghe Tattarescu also preoccupied himself with the foundation of a Romanian artistic school. Together with Theodor Aman, he founded, in 1864, The National Fine Arts School. He worked together with his students, especially on church paintings.
The artist lived the political and cultural atmosphere of the time to the fullest. He is the author of memorable portraits of the leaders of the 1848 movement, like Nicolae Balcescu, Gheorghe Magheru or Stefan Golescu.
In 1848, when he was in Italy, he started to work on an artistic project dedicated to the national ideal. Gheorghe Tattarescu exhibited the work for the first time in Rome, in 1850. “The Awakening of Romania” signifies the rebirth of the country through science, art and faith. The composition is distinctly accomplished in two planes. On the lower side, a woman wakes up from her sleep, a symbol of Romania’s birth who breaks free from the chains of slavery, next to the partially unfolded Romanian flag. Further down on the left side, there is the horn of abundance, and on the right side, by contrast, a poor peasant family in front of a hut. An angel lifts the veil of obscurantism, pointing towards the upper plane to the personified symbols of science, art and faith. The Danube, the Carpathians, and the ruins of the former Romanian capital, Targoviste, all figure suggestively in the background of the composition.
Tattarescu offered the painting to the Barbu Stirbei ruler, who, impressed by the gift received, founded The Gallery of Paintings. The first piece of the collection, donated by the ruler, was Tattarescu’s own painting. In the meanwhile, the Gallery was transformed in the State Pinacotheque, and later on, in the National Museum of Art.
Gheorghe Tattarescu’s body of work, today found in the patrimony of the Bucharest Municipality Museum, had several names. Initially, the author mentioned the canvas by the title “Romania’s Awakening”. But, in 1867, when the artwork was sent to Paris, at the Universal Exhibition, it was renamed “Romania’s Dream”. In 1953, when the Memorial House “Gheorghe Tattarescu” was founded, his work entered the patrimony of the Bucharest Municipality Museum with the title “The Renaissance of Romania”.
On the stamp of the imperforated souvenir sheet of the postage stamp, with the face value of Lei 15, is reproduced an old age penciled portrait of Gheorghe Tattarescu. The illustration is probably an intermediate version of the Self-Portrait on canvas, finalized in 1875.
(Romfilatelia internet site)

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