On National Culture Day, on January 15, 2025, from 1:30 p.m., we invite you to the opening of the exhibition “Days in Golești. Atelier Ivanovici”. The exhibited works are made by students of the “Dinu Lipatti” High School of Arts in Pitești, coordinated by professor Marius Viorel Ivanovici.

Alisia Maria Prioteasa, Daria Durigu, Alis Uță, George Moraru, Vanesa Bădulescu, Teodora Andrei, Mihnea Paraschiv, Alexandra Schvartz, Letizia Coatu, Ioana Teodora Ivanovici, Alexia Nicolescu are the youngsters who tomorrow will be the bearers of an identity and cultural values ​​anchored both in the universal tradition and in that of the fine arts in Romania. Through the exhibition that will open on January 15, 2025, in the Golești memorial history section, the Golești Museum offers students the opportunity to express their creativity, to bring visual messages that reflect their perspectives on culture and heritage to the public. It is also a way to encourage young exhibitors to understand that art is a powerful form of communication and a vehicle for social change. Volume, spatiality and perspective are rendered by the agile and curious eyes of children through color, line, dot and stain, resulting in authentic architectural and plastic compositions, united by the innocence and dedication with which they were created. The subjects, inspired by the two great places of national historical memory of Argeș County, the Golești Museum and the Florica Villa, represent architectural, drawing studies, static nature, project images of monumental constructions, which were approached with seriousness and curiosity by the young artists.

Along with the young aspiring to an artistic career, the professor Marius Viorel Ivanovici also exhibits some of his recent painting works. Born in Pitești, on August 15, 1975, Marius Ivanovici was a student of the art high school in Pitești, where Ion Pantilie and Nicolae Georgescu were his teachers. He then followed his artistic training at the National University of Art in Bucharest, under the guidance of Paul Vasilescu.

It is important to support these initiatives, because the cultural education of the young generation will contribute not only to their personal development, but also to the strengthening of the ties between them and the wider community. By encouraging them to appreciate and participate in the cultural life of the community, we invest in the future of a society that will preserve its values ​​and traditions, but will at the same time know how to evolve and adapt to changes.