This significant new monograph on Romanian painter Marius Bercea (b. 1979) presents a selection of his work from 2020 to 2025, offering an in-depth view of his recent practice through both critical and personal perspectives. The publication features a new essay by curator and critic Diana Marincu, a conversation with the British painter Nick Goss, chaired by Thomas Marks, an interview with art historian and curator Liviana Dan, and a foreword by Matt Price. The book is published by Anomie Publishing, London, with the support of Jecza Gallery and UniCredit Bank Romania.
Bercea is widely recognised as a leading figure of the Cluj School of Painting a group of artists who emerged in Cluj-Napoca following the 1989 Romanian Revolution. Drawing on his experiences growing up in Communist Romania and his encounters with American culture, particularly during his many visits to Los Angeles, Bercea creates paintings that navigate the intersections of personal and collective memory, history and cultural identity. In recent years, Bercea has focused his portraiture on a generation of young Romanians, specifically those born around 1989, exploring their unique sense of historical memory and their collaged experience of liberal democracy and the free market.
In her essay, Diana Marincu examines recurring figures and motifs in Berceas recent work. She considers how his painted spaces often function like the scene of a film or the stage of a live performance, populated by characters who seem to await the finished script. Marincu traces the interplay of nostalgia, temporality and imagination in Berceas compositions, considering how his paintings negotiate the tension between personal experience and collective history.
In a conversation with friend and fellow artist Nick Goss, chaired by Thomas Marks, Bercea discusses his studio practice, techniques and the literary and art-historical references that inform his work. They consider Berceas engagement with American modernism, the interplay of interior and exterior spaces and the careful attention paid to the details of his subjects and environments. The dialogue emphasises how memory, storytelling and cinematic imagination converge in Berceas paintings. They also discuss their respective art educations and upbringings and how they inform their practices and the overlap between personal and cultural memory. Berceas interview with Liviana Dan foregrounds the artists intellectual and emotional engagement with painting and its history, tracing the influence of masters from Poussin and Titian to Cézanne and Gerhard Richter. They discuss his approach to portraiture, domestic interiors, colour and geometry, as well as the ways in which his biography and personal life intersect with his artmaking.