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WIN Gallery interviews promote art not only as an aesthetic form, but also as a universal means of communication, connecting ideas, people, and cultures, transforming contemporary art in Romania into a true social and cultural catalyst.

Marijana and Relu Bițulescu engage in a fruitful artistic dialogue, in which experience, rigor, and reflection come together in a fascinating „dance”. A visual artist with an impressive career, Marijana Bițulescu has established herself as an authority in the field of tapestry, printmaking, and fashion design. Today, she is one of the most active and appreciated contemporary creators in her field, having received numerous prestigious international awards and selections. Her artistic career is marked by a constant presence in major European exhibitions and solid recognition in private collections around the world. Complementing her work, her husband Relu Bițulescu—a multifaceted spirit—obsessively returns in his work to the symbol of the apple of knowledge and the myth of Adam and Eve, seen as a meditation on time. For the artist, religiously inspired figures do not belong to a single age or condition; whether young or old, real or imaginary, his characters are bearers of an essential question about becoming and about the ephemeral.

Relu and Marijana Bițulescu at WIN Gallery - 2025

Relu Bițulescu - Profile with Orange Hair (2025)

Relu Bițulescu - Memories from Byzantium (2025)

Marijana Bițulescu - Hourglass​ (2018) 

Artist Relu Bițulescu at WIN Gallery with
curator Marinela Măntescu-Isac (2025)

WIN Gallery: What personal experiences of the artist Marijana Bițulescu are woven into the monumental work entitled "Axis Mundi"?  ​

M.J.: When I start working on a piece, I try to connect with what is above us. I believe we need to have this connection in order to find our way. It is this connection we have with what is above and what is below. The work has a strong bond with spirituality, with philosophy, the composition goes vertically. My whole theme, Migration, which is so current — whether cultural, political, or economic — tells the story of people trying to find their way in life. Some succeed; others don't. We all ask ourselves questions, seek answers, migrate from one culture to another, and come across those good things. To the same extent that they appear, we also realize that we discover the less good ones in the process.

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Marijana Bițulescu at WIN Gallery with curator Marinela Măntescu Isac (2025)
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Marijana Bițulescu - Axis Mundi (2024)

R.B.: These are compelling themes in art, and yet you can't ignore them. Even good things, not just the bad things, come with migration... Or at least the good things are more important than the bad ones. [Speaking of migration and the artist's original art], I think it's already risky to say that someone has discovered something, because history proves to us, at every moment in time, that someone else was there before, someone else was there, and [...] has already traveled that path and interpreted what you thought you had discovered. Somehow, I suspect Da Vinci had extraterrestrial connections, because he couldn't have thought of all of that with his 15th-century mind... Everything that has been done since then has actually stemmed from his ideas, like battle machines, helicopters...

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Marijana Bițulescu - Cultural Migration III​ (2024) 

Relu Bițulescu - Temptation (2025) 

Marijana Bițulescu - Infanta with the dog (2017) 

WIN Gallery: What themes have been revisited? What themes fascinate you now, as much as they did 20 years ago? ​

R.B.: For me, it's still the same theme: Adam and Eve, but not limited to only that.

M.J.: I didn't stick to one theme, I just followed him [husband Relu Bițulescu], just like that, on the fly, so that we could be united.  

R.B.: Technologically speaking, it's harder for her, she works with threads, with materials, not just with color. 

 

WIN Gallery:  Is it easier to finish a piece or to start a new one? 

M.J.: I don't know what's easier, I couldn't say if there's anything easy about what I do. Finishing a piece isn't easy, but neither is continuing one that's already started. The tapestry technique requires a lot of work, a lot of effort...

R.B.: In principle, things are pretty much the same, except that by approaching [art] differently in terms of materials, you find that, technically speaking, you have some more spectacular solutions than the other one, who works with thread, metal, sheet metal, wire, nails... In turn, the other one may find some forms of expression that are more beautiful and interesting than in painting. [In the series "Forests" - "Golden Forest," "Silver Forest"...] I used some mixed techniques, with reliefs, precisely to break out of some patterns. I was talking earlier about the white canvas... You can give it a background and start drawing something and filling it in. But here I wanted to overcome the limitations of the canvas with these mixed techniques. In the end, our purpose is to interpret all the time. 

M.J.: Just as he tries to use all kinds of materials in his painting, I also try to use less conventional materials... wool, wire, various threads. 

R.B.: That's right, and with trompe l'oeil... It's a little trick, but it's not a literal translation; we're not deceiving the viewer. The artist uses a trick to bring to life an artistic expression that is both appealing and captivating. 

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Relu Bițulescu - Portrait of an old pink pearl (2024)
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Relu Bițulescu - The golden forest (2024)

Relu Bițulescu - The lady with pearls (2024) 

Relu Bițulescu - Adam's suspicions (2024) 

Marijana Bițulescu - Annunciation (2016) 

WIN Gallery: The arts intersect... Painting with photography, with film, with theater. What are the most important influences in your work?  ​

M.B.: I have always had respect for the legacy left to us by our ancestors, even when it comes to our folklore art and craftsmen. The arts are beautiful throughout Romania; I couldn't single out any particular region. I made tapestries, I studied a lot, and the Oltenian and Moldavian rugs are fabulous! The Oltenia region is [so] rich in symbols and symbolism. My creative foundation as an artist comes from there, I had enormous respect for the heritage they left behind, I went to the roots and tried, through my own means, to bring it into the contemporary world, to enrich it in my own way.  

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Marijana Bițulescu - Wings (2018)
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Marijana Bițulescu - Cultural Migration IV (2024)

WIN Gallery: Regarding the idea of migration—a theme that appears frequently in your work—what is that special thing you learned about cultural migration? 

R.B.: The Portuguese were among the first to arrive in Japan, and they left some Christian "traces" there. And they left something else: the Japanese did not have the word "thank you" in their vocabulary. It didn't exist! The word "Arigato" comes from the Portuguese "Obrigado," someone from Portugal told me this, and I was deeply impressed. The Japanese had no reason to say thank you, it wasn't in their philosophy, and they took this word, "Thank you," from them.  

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Marijana Bițulescu - Between Heaven and Earth - Message (2022)
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Relu Bițulescu - The fruit of knowledge (2025)

Interview by  Ioana-Raluca Zamfir,
Visual artist and PhD. in cinema and mass-media