bg Chisinau

Moisei Gamburd House

- Strada București 63 -
The one-story residential building was built at the end of the 19th century and belonged to the merchant Ivan Hristoforovivi Kubitsky. At the beginning of the 20th century, it was bought by the Goldenberg family, and later on by the winegrower Isak Gamburd, the father of the Romanian painter Moisei Gamburd. Moisei, who was born on October 6, 1903, in Chișinău, lived here in the periods from 1938 until 1941 and from 1944 until 1954. His parents owned a vineyard in the area of ​​the village of and were engaged in winemaking. He studied at the gymnasium and lyceum named after , then at the Chișinău Higher School of Fine Arts with the artist and the sculptor . In June 1925, he passed the undergraduate exam at the Chișinău Lyceum for Boys. In the period between 1925 and 1930, he studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in , after which he returned to Chișinău.
Moisei Gamburd
Moisei took part in the salons of the Society of Fine Arts of Bessarabia, of which the first personal exhibition was held in Chișinău in 1934. Until 1940 he was known as Max Gamburd and lived mainly in . In 1938 he moved back to Chișinău, together with his wife Eugenia Gamburd, who was born in 1913 and became a painter, decorator, and scenographer, who studied at the School of Fine Arts in Chișinău between 1930 and 1935 and the Academy of Fine Arts in Bucharest between 1935 and 1936. During the , Moisei was transferred to , where he was involved in the work of the evacuated government of the Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic. After his return in 1944, he taught at the Chișinău Art School and restored and headed the Union of Artists of Moldova in Chișinău, which at that time included only three other artists besides him. On July 14, 1954, a few days after his personal exhibition in Chișinău as one of the most influential artists of the republic, he unexpectedly committed suicide.
Eugenia and Moisei Gamburd
The top part of the porch that covers the main entrance of the building, which was built in the Eclectic style with Neo-Classical influences, features a containing the initials of Isak Gamburd. The impressive columns that support the porch are crowned with a Corinthian , which also counts for the many . The that are placed above the windows and the main entrance door are beautifully decorated with a , as well as two . The pediments are supported by two , which are adorned with foliage. The between these corbels is embellished with floral decorations, including a .
An old photo that shows the building