About the Book
In 1936, the youthful Nicolae Ceaucescu was imprisoned for anti-Fascist agitation in Bucharest. Some 53 years later, he was tried and convicted as a dictator, for genocide and the sabotage of the Romanian economy. In that interval, Ceaucescu had gone from street agitator to Communist minister, president of the State Council, President, and, ultimately author of a personality cult that was to estrange him from the most basic needs of his people--leading to his execution by firing squad in 1989. The Ceaucescu following stemmed in part from a particularly powerful personal narcissism that required a great deal of iconic affirmation of itself, and "CEAU" gathers a selection of the hundreds upon hundreds of portraits of Nicolae and Elena Ceaucescu that had either been commissioned by a variety of political bodies within the Socialist Republic of Romania, or had been offered to the Ministry of Culture as a gift by the artists themselves. These portraits have been preserved in the storage vaults of the National Museum of Contemporary Art in Bucharest, and are now collected and published for the first time, with a transcription of the 1989 trial of Nicolae and Elena Ceaucescu that brought an end to their rule.