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- ESSAY, Page 78Eugene Mihaesco
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- Shades of detail had not yet been sketched in, but the
- picture's message was evident. The boulder was Nicolae
- Ceausescu, and the people were trying to propel the monolith
- off a cliff. Staring at the unfinished illustration in New York
- City, a Rumanian guest of the artist Eugene Mihaesco remarked,
- "I guess we have to push a little harder." That was a year and
- a half ago. The piece and others by Mihaesco, who was born in
- Bucharest, have since appeared in Universul, a U.S.-printed
- biweekly circulated underground in Ceausescu's kingdom. And
- Rumanians did push, with all their heart, all their soul, all
- their might. Last week Mihaesco drew a sequel, the boulder
- smashed into pieces, which TIME set with the original to form
- a visual essay.
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- For Mihaesco, the personal cost has been heavy. Ceausescu
- was enraged at the drawings. In early 1989 Mihaesco's
- 79-year-old father Nicolae, who lives in Bucharest, was sacked
- from his job, isolated from his friends and ordered to rein in
- his "seditious" son. "I'm crushed if you go on," Nicolae told
- Eugene by telephone. "They will destroy me, destroy your
- mother." Grasping for a solution, the artist screamed at his
- father -- and the eavesdropping police -- "Don't tell me what
- to do. I disinherit you!" Children do not disinherit parents;
- this artist is crazy. Or so Mihaesco hoped the Securitate would
- think. Soon after, his father got his job back. But Nicolae
- Mihaescu did not understand his son's vehemence. They have not
- spoken since.
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