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Clotilde Armand and the exhibition at the town hall
Lawyer Mihai Dragan comes with bomb footage from the town hall led by Clotilde Armand (Sector 1).
“From very reliable sources, we learned that, after quickly solving all the problems of Sector 1, from sanitation, to scholarships for students, from residential parking lots, to security in schools, the mayor of Banu Manta found time for the pearl hat. .. Sorry for the patronage.
For Friday, Mayor Clotilde Armand prepares the opening of a sculpture exhibition, right in the monumental hall on the ground floor of the Sector 1 Town Hall.
However, the inauguration will be held behind closed doors, and will be intended only for connoisseurs, that is, artists and their families. Only on Monday, the general public will be able to visit the mayor’s exhibition.
The pretext is, of course, the pandemic.
Of course, the comments on Clotilde Armand’s socializing page, where the mayor also announced the opening, give rise to another reason for postponing public access. Citizens reproach the mayor for refusing to hold hearings, under the pretext of complying with the regulations to prevent the spread of the new coronavirus.
So the reason for restricting the general public’s access to Friday’s inauguration could also be to avoid possible reproaches from some citizens.
Beyond the mundane aspect or political considerations, what is striking is the somewhat grotesque aspect of the “works of art” that are going to delight the public.
The Sector 1 Town Hall building is monumental, built between 1928 and 1936, in an eclectic style that combines Neo-Romanesque and Neo-Romanian elements, for the Town Hall of Verde, as it was called then.
The painting of the beautiful council chamber belongs to Olga Greceanu, a famous and fashionable painter at the time. King Ferdinand I himself paid for the painting with his own money to capture scenes of his coronation and that of Queen Maria in Alba Iulia.
In such a monumental public building, the hall of honor, clad in white marble, decorated with marble columns and where the monumental sculpted marble staircase begins, may not be the best place to display controversial works of art.
Of course, these works could be exhibited, why not successfully, in a private gallery.
And the legitimate question of the citizens remains: how can Mayor Clotilde Armand participate in social events, such as the opening of an exhibition, but cannot give audiences in the spacious boardroom of the Sector 1 City Council? Perhaps Madame Clotilde needs a … pearl hat … ”, said lawyer Mihai Dragan.
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