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Updated June 11, 2025
Grupul statuar “Pescarii” – Heritage Constanța
## Grupul Statuar „Pescarii” (Grupul Statuar) in Constanța, Romania
On Constanța’s seafront promenade by the city’s iconic Casino, Grupul Statuar „Pescarii” (“The Fishermen”) is one of those public artworks that reads instantly—even if you know nothing about Romanian sculpture. Three fishermen strain together, pulling a net from the sea. The composition is all tension and teamwork, built to be seen in profile against the open sky and the Black Sea.
This is not a museum piece behind glass. It’s a historic monument on the Faleza Cazinoului / Casino Promenade, positioned along Bulevardul Regina Elisabeta in Constanța.
### Quick facts you can rely on
– Name: Grupul statuar „Pescarii” (“The Fishermen”)
– Where: Constanța, Casino Promenade (Faleza Cazinoului), Bd. Regina Elisabeta (near the Casino area) Constanța
– Coordinates (given): 44.171388, 28.6639139
– Sculptor: Corneliu (Cornel) Medrea Constanța
– Material: Stone (piatră) Constanța
– Year: 1959 Constanța
– Historic monument listing (LMI): CT-III-m-B-02922
– Restoration note: Listed as rehabilitated in 2016 by local heritage reporting. Constanța
## What you’re looking at (and why it works)
### The scene
The statuary group depicts fishermen hauling a net—a moment chosen for movement: bodies leaning back, arms engaged, the net rendered as a mass that visually “pulls” the eye forward. That subject is explicitly described in Constanța’s local heritage documentation. Constanța
### Why the setting matters
This piece was designed for the seafront. Placing working bodies at the edge of the water is the entire point: it ties the sculpture’s theme (labor + sea) to the city’s identity as a Black Sea port. In practical terms, that means your experience of it changes with:
– Side-light (early/late day) that exaggerates surface texture in the stone
– Wind and sea glare that make the figures feel more exposed—more “real” than they would inland
Those are observational travel truths rather than hidden trivia, but they’re why people stop here without planning to.
## How to visit (no gate, no ticket, no schedule to memorize)
Because it’s an outdoor monument on a public promenade, there’s no official “opening hours” concept the way there would be for a museum. Your main constraints are daylight, weather, and pedestrian traffic on the promenade.
### Best way to approach it on foot
If you’re already at the Casino Promenade (Faleza Cazinoului), approach from both directions:
– From the Casino side: you get the “postcard” relationship between the sculpture and the waterfront setting.
– From the boulevard side: you’ll notice how the figures were composed to read clearly even from a distance.
The monument is documented as being on the promenade near Bd. Elisabeta (with references placing it in the Casino waterfront zone). Constanța
## Photography tips that actually improve your shot
### 1) Don’t shoot it head-on first
The sculpture’s narrative (pulling force) reads strongest from an angle where you can see the lean of the bodies and the “weight” of the net mass.
### 2) Use the horizon deliberately
A slightly lower camera position lets the figures cut cleanly against sky. A higher angle flattens the forms and makes the net look like a lump rather than an action.
### 3) Watch for harsh midday contrast
Bright seafront light can blow out pale stone. If you’re shooting midday, expose for highlights and bring shadows back later—stone holds detail if you protect the bright areas.
## Context: who made it and when
The work is attributed to Corneliu Medrea, a major Romanian sculptor, and multiple sources (including local heritage documentation and local press) place the sculpture’s completion in 1959, executed in stone. Constanța
It also appears on Romania’s List of Historic Monuments (LMI) under code CT-III-m-B-02922, reinforcing that this is not just decorative street art—it’s formally recorded as cultural heritage.
## What else to pair it with nearby (so this stop isn’t “just a statue”)
Because Grupul Statuar „Pescarii” sits on the Casino Promenade, it naturally fits into a compact seafront walk that foregrounds Constanța’s coastal identity. One high-confidence pairing is the Constanța Casino area itself—the promenade context is repeatedly cited as the sculpture’s setting. Constanța
If you’re building a wider city loop, Romania tourism materials point travelers toward Constanța’s broader mix of seafront landmarks and archaeological/museum offerings—useful if your day isn’t exclusively coastal.
## Data freshness check (what might be outdated)
– Restoration/rehabilitation details: sources report rehabilitation around 2016, but conditions can change over time with seafront wear and municipal works; treat any “current condition” claims you see elsewhere as time-sensitive unless recently verified on-site. Constanța
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