I love the style of these paintings. They are rich and suggestive and make me want to get to know their subjects. The red dots on a couple of the placards indicates they're sold, right? What does work like that sell for in Bucharest?
I think I understand your love-hate relationship with your city. I'm getting rather tired of Boston, but then again, I'm walking the same few roads from South Station to work every day. (And one of them takes me through a notorious open-air drug market.) But whenever I go for a long run along the Charles River I feel much better. I need to find the time and energy to explore some different neighborhoods.
Yes, pretty sure that's what they mean. And I do not know, they don't show the price next to it. Probably a good thing for budget-friendly activity hunters like me :)) I wondered myself, though. If I could afford to get art for my house, it would probably be like this, though. None of that line and a dot stuff.
Yes, I think that's certainly a huge element of it. It's unfair to compare your home city with places you travel to, because there, you're less likely to have the same work/grocery shopping/five friends you visit routine. Obviously. So it's less likely you get bored. I think we all get that eventually with the place we're in.
I dunno, I saw a thing online that said life's more than the same five streets and three friends you circle through, so go out there and explore. Resonated a whole lot.