Márton Izsák


Márton Izsák was a prolific Transylvanian Jewish sculptor of Hungarian descent, noted personality and recipient of the honorary citizenship award from the city of Târgu Mureș.
The son of Izsák Jakab, by arranged marriage to Friedman Vilma, Márton was born in Gălăuțaș. After his family home in Gheorgheni burned down in World War I, his family spent some years in Petele before eventually settling down in Târgu Mureș.
After moving to the city, he spent some time apprenticing in furniture making under an artist named Rózsa Géza, who noted Márton's artistic talent. At the artist's behest, Márton's father enrolled him in an arts program, and he spent the next 3 years learning how to carve at the Industrial High School in Târgu Mureș, but before finishing he was invited by Rózsa to complete highschool, and then continue to an arts degree, at the College of Applied Arts in Budapest, graduating in 1933. While at the College, he studied under notable sculptors Imre Simay and Lajos Mátrai.
In the late 1930s he returned home to Târgu Mureș, where he remained until his deportation at the beginning of World War II. He gained recognition and eventually presented his works in personal exhibitions in 1936 and in 1937.
During the war, he lost 25 relatives, including his mother, to death camps. After his return to the city from labour camp in 1944, he worked as well recognized instructor and eventually art director at the acclaimed Liceul Vocational de Artâ in Târgu Mureș 1945 to 1974.
During his time at the art school, he produced many notable works, including several collaborations with István Csorvássy. His Monument to the Deportees, erected in Dej in front of the local Orthodox synagogue is one of the earliest Holocaust memorials to be erected in Europe, and memorializes ~7000 jews relocated to the nearby Dej ghetto and eventually deported and killed at Auschwitz-Birkenau. Many of his other works still are on display in several cities, but primarily in Târgu Mureș – including the notable "Two Bolyai" in Bolyai Square in Târgu Mureș.
The mysterious overnight removal, in 1962 of his statue of Stalin, erected just five years earlier in 1957, is remembered as signifying the metaphorical end of a Soviet Union domination of Romania during De-Stalinization in Romania.
In 2003, a public Holocaust memorial was erected in Târgu Mureș, based on a cast and plans originally produced for Dej in 1947. Shortly before his death, he was ordained as :ro:Cetățean de onoare for the city.

Mysterious disappearance of the Stalin statue in 1962

According to local tales, the Târgu Mures statue was not officially destroyed – it simply disappeared overnight, without indication of where it went or what was done with it. All this occurred against a background of significant political upheaval, including the start and end of the Magyar Autonomous Region, De-Stalinization in Romania, and Romania's gradual distancing from the Warsaw pact.
The event has entered public folklore, and to this day continues to be a subject of conversation and the source of several urban myths – for example, the popular idea that the state was originally meant to contain a library in its base, or that the library was actually constructed, still currently exists. Some claim the statue is still stored inside.

Selected works