At the beginning of the 20th century, as the town of Constanta was getting bigger, new Orthodox churches were built for the new districts of the city. In 1914 the municipality started the construction of St George’s Church in what was, one hundred years ago, the far end of the city and nowadays is part of the city centre. The construction was going to last eight long years because of WWI. At the beginning of the 1930’s the municipality commissioned the famous Romanian artist Nicolae Tonitza to paint the walls of the church. Tonitza worked for two years at the decoration of the interior walls of the church and today the exquisite frescoes he created amaze the visitor with their directness and especially with their incredible blue, very similar to another shade of blue, famous in Romania – the Voronet blue.
Nicolae Tonitza (1886 – 1940) is one of the most important and highly appreciated Romanian painters before WWII. He made a name for himself mostly by painting portraits. His portraits of children with their incredible innocent eyes and impression of direct eye contact with the viewer sell for thousands of hundred euros at art auctions in Romania and abroad. Some of his most famous paintings are exhibited at the Art Museum in Constanta.

Nicolae Toniţa (1886 – 1940) este unul dintre cei mai apreciaţi pictori romȃni din perioada interbelică. Este cunoscut mai ales pentru portretele de copii pe care le-a realizat şi care impresioneaza prin minunaţii ochi inocenţi ai copiilor şi prin senzatia de contact vizual direct pe care o dau privitorului. Tablourile sale se vand azi pentru sute de mii de euro la diverse licitaţii de artă din romȃnia şi din străinătate. Muzeul de artă din Constanţa expune cȃteva din tablorile sale celebre.