In 1958 Baba was appointed Professor of Painting at the
Nicolae Grigorescu Institute of Fine Arts in Bucharest, where Niculiţă Secrieriu and
Ștefan Câlția were among his pupils. The same year he received the title of
Emeritus Master of Art. By this time, his earlier problems with the communist authorities appear to have been smoothed over. In the next decade, both he and his paintings were to travel the world, participating in exhibitions in places as diverse as
Cairo,
Helsinki,
Vienna, and
New Delhi, culminating in a 1964 solo exhibition in
Brussels. In 1962, the Romanian government gave him the title of ''
People's Artist''; in 1963 he was appointed a corresponding member of the
Romanian Academy, and in 1964 was similarly honored by the
East Berlin Academy of Fine Art. Honors and exhibitions continued to accumulate, ranging from a 1970 solo exhibition in
New York City to the receipt of the
Order of the Star of the Romanian Socialist Republic, 2nd class in 1971. While his name became a household word in Romania and, to a lesser extent, throughout the
Eastern bloc, he never achieved comparable fame in the
West. In 1988, Baba was seriously injured by an accident in his studio, and was immobilized for several months. In 1990, following the
Romanian Revolution, he was elevated to titular membership in the Romanian Academy. Shortly before his death in 1997, Baba published his memoir,
Notes by an Artist of Eastern Europe. He was posthumously awarded the Prize for Excellence by the
Romanian Cultural Foundation. Corneliu Baba appears in the People of influence painting of Chinese artists Zhang An, Li Tiezi, and Dai Dudu. In 2019, the Han Yuchen Museum in Handan (China) presented the largest Corneliu Baba Chinese museum retrospective. ==Art==