While there isn't a widely known published work titled (which translates to "All the Drawings"), the phrase often appears in Romanian literary and artistic contexts to describe a collection of life's memories, sketches, or an artist's legacy.
If you are drafting an original story with this title, here is a narrative structure and concept to help you develop the draft: Story Concept: "Toate Desenele" (All the Drawings) The intersection of memory, art, and legacy.
Matei begins sorting through thousands of papers. As he touches each one, he experiences a "sensory flashback." A charcoal sketch of a rainy street doesn't just look like a street; it smells of wet asphalt and evokes the feeling of his first heartbreak. Toate Desenele
Use the setting as a character—dust motes dancing in the light, the smell of turpentine, and walls that feel like they’re made of paper.
An elderly, reclusive artist named Matei is moving out of his lifelong studio in a crumbling Bucharest building. He decides he cannot take everything with him and must choose which parts of his life to keep. He begins to organize "all the drawings" he has ever made, only to realize that the sketches aren't just art—they are a chronological map of his soul and the people he has lost. Narrative Arc While there isn't a widely known published work
Matei finds the first drawing tucked inside the back of a mirror. Seeing the crude, simple lines of a child next to his masterworks, he realizes he doesn't need to keep the physical papers. He leaves the door to the studio unlocked, leaving "all the drawings" behind for the next tenant to find—passing his memories into the world. Key Imagery to Include
In his search, he finds drawings he doesn't remember making—sketches of people he never met or places he's never been. He begins to wonder if "all the drawings" represent not just his life, but a collective memory or a future he hasn't lived yet. As he touches each one, he experiences a "sensory flashback
Use Bucharest (or another city) as a backdrop that changes through the drawings—from old-world charm to modern glass.