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Regional documentation --- Asian --- History of civilization --- Art --- India --- Maps
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A short but flourishing era of Avant-Garde in Georgia brought back to life. In the turbulent global context following the fall of the Russian Empire and the October Revolution, Georgia declared its independence in 1918. Between then and the beginning of Soviet rule in 1921, an Avant-Garde creative scene burgeoned. Artists met, mainly in the many taverns and cafés in Kutaisi and the capital Tbilisi, to organise multidisciplinary events. Their frequent collaborations and interactions, which bore the imprint of Georgian tradition and Western and Eastern influences, took various forms: paintings, drawings, films, photos, performances and typographical experiments. Divergent movements such as Symbolism/Neo-Symbolism, Futurism, Dadaism, Zaum, Expressionism, Cubism and Cubo-Futurism existed side by side in unprecedented creative turbulence. This book tells the unknown story of a vibrant Avant-Garde in the Caucasus, born in the taverns of Tbilisi – artistic laboratories where anything was possible, but where Soviet censorship lurked. Extensively illustrated with works by Elene Akhvlediani, Gigo Gabashvili, Irakli Gamrekeli, Lado Gudiashvili, David Kakabadze, Petre Otskheli, Niko Pirosmanashvili, Ilia and Kirile Zdanevich, and many others. The publication coincides with the exhibition of the same name, The Avant-Garde in Georgia (1900–1936), which runs at BOZAR, Brussels from 5 October 2023 to 14 January 2024 and is part of the Europalia arts festival.
Art, Modern --- Art, Georgian (South Caucasian) --- Painting, Georgian (South Caucasian) --- Photography --- Theaters --- Stage-setting and scenery --- Georgia (Republic) --- Intellectual life --- Art --- visual arts [discipline] --- anno 1900-1909 --- anno 1910-1919 --- anno 1920-1929 --- anno 1930-1939 --- Georgia
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Premier catalogue général sur la riche histoire culturelle de la Géorgie Grâce à sa position entre deux continents, la Géorgie constitue traditionnellement un pont entre l’Est et l’Ouest. Une histoire de rencontres reflète l'art, la culture et l'histoire exceptionnelles du pays, du néolithique au XVIIIesiècle. C'est notamment au cours de « l'âge d'or » de la Géorgie unifiée, entre le XIeet le XIIIe siècle, que le pays a connu un essor culturel et économique sans précédent. Cet ouvrage montre comment l'histoire mouvementée et les nombreux échanges le long des grandes routes commerciales et de la soie au carrefour de l'Europe et de l'Asie ont donné naissance à un patrimoine d'une richesse inimaginable, jusqu'à présent resté largement méconnu. Une orfèvrerie raffinée de l'âge du bronze, du vin comme bien culturel le plus ancien et des arts visuels originaux : la Géorgie offre de nombreux trésors inattendus, présentés en détail pour la première fois. Cet ouvrage est publié à l’occasion de l’exposition Géorgie : une histoire de rencontres, présentée du 27 octobre 2023 au 18 février 2024 au Musée Art et Histoire à Bruxelles, dans le cadre du festival d’art Europalia.
Art, Georgian (South Caucasian) --- Georgia (Republic) --- History --- Foreign relations --- Civilization --- Exhibitions --- Georgië (Republiek) --- Geschiedenis
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First catalogue to offer an overview of Georgia’s rich cultural history Thanks to its location between two continents, Georgia has traditionally formed a bridge between East and West. A Story of Encounters reflects the exceptional art, culture, and history of the country from the Neolithic to the eighteenth century. Especially in the “golden age” of united Georgia, between the eleventh and thirteenth centuries, the country experienced an unprecedented cultural and economic boom. This book shows how the turbulent history and the many exchanges along the major trade and silk routes at this crossroads of Europe and Asia resulted in an unimaginably rich heritage, which has remained largely unexposed until now. Refined goldsmith’s art from the Bronze Age, wine – the country’s oldest cultural asset – and original visual arts: Georgia offers many unexpected treasures, which are shown in detail for the first time. This book accompanies the exhibition Georgia: A Story of Encounters, which runs at the Art & History Museum in Brussels from 27 October 2023 to 18 February 2024, and is part of the Europalia arts festival.
Georgië (Republiek) --- Exhibitions --- Archaeology and history --- Civilization --- Tentoonstellingen --- Catalogi
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