THE SPECIAL EXHIBITION OF CONTEMPORARY ART
OF GEORGIA︱Focus, Confluence
Standing at the crossroads of multiple civilizations and cultures, Georgia has always been a geocultural space where the past persists into the present and where the prolific encounter and exchange between distinct civilizations and cultures melt into a rich and diverse cultural experience of its own.
George Gagoshidze / Landscape 2 / 2013 / acrylic on paper / 85cm×150cm
George Gagoshidze / Kaloubani / 2011 / pencil and acrylic on paper / 70cm×98cm
While excessively incorporating the best from the East and the West, the contemporary Georgian art landscape stands out as unconventional in many ways. These artists manage to remain in the vanguard of contemporary art and at the same time are vigilant to cultural legacy and thoughtfulness. All images, despite their coarsely grained frame and nostalgic looks, contain a perceptible tension between the stagnation of time and dynamism of everlasting motion. These creations are often expressive and intense and occasionally ephemeral, resembling the shots from the heart of an imaginary world or even a very tangible realm that most of us are unable to get in touch with.
Tea Nili
Curator of Georgian Special Exhibition
Mai Lashauri / Imaginary Lover / 2016 / oil on canvas / 80cm×100cm
Lana Tsagareishvili / Evolution / 2016 / oil on canvas / 62cm×120cm
Levan Mindiashvili / Untitled (Past Is Just a Story) / 2015 / acrylic and gel medium on canvas / 218cm×345cm(part)
Levan Mindiashvili / Untitled (Past Is Just a Story) / 2015 / acrylic and gel medium on canvas / 218cm×345cm(part)