Fantastic Tavern: The Tbilisi Avant-garde

Presented by Casey Kaplan

June 25, 2009- July 31, 2009

Reception: June 25, 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm    


curated by Daniel Baumann and AIRL
Installation view (2009)
Curated by Daniel Baumann and AIRL

Fantastic Tavern: The Tbilisi Avant-garde is an exhibition as a book. It presents an introduction into Georgian Modernism, a highly significant yet overlooked period in art history. Since 2004, Swiss curator and art historian, Daniel Baumann, has collaborated with the Arts Interdisciplinary Research Laboratory (AIRL), a group of Georgian art historians and artists, on an annual celebration of international contemporary art and culture in Tbilisi. Here, Casey Kaplan is pleased to introduce their newest collaboration to New York.

From 1918-1921, Georgia declared its short independence as the Democratic Republic of Georgia, and Tbilisi became the “Paris” of the East, where an inspired community of artists not only developed unprecedented creative practices but also collaborated to produce astonishing works of art. During this time, members of the avant-garde in Russia fled Moscow and several key figures from this group made their way to Tbilisi. Their union with the Tbilisi avant-garde along with others from the International community marks a short but crucial period in Georgia’s rich history that eventually led to the development of films, stage designs, theatrical performances, musical compositions, literature, sound poetry, magazines, books, paintings and sculptures, all of which form what is referred to today as “Georgian Modernism”.

At the entrance to the gallery, the title of the exhibition is hand-painted by Georgian artist, Levan Chogoshvili, in old Georgian script with its English translation below. Inside, nine fully-illustrated publications highlight the work of Futurists, Dadaists, and other avant-garde artists, including the Georgian Dada manifestos of Grigol Tsetskhladze and Titian Tabidze. Documents on stage design, sound poetry, and musical compositions provide a glimpse into to the undiscovered cultural events that occurred in Tbilisi in the 1920’s. The exhibition also features four films with genres ranging from documentary fiction to parody and drama, only very rarely screened in the West. Mikheil Kalatozishvili’s 1932 film, Nail in the Boot, was banned and believed to be lost until it was discovered again in 2008. It will be shown here to the public for the first time. The Georgian art historians, (AIRL), illuminate the historical relevance of the period explored in this exhibition through their texts.

On the night of the opening at 8pm, the young New York musician and composer Sergei Tcherepnin will perform at Casey Kaplan.

Sergei Tcherepnin is the great grandson of esteemed conductor and composer, Nikolai Tcherepnin, who was the Director of the National Conservatory in Tbilisi during the short period of Georgia’s independence. Tcherepnin’s absorption of the local culture of Tbilisi at the height of Georgian Modernism is reflected by the Georgian folk melodies present in his compositions of the period.

Daniel Baumann lives in Basel, Switzerland and is an art historian, freelance curator, and writer for, among others, Camera Austria, Mousse, Parkett, Piktogram, and Spike. He is the director of the Adolf Wölfli-Foundation, Museum of Fine Arts in Bern, Switzerland; the curator of Nordtangente-Kunsttangente, a project for art in public space in Basel, Switzerland; and the co-founder of New Jerseyy and Shift Festival for Electronic Arts in Basel (see also www.denver.cx). This is the second exhibition that Baumann has curated at Casey Kaplan, preceded by Pose and Sculpture during the summer of 2006.

AIRL (Arts Interdisciplinary Research Laboratory) was established in Tbilisi in 2001 by art historians, historians, sociologists, and conservators together with artists in order to research Georgian art and to promote intellectual and cultural cooperation and exchanges internationally.

Information on the annual celebration in Tbilisi, organized by Daniel Baumann and AIRL, is accessible through the following website’s www.tbilisi2.com, www.tbilisi3.com, www.tbilisi4.com, www.tbilisi5.com. For more information on the Tcherepnin family, please visit www.tcherepnin.com. For further information on the exhibition please contact Loring Randolph, loring@caseykaplangallery.com at the gallery.

Next exhibition: Jason Dodge, When I woke up, there was a note in my pocket explaining what had happened, September 10 – October 24, 2009

Reviews of Fantastic Tavern: The Tbilisi Avant-garde

New York Times
July 23, 2009
Roberta Smith"...The virtually unknown silent films on view are especially engrossing. The 1930 documentary-fantasy by Mikheil Kalatozishvili (often spelled Mikhail Kalatozov), “Salt for Svanetia,” looks to the past with sequences of hard-working peasants amid breathtaking mountains. Konstantine Mikaberidze’s 1929 film “My Grandmother” is antic and modern, a tale of unemployment and marital deceit, full of antic carryings-on and (faintly) dubbed in English. In all, it never hurts to know more clearly and extensively what you don’t know...."
Locationmap 
Email
WebsiteWebsite
Address525 W 21st St
New York (Chelsea)
NY, 10011
United States
Local time1:37 am
Phone212-645-7335
Fax212-645-7835
HoursTue-Sat 10-6




© 2005-2009 One Art World. All Rights Reserved. | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Site Map
GALLERIES
ARTISTS
SHOWS
ARTWORKS
AUCTIONS
galleries  |  artists  |  people

More ToursUpcoming Guided Tours

November 11, 11:30 am - 1:00 pm (Wed)
New Museum on Bowery and Lower East Side Galleries with Riva Blumenfeld
November 17, 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm (Tue)
Chelsea Galleries at Night with Riva Blumenfeld
December 8, 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm (Tue)
Upper East Side at Night with Riva Blumenfeld

Recent and Upcoming Auctions

November 3Impressionists/Modern Evening Sale
Results:$56,850,000
Christie'sNew York
November 4Impressionists/Modern Works on Paper
Results:$6,883,900
Christie'sNew York
November 4Impressionists/Modern Day Sale
Results:$11,808,500
Christie'sNew York
November 4Impressionist & Modern Art Evening Sale
Results:$158,660,000
Sotheby'sNew York
November 5Impressionist & Modern Art Day Sale
Sotheby'sNew York

My Personal TourMap | Share | Print


No Shows in Your Tour Yet
Click on the +Tour Button to Add a Show


You must be logged in to send emails

 
User Email
Password
 Forgot password?

  Not registered yet?