Avto Varazi
Avto Varazi | |
---|---|
Born | Avtandil Varazashvili 25 October 1926 Tbilisi, Georgia |
Died | 3 March 1977 Tbilisi, Georgia | (aged 50)
Nationality | Georgian |
Education | Georgian Technical University, Faculty of Architecture |
Known for | Painting, mixed media |
Notable work | The Bull's Head, Bibliopole, Violin and Guitar, The Fish in a Laced Frame |
Avto Varazi (Georgian: ავთო ვარაზი) was a Georgian artist and painter.
Avto Varazi occupies a special place in Georgian painting of the 20th century. The artist applied various painting systems and techniques with equal success. Religious motifs also took a significant role in Varazi’s work, which was quite unusual for a painter of the Soviet period. His teacher was a Soviet Georgian artist, graphic designer and sculptor Alexander Bazhbeuk-Melikyan.
Varazi was the first among Georgian artists to apply the technique of collage.
Varazi’s works are spread among world museums, while the fate of some of them remains unknown. Bull's Head is kept at MoMa. Another one, also named Bull's Head, representing a lamb’s head, is displayed in Zimmerli Art Museum at Rutgers University. The other Bull's Head remains with Alexander Glezer in Paris, and The Octopus is in George Costakis' private collection in Greece. His 15 works are exhibited in Georgian National Museum; others are displayed in Kutaisi, Tsageri, Ambrolauri Museum of Fine Arts and Senaki.
References
[edit]- (in Georgian) ქართული საბჭოთა ენციკლოპედია, ტომი 4, გვერდი 297, თბილისი, 1979
External links
[edit]- Avto Varazi at IMDb