词条 | Alexandre Bandzeladze |
释义 |
Alexandre Bandzeladze ({{lang-ka|ალექსანდრე ბანძელაძე}}) was a Georgian artist. Alexandre Bandzeladze's family, after having been exiled to the Irkutsk District during the repressions in the 1920s, returned to Tbilisi in 1932. In 1947, he enrolled in the Oil Painting Department of the Tbilisi Academy of Fine Arts under the tutorship of Sergo Kobuladze, Iosif Charlemagne, and Valentin Sherpilov. Expelled from the academy in 1949, he received his diploma as late as 1963, with the help of Apolon Kutateladze. At that time, Bandzeladze actively collaborated with the editorial teams of various Georgian magazines. He authored milestone works for the development of Georgian book graphic design, such as Arsenas Leksi (Arsena's Poem) (1957) and Rudyard Kipling's Mowgli (1960). In 1978–1988, he painted the murals at the Church of the Dormition of the Mother of God in Didube. In the 1950s, Alexandre Bandzeladze led an innovative movement in Georgia and the Soviet Union in general and pioneered the process of rejuvenating the language of visual arts. During his creative quest, and as a result of taking in the traditions of modernist European oil painting, he developed his own artistic system characterized by striking individualism. After Davit Kakabadze, Alexandre Bandzeladze was one of the first to have returned abstract art into Georgia's artistic context. Alexandre Bandzeladze's works have had an enormous impact on the development of contemporary Georgian visual arts and on nourishing interest in arts among younger generations. ExhibitonsSolo exhibitions
Group Exhibitions
Georgian Art 1990, Mona Bismarck Foundation for International Art Exhibition House, Paris, France
Details taken from the Georgian Art Portal.[1] References1. ^{{cite web|url=http://art.gov.ge/artists.php?lang=En&artist=407#|title=Georgian Art Portal | Artists|website=art.gov.ge|accessdate=2019-03-20}} 1 : Georgian artists |
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