The photo-exhibition
in the entrance of the museum is simple, but effective – it is life in art.
Swedish photographer Markus
Marcetic took 22 photographs – 14 Swedish and 8 Georgian people with disabilities.
Voices accompanying the 14 Swedes tell of their personal lives – everyday
routines, family, work, leisure, relationships, challenges, advantages, hopes,
and dreams.
The exhibition called AccessAbility is a display of large photographs – mainly
portraits – with audio head-sets and exhibits of ability aids, such as bathroom
seats, baby carriers, tactile flooring, eating utensils, and drink containers.
AccessAbility will be shown at The Georgian National Museum in Tbilisi from June 8-28, 2015.
AccessAbility provides
the opportunity for people with disabilities – physical and mental – to be seen
and heard. The exhibition is part of a series of conferences and seminars in
Tbilisi on the rights of people with disabilities.
Also, for the first
time ever, there is a social campaign during the exhibition, featuring posters
of people with disabilities on buses and local transportation billboards in
Tbilisi.
The exhibit, organized
by the Swdedish Institute, was first held in Sweden in 2014, and later in Moscow.
In 2015, after Georgia, the exhibition will be shown in Turkey and Brazil. In
each country the exhibit will include the 14 Swedish photographs as well as
photos of people with disabilities who live in the host country.
People with
disabilities are, at all times, entitled to free admission at all Georgian
museums.
MARTINA NICOLLS is an international
aid and development consultant, and the author of:- The Shortness of
Life: A Mongolian Lament (2015), Liberia’s Deadest Ends (2012), Bardot’s Comet
(2011), Kashmir on a Knife-Edge (2010) and The Sudan Curse (2009).
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