The Museum of Modern Art in Tbilisi, Georgia, is holding a ‘Retrospective’
exhibition by Italian painter Bruno Bruni from 3 June to 3 July 2016.
Bruno Bruni (1935-) is a painter, sculptor, lithographer, and graphic
artist. Bruni moved to Hamburg, Germany, in 1960 where he attended the Hamburg
School of Arts under the lectureship of Georg Gresko, Paul Wunderlich, and
Renato Guttuso. His inspirations include Van Eyck, Botticelli, Michelangelo,
Durer, Bosch, and Renaissance art.
The ‘Retrospective’ exhibit displays about 100 works in his first
exhibition in Georgia. The exhibition commenced during the Italian Festival in
Georgia from 2-6 June. It includes works of flowers, nudes, and historic
figures, such as Rosa Luxemboug and Che Guevara.
Albrecht Durer (1471-1528), a German artist of the Renaissance period,
wrote about the theory of proportion in his diary, published in 1528, in which
the perfect body size must be nine times the length of the size of the head. In
Europe body proportions are only 7.5 times the size of the head. Bruni explores
these body proportions in his sculptures of women.
Bruno Bruni's themes include women with faces hidden, faceless men, hats, overcoats,
the psychiatrist’s couch, and animals, such as chameleons, frogs, owls, and
bulls.
MARTINA NICOLLS is 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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