The Tbilisi History Museum, part of the Georgian National Museum network, is exhibiting the works of Georgian clay artist Lia Bagrationi. Under the framework of the Project “Contemporary Art Gallery” the museum presents Bagrationi’s solo exhibition called “A Mad Tea-Party.”
The exhibition, curated by Magda Guruli and coordinated by Lika Mamatsashvili, will be held from 29 November 2018 to 20 January 2019.
Lia Bagrationi's exhibition "A Mad Tea-Party" is the artist's recent and past works examining the interaction of randomness, visibility and invisibility, memory and material. The title of the exhibition is also the name of her previous installation in 2015.
The exhibition tries to answer the questions: How do these concepts translate into the language of the material? How does clay answer the aesthetic tasks? How are the functionality and physicality of clay transformed into a visual concept?
Lia Bagrationi starts with the concept of the tea drinking ceremony, which, she states, is associated with a calm atmosphere, and nothing in common with madness, representing ‘visualized ritual absurdity.’ Her installations use dry clay that dissolves in water, which she calls conceptual ceramics. She combines clay with other materials, such as fabrics, and also includes performative videos.
MARTINA NICOLLSis an international aid and development consultant, and the authorof:- Similar But Different in the Animal Kingdom(2017), 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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