Niko Pirosmanashvili: A Study of His Life and Art
By (Author) Arkady Troyanker
By (author) Tengiz Mirzashvili
By (author) Giorgi Khoshtaria
By (author) Erast Kuznetsov
Foreword by Aka Morchiladze
Foreword by Orhan Pamuk
Edited by Giorgi George Papashvili
Illustrated by Niko Pirosmani
Unicorn Publishing Group
Unicorn Publishing Group
30th September 2024
30th September 2024
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Sculpture
History of art
709.2
Hardback
600
Width 297mm, Height 375mm
Niko Pirosmanashvili comprehensively tells the story of the life and work of elusive Georgian painter Niko Pirosmanashvili (c.1866-1918), popularly known as Pirosmani, during one of the most interesting epochs in the history of Georgia. Key essays, both recollections by those who knew him and contemporary scholarship, explore his life as an impoverished artist living in Tbilisi. Charting his influence on the Georgian and Russian avant-gardists to the Modernists, including Picasso, and the parallels he holds with Henri Rousseau and Vincent Van Gogh, the artist's wider cultural impact is also examined from Georgian and international perspectives, past and present. Illustrations of his artwork, alongside a wealth of photographs from Georgia from the beginning of the twentieth century, make this a richly visual resource. With a foreword by Orhan Pamuk, this evocative book is the result of a meticulous process of assemblage by two artists dedicated to broadening Pirosmanashvilis legacy and has been information for almost fifty years.
Tengiz Mirzashvili (19342008) was a respected Georgian artist, stage and film designer, and book illustrator. Known for his landscapes and genre paintings, his work drew comparisons to Pirosmanashvili, whom he spent many years researching. Mirzashvilis work can be found in several museums and private collections. Arkady Troyanker is an award-winning graphic designer who has worked for major publishing houses since the 1960s and was the creative director of "Itogi" magazine (1995-2001). Orhan Pamuk was awarded the Nobel Prize for literature in 2006.