- “Wine and Cheese” already exists in your Collection
Europe
Year: 2005
Medium: Mix Media on Canvas
Size: 135.5 X 125 cm, 53.3 X 49.2 In
This is a unique work.
Description
About Sergo Tbileli
Sergo Tbileli is a prolific Georgian contemporary artist, he began his professional carrier in the early 70s in Soviet Georgia. While still pursuing his studies at the Tbilisi state academy. During his studies, he worked on monumental murals and sculptures all over the Soviet Union creating and contributing to the Soviet art scene. Learning different styles and evolving his style during his journeys all over the Eurasian continent. Financing his creative pursuits by working on Soviet state commissions. During his early years, he worked a lot with the ceramic medium creating one of his first series of plates. he achieved fame with his series “Georgian Motives”, which represented his colorful vision of Caucasus and Georgia mountains landscapes. Selling out his show in Istanbul. After The “Georgian Motives” series he further evolved his style and started working on his new works which combined his prior vibrant colors and movement with mythical subjects and topics on a grander scale. Some of his masterpieces from that era are “Venice Carnival” 2006, “Nude” 2005 and etc.
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Additional information
| materials | Canvas, Mixed Media |
|---|---|
| Years | 2005 |
| Rarity | Unique |
Sergo Tbileli (Georgian, b. 1958) is a prolific contemporary artist whose career began in the early 1970s in Soviet Georgia, while he was still a student at the Tbilisi State Academy of Arts. During his studies he worked on monumental murals and sculptures across the Soviet Union, absorbing diverse styles on journeys throughout Eurasia and financing his early creative work through state commissions.
In his early career he worked extensively in ceramic, including his first plate series. He gained wide recognition with “Georgian Motives,” a body of work capturing the color and movement of Caucasus and Georgian mountain landscapes; the series sold out at a presentation in Istanbul. Following that success, Tbileli developed larger-scale compositions that combined his vivid palette and dynamic brushwork with mythic subjects and narrative themes. Major works from this period include “Venice Carnival” (2006) and “Nude” (2005).
