This Song About Love is a confession, painted in the colors of the Georgian land. In twelve canvases, flowers bloom, pomegranates crack open and let their juice flow into the earth, and the words of Rustaveli resound — his love for Queen Tamar, both earthly and eternal.
The triptych dedicated to Saperavi is rich, bold, viscous, and deep, like the dark Georgian soil itself. Above this land, the sun takes on the color of ripe pomegranate at sunset and the hue of Chinuri at dawn; in its light, the paints burn even more brightly.
The exhibition weaves together painting and installation, legend and reality, to tell a story of love that does not end with death and does not dissolve in time. Like the lovers of the romantic epic Eteriani, in this story they return to the earth, and from their hearts, red flowers grow. Each work sounds like a single verse of a great song, and together they form a chorus — passionate, aching, and saturated with color.
This is a song where the pomegranate is the heart, the wine is memory, the sun is the fire of love, and the earth is its eternal home.