Zurab Tsereteli

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Zurab Tsereteli (left) with Eunice Kennedy Shriver
Zurab Tsereteli (left) with Eunice Kennedy Shriver

Zurab Konstantines dze Tsereteli (Georgian: ზურაბ წერეთელი, Russian: Зураб Константинович Церетели; born January 4, 1934 in Tbilisi) is a controversial Russian-Georgian painter, sculptor and architect who holds the office of President of the Russian Academy of Arts.

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[edit] Life

Tsereteli graduated from the Academy of Arts in Tbilisi but soon relocated to Moscow. Among his works from the Soviet period was a resort for children in Sochi, completed in 1986. His wife is Princess Andronikashvili, from a noble Georgian family that claims patrilineal descent from Emperor Andronikos I Komnenos.

Although much of his career was dogged by controversy, Tsereteli came to befriend Moscow's mayor Yuri Luzhkov, who secured some important commissions for him, including the reconstruction of the Cathedral of Christ the Savior, the Manege Square ensemble and the War Memorial Complex on Poklonnaya Gora. Luzhkov also allowed him to occupy an old mansion in downtown Moscow, which now houses the Zurab Tsereteli Gallery and where his life-size statue of Vladimir Putin is on display. He is a friend of Eunice Kennedy Shriver.

[edit] Offices

Tsereteli's 96-meter-tall statue of Peter the Great on the Moskva Riverbank is one of the tallest in the world.
Tsereteli's 96-meter-tall statue of Peter the Great on the Moskva Riverbank is one of the tallest in the world.
  • Professor and President of the Russian Academy of Arts.
  • President of the Foundation for the Children's Park of Miracles (since 1988), hence the rumours of his involvement with the construction of Disneyland in Russia.
  • Founder of the Moscow International Foundation for Support to UNESCO, he was appointed a UNESCO Goodwill Ambassador on 30 March 1996.
  • Since 2005 he has been a member of the Public Chamber of Russia.

[edit] Projects

  • The statue of Peter the Great in downtown Moscow which, at 94 meters, is the sixth tallest statue in the world.
  • An un-assembled statue known as "Birth of the New World" depicting Christopher Columbus. The statue was rejected by the US government when Tsereteli attempted to have it installed in the USA in 1992, in connection with the 500th anniversary of his voyage. The municipal government of Cataño, Puerto Rico, consented to having the statue built in their town, but later was unable to garner enough public support and funding. The pieces of the statue have never been assembled but is rumoured to have been used for the Peter the Great Statue above.
  • The statue of St. George at the Moscow War Memorial and several versions of the same subject in Moscow and elsewhere. The foremost among these is a sculpture using sections of scrapped US Pershing and Soviet SS-20 nuclear missiles. The sculpture, entitled 'Good Defeats Evil' is on the grounds of the UN building in New York City. The sculpture is a 39 foot high, 40 ton monumental bronze statue of St George fighting the dragon of nuclear war. It was donated to the UN by the Soviet Union in 1990.
  • His Tear of Grief (actually titled "To the Struggle Against World Terrorism") features a 40-foot teardrop suspended in the fissure of a 106-foot bronze rectangular tower. The monument includes the names of all the victims of the September 11, 2001, attacks in New York, Washington D.C., and Pennsylvania, as well as the 1993 attack on the World Trade Center. At the ground breaking for the massive project, Vladimir Putin was present and called the sculpture “a gift from the people of Russia.”

[1]It was erected at the tip of the decommissioned Military Ocean Terminal, now rechristened The Peninsula at Bayonne Harbor, in Bayonne, New Jersey (after nearby Jersey City first accepted, then declined, the free monument) and was dedicated on September 11, 2006. The artist, Bill Clinton, Michael Chertoff, New Jersey Senator Jon Corzine, and a 9/11 widow all spoke at the dedication ceremony.

[edit] Cultural references

The "Tear of Grief" on the bank of the Hudson River.
The "Tear of Grief" on the bank of the Hudson River.

As a reflection of his controversial reputation, a satiric short story describing Tsereteli as an alien installing a beacon through his various sculptures was published by Boris Akunin in his anthology Fairy Tales for Idiots (Russian: Сказки для идиотов, Skazki dlja idiotov). The alien's name is given as Yagkfi Yeyukuyeudsh (Russian: Ягкфи Еыукуеудш), a seemingly gibberish-like combination which actually spells out "Zurab Tsereteli" when typed on a Latin QWERTY keyboard by hitting the keys where the corresponding Cyrillic characters would be located.

[edit] Controversies

Tsereteli's works, though often welcomed by the authorities, tend to become objects of strong public criticism. His sculptures are often blamed and mocked for being incongruously pompous and out of proportion.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Robert Ayers (July 31, 2006), Famed Russian Sculptor Crafts Giant Teardrop in Memory of 9/11, ARTINFO, <http://www.artinfo.com/news/story/19195/famed-russian-sculptor-crafts-giant-teardrop-in-memory-of-911/>. Retrieved on 20 May 2008 
  2. ^ ibid.
  3. ^ Pulse magazine, St. Petersburg, October 2006

[edit] External links

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