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Sergei Paradjanov Festival Launches In UK

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  • Sergei Paradjanov Festival Launches In UK

    SERGEI PARADJANOV FESTIVAL LAUNCHES IN UK

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    23.02.2010 17:10 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Sergei Paradjanov Festival in London and Bristol
    was opened with Yuri Mechitov's photographic exhibition at the National
    Theatre Monday, February 22.

    The exhibition is composed of rarely seen photographs taken by
    Georgian photographer Yuri Mechitov during his 11 year friendship
    with the director.

    The Sergei Paradjanov Festival in London and Bristol is the first
    major celebration of the legendary artist and filmmaker whose talent
    transcends religious and political boarders, drawing on the cultural
    traditions of Georgia, Armenia, Ukraine and Russia. The Festival aims
    to present the life and works of Sergei Paradjanov to UK audiences
    through a series of diverse events that include: a film season;
    a moving image installation; a symposium and a workshop at the
    BFI Southbank; a photographic exhibition at the National Theatre;
    screenings and talks at Pushkin House; a concert at St. Yeghiche
    Armenian Church; a film retrospective at Arnolfini (Bristol); and a
    photographic exhibition at The Bristol Gallery.

    "The films of Sergei Paradjanov have always captivated me with
    their unique cinematic language and the poetic strength of their
    imagination. For me, Paradjanov is like a slap in the face to banality,
    harshness, self-interest and general uniformity," festival organiser
    Layla Alexander-Garrett said.

    The festival will last till March 28.

    Sergei Paradjanov (1924-1990) is one of the 20th century's greatest
    masters of cinema. An Armenian born in Georgia, Paradjanov studied film
    in Moscow, worked in Ukraine, Armenia and Georgia. He started making
    films in 1954 and is celebrated for his poetic and visionary films
    including The Colour of Pomegranates (1968) and Ashik Kerib (1988).

    A winner of British Academy Award for the "Shadows of Forgotten
    Ancestors", Paradjanov was a constant target of Soviet authorities;
    deprived of the opportunity to make films for fifteen years, five
    of which were spent in hard labour camps, he found the most vibrant
    means of expressing his talent through drawings, collages and writing.
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