Hikarix
placeholder

The Desert of Forbidden Art

4.72011

How does art survive in a time of oppression? During the Soviet rule artists who stay true to their vision are executed, sent to mental hospitals or Gulags. Their plight inspires young Igor Savitsky. He pretends to buy state-approved art but instead daringly rescues 40,000 forbidden fellow artist's works and creates a museum in the desert of Uzbekistan, far from the watchful eyes of the KGB. Though a penniless artist himself, he cajoles the cash to pay for the art from the same authorities who are banning it. Savitsky amasses an eclectic mix of Russian Avant-Garde art. But his greatest discovery is an unknown school of artists who settle in Uzbekistan after the Russian revolution of 1917, encountering a unique Islamic culture, as exotic to them as Tahiti was for Gauguin. They develop a startlingly original style, fusing European modernism with centuries-old Eastern traditions.

Kurosawa's Way
Scar Tissue
From Both Sides Of The Aegean: Expulsion And Exchange Of Populations, Turkey-Greece 1922-1924
Grizzly Man
Olympia: Part One – Festival of the Nations
Olympia: Part Two – Festival of Beauty
Britain's Holocaust Survivors
Jesus Camp
Grey Gardens
News From a Personal War
Extranjeras
Memories of 36'
Perfect Image?
Place of Work
Elie Wiesel Goes Home
Lots's wife
Bust of a poet
Emiliana de Zubeldia
Hobbyhorse Revolution
Unteachable