Immersed in Van Gogh and the Masters at the Tbilisi Digital Museum, Georgia… the lesson in art is not technique; it’s emotion …This summer in Georgia, I stepped into a painting. It was not metaphorical, but quite literal. At the Tbilisi Digital Museum, I attended the Immersive Van Gogh Exhibit, and for the first time, I truly felt what it might mean to stand inside the mind of an artist. The room pulsed with movement. Walls dissolved into colour. Brushstrokes swirled around my ankles. It was Vincent Van Gogh’s world (1853-1890), re-imagined through light and sound. And yet, it was also a collective celebration of art, featuring Salvador Dalí (1904-1989), Frida Kahlo (1907-1954), Gustav Klimt (1862-1918), and Sandro Botticelli (1445-1510). Of course, Vincent Van Gogh was the star: the star of madness, mercy, and moonlight. We walked into his “Sunflowers” painting, stood beneath the thick star-swirled sky, and watched his bedroom in Arles, France, come to life. The immersive format didn’t sanitize his pain; it amplified it. His anguish and wonder flickered across the room like his paint did across canvas. We weren’t just observers. We were participants in his vision. What struck me most wasn’t his madness, but his clarity of feeling. In an age where precision is praised, Van Gogh dared to paint emotional truth. That emotion becomes visceral in an immersive setting: you don’t just see the stars; you feel them spinning. Frida Kahlo, also in pain, was “Beauty in Brokenness.” Frida Kahlo emerged bold, unflinching, defiant. Her immersive segment was intimate and personal, lighting up the walls with fiery reds and greens. Floating across the room came images of her self-portraits, her spine as a shattered column, her tears blooming into flowers. Frida never asked for pity. She offered truth. And in this exhibit, the truth was wrapped in digital silk, so beautiful, tragic, and unfiltered. It felt like reading her diary through the language of colour. Salvador Dalí was all about time, dreams, and the absurd. It was surreal. Salvador Dalí’s clocks melted across the floor, his elephants with spindly legs tiptoed across the walls, and dream logic overtook our visual field. The digital setting suited Dalí brilliantly. His world bent and buckled. The room became a lucid dream. Yet behind the eccentricity was a strange kind of elegance. Dalí made chaos look choreographed, and the immersive format heightened the sense that “art can question everything, even gravity.” Gustav Klimt was gilded intimacy, so emotional and so evocative it brought tears to my eyes. Klimt’s gold leaf shimmered with stunning sensuality. In an immersive room, the patterns of his paintings "The Kiss" and "Portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer" felt almost like tapestries coming to life. There was something soothing in his world, and a beautiful balance between erotic and sacred. The most surprising presence for me was Sandro Botticelli’s "Birth of Venus" painting. The immersive format gave his still mythologies movement, without disturbing their grace. There’s something magical in watching classical beauty take form, with Venus rising from the seashell, not in oil, but in pixels. Some might argue that immersive exhibits dilute the essence of the original. But I felt the opposite. For those who can't travel to Florence, Mexico City, Vienna, or Amsterdam, this exhibit is a bridge, not a replacement. I didn’t leave the exhibit understanding technique. I left understanding emotion. I walked out drenched in rich and vibrant hues, carrying a little of their madness, magic, and their message. That is the beauty of art in ancient Tbilisi, Georgia. I found myself in a space that collapsed time and geography. Van Gogh’s Dutch sorrow met Kahlo’s Mexican courage. Dalí’s dream brushed against Klimt’s gold, and Botticelli’s Venus rose above it all. It wasn’t just an exhibit. It was beauty out of pain, light out of shadows, art out of being human. See more photos in the article “Van Gogh, Kahlo, and Klimt at the Tbilisi Digital Museum, Georgia” Can’t see the whole article? Want to view the original article? Want to view more articles? Go to Martina’s Substack: The Stories in You and Me MY PARIS WEBSITE AND ALL THINGS PARISIAN Photographer: Martina Nicolls PIP DECKS, the fun and engaging how-to guides for business. You're currently a free subscriber to The Stories in You and Me . For the full experience, upgrade your subscription. |
Friday, 18 July 2025
Immersed in Van Gogh and the Masters at the Tbilisi Digital Museum, Georgia
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