panorama.am. A street in Tbilisi, Georgia, has been named after renowned Soviet Armenian filmmaker Sergei Parajanov.
The street in the Mtatsminda district where Parajanov lived was inaugurated on Friday with the Tbilisi City Council members, art workers as well as Parajanov’s relatives and friends in attendance, Georgia’s Channel One reported.
Sergei Parajanov (born Sarkis Paradjanian) was one of the 20th century’s greatest film directors, who made significant contribution to Ukrainian, Armenian and Georgian cinema. He was born on 9 January 1924 to Armenian parents in Tbilisi. Parajanov’s work reflected the ethnic diversity of the Caucusus where he was raised.
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His first major work was Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors (1964), which earned him an international reputation for its rich use of costume and color, and its whimsical portrayal of rural life. Possibly his greatest work, The Color of Pomegranates (1969), described the life of the Armenian poet Sayat Nova. The film angered the Soviet authorities, who claimed that it evoked nationalist sentiment.
Claiming that Parajanov promoted homosexuality, the government arrested him in 1973 and sentenced him to five years in a labor camp. A large number of prominent artists, writers and filmmakers protested his sentence, but Parajanov was only released four years later, in large part due to the efforts of French surrealist Louis Aragon. He was banned for making films for many years afterwards, when he was living in Tbilisi, but he was allowed to make The Legend of Suram Fortress (1984), which captured much of the color of his earlier work.
He managed to direct three more films before he died of cancer in Yerevan on 20 July 1990, aged 66. A house was built for him in Yerevan which was completed shortly after his death, but which now houses all his belongings and has been turned into the Parajanov Museum.