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Sergei Parajanov Museum

TIME : 2016/2/18 16:27:23

For something totally unique, head to this museum near Hrazdan Gorge. Crammed with collages, drawings, photographs and assemblages created by the experimental filmmaker best known for his 1969 film Sayat Nova (aka The Colour of Pomegranates ), it is as eccentric as it is engaging. Housed in an attractive 19th-century timber house, the collection manages to successfully evoke Parajanov's prodigious talent, humour and humanity while at the same time illustrating the difficulties faced by artists, filmmakers and writers living under the Soviet regime.

Born in 1924 in Tiflis, Parajanov moved to Moscow in 1945 to study filmmaking. His early career was blighted when he was convicted of homosexuality (then illegal) in 1948, a charge that many of his friends and supporters considered bogus. After being released from jail and living in the Ukraine for a few years, he moved to Yerevan in the late 1960s. Two more criminal charges were levied against him in 1973 (for rape and producing pornography) and he was sentenced to five years of hard labour in a Siberian jail. He was eventually released after a high-profile international campaign for his freedom, supported by artists including Françoise Sagan, Jean-Luc Godard, François Truffaut, Luis Buñuel, Federico Fellini, Michelangelo Antonioni, Andrei Tarkovsky, Louis Aragon and John Updike. Parajanov died in Yerevan in 1990.