Pages

Tuesday, March 20, 2018

Discovering Tashkent with X-Places

Canal running through old Tashkent. Image: Anastasiya Bondarenko
Tashkent residents are falling in love with their city again, thanks to the marvellous X-Places excursions.

Tashkent is often, and undeservedly, overlooked by tourists when they visit Uzbekistan.

The city's history is rich and complex. Not only was Tashkent a stop on the ancient Silk Road, it was the fourth most important city in the USSR, after Moscow, Leningrad and Kiev.

And today, as the most populous Central Asian nation, as well as being resources rich, it is forging its future as a regional leader.

Yet at a superficial glance, this wide-boulevarded and green city, can seem a little bland.

If you speak even a little Russian (or you are prepared to engage an interpreter for half a day) joining an X-places tour will make this city come alive.

X-places is the brainchild of Samarkand-born Rustam Khusanov who adores his adopted city. The trips are often led by Tashkent's foremost historian, Boris Golender, and open up Tashkent's magical spaces and stories. No one knows this city as does Mr. Golender. Throughout his commentary, he links literature, music, town planning, history and art. It is enthralling.

Wonderful Rustam Khusanov, who started X-Places
The excursions, usually 3 - 4 hours, are held on Saturdays and Sundays. Some are walking tours, others combine bus and walking as Tashkent is a spread out city.

These are some of the tours that I have thoroughly enjoyed:

Canals of Tashkent.

During this lovely afternoon the group explored the Anhor canal, in the city centre, and also the canals of the old city and suburbs.

This tour revealed that life along Tashkent's canals continues much as it has for centuries - tea houses, mud brick houses, gardens and families sitting on the tapchan (raised platforms) and enjoying a meal together.

Backstage at the Alisher Navoi Opera House

Opened in 1947 and recently re-opened after an extensive renovation, the opera house is a focal point for  classical performances.

And this tour is the only way to peek back stage. A highlight was the light-filled 6th floor, where artists were producing the stage scenery for a new production of Aida.

On the Sunny Side of the Street

This charming tour centred around the book of the same title by Dina Rubina, who grew up in sun-soaked Tashkent, where representatives of different cultures and ethnicities lived side by side.

We visited scenes from the book and the apartment building where she spent her teenage years.  While we were on the bus, Louise Armstrong's "Sunny Side of the Street" serenaded us.

Tashkent's Alisher Navoi Opera House - completed in 1947
Tashkent Places of Worship

This tour included the Armenian church, the Buddhist temple, the synagogue, the Catholic cathedral.

Constructivist Architecture in Tashkent

It was splendid to see these neighbourhoods - all of which survived the Tashkent earthquake of 1966 - and possibly soon to be demolished.

How to join a tour

Join the X-Places Facebook group. Note that these tours, about US$5 per person, fill up very quickly. Excursions are usually posted on Thursdays.

There are also occasional lectures on historical topics, such as The Great Game, which are well worth joining.

Related posts:
Tashkent: The Blacksmith and his Family Return 
Seismic Modernism - Architecture and Housing in Soviet Tashkent
Pushkin in Babur Park, Tashkent
Tashkent: A Stroll Along Anhor Canal
Solar Energy in Uzbekistan (X-Places has excursions to this solar furnace facility)
Tashkent: A City of Refuge 


Monday, March 5, 2018

Dilyara Kaipova Conquers Bishkek at the Asanbay Center

textile artist dilyara kaipova, uzbekistan contemporary artists, small group art craft tours to uzbekistan
The solo exhibition of Dilyara Kaipova, whom I consider the most innovative textile artist of Central Asia, has just opened at the Asbanbay Center in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan.

Although Bishkek is a small, Central Asian nation, it is fast establishing itself as the creative hub of the region.

Apart from providing an 1800 square-metre space for events, master classes and seminars, the two-storey, new Asanbay Center also has a gallery, a designer shop, a book shop, a cafe and a Georgian restaurant upstairs.

There's a a huge HD screen and a viewing platform where vintage European films are screened. (Kazakh media have recently visited the centre, complimenting Bishkek by calling it the Berlin of Central Asia).

Aida Sulova, a graduate in digital communications and media from New York University, is the project manager and curator at the Asanbay. She has been involved with the project from the beginning.

In a country where there is no tradition of philanthropy and cultural patronage, Sulova works hard to convince her Kyrgyz compatriots that culture is important. Her brief includes fundraising with Bishkek businesses to ensure that art events and workshops are free. The exhibition schedule is full for all of 2018.

It is the perfect venue for Tashkent-based Dilyara Kaipova's 1200 exhibition. The title is derived from the number of threads across the fabric she has used for the pieces.

textile artist dilyara kaipova, uzbekistan contemporary artists, small group art craft tours to uzbekistanThe exhibition further explores Kaipova's themes of using traditional Uzbek arts to comment on mass culture and cultural globalisation.

Pieces include European-style clothing as as well as Uzbek chapans (coats).

The exhibition is open until 18 March at the Asanbay centre, 21a Aaly Tokombaev, Bishkek. Phone for directions, as it is not in the main city centre - tel:+996 775 979 500.

You can follow the artist and contact her via

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/dilyara.kaipova
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/crazy_for_ikat/

If you can't get to the Bishkek in time, please enjoy the images below.

Related posts: Dilyara Kaipova Strikes Again at the International Applied Arts Festival, Tashkent
The Fantasy World of Uzbek Textile Artist Dilyara Kaipova
Robert Rauschenberg: Samarkand Stitches

textile artist dilyara kaipova, uzbekistan contemporary artists, small group art craft tours to uzbekistan
 

textile artist dilyara kaipova, uzbekistan contemporary artists, small group art craft tours to uzbekistan

textile artist dilyara kaipova, uzbekistan contemporary artists, small group art craft tours to uzbekistan

textile artist dilyara kaipova, uzbekistan contemporary artists, small group art craft tours to uzbekistan

textile artist dilyara kaipova, uzbekistan contemporary artists, small group art craft tours to uzbekistan

textile artist dilyara kaipova, uzbekistan contemporary artists, small group art craft tours to uzbekistan