Sophia Tabatadze

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2002  
- Wallpaper  
- Self-Portrait as Architecture  
   
2003  
- De Doorzonwoning  
- House on Wheels  
   
2004  
- Architectural Drawings  
- Buildings and Strangebuildings  
- What We Thought Was a Wall   Turned Out to Be a Curtain  
- Tunnel  
   
2005  
- Heroes of Stagnation  
- Subu-Diet  
   
2006  
- Caucasian Memory Game  
- Georgian Toasting Traditions  
- Much More  
   
2007  
- Humancon Undercon  
   
2008  
- From Flags to Flowers  
- All my Re-Collections  
   
2009  
- Travelers Journal  
   
2010  
- Calendar and F Words  
- Just Buy and Put a Fence
Round it
 
   
2011  
- Gulo  
   
2012  
- Limitations of Imitation  
- Screens  
   
2012-14  
- Pirimze  
   
Title: Subu Diet
Year: 2005
Size: 66x47cm
Material: Printed poster
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
     

This project deals with dieting and drug addiction, two activities that are currently very popular among young people in Georgia. People get involved with them out of desperation, not knowing what else to do. They also offer a kind of hopeless escape: people feel a kind of security by wishing for something that they know will never happen.

Subutex is something like a methadone, it is made to help people cut down on drug use and to prevent cold-turkey. It is imported to Georgia from France. Instead of using it for its proper purpose, this pill is usually shared and shot up by groups of eight young men. The poster I made showed an enlarged Subutex pill with eight common, urban Georgian names printed next to it. Next to this poster there was another one offering two kinds of diet for young women. The first was a diet for intellectuals, which was mostly recommended to women with jobs and higher education degrees; among other things it claimed that the diet will be most effective if one speaks English and has computer skills (referring to the only job opportunities in Georgia: in order to get work in foreign companies, it is essential to have English and computer skills). The second diet was for people who were unemployed, and included advice on how by sleeping long hours one could lose several kilos. The diet included more absurd facts but was written in a such a way that it was hard to grasp its ironic message right away.

I placed these posters all over the city on the garbage containers and in the places where the young people gather. Later on I photographed these places and made postcards: “Greetings from Georgia”.