In October 1920 left the country to investigate the new artistic currents of France. After a year spent in
Constantinople acquiring a French visa, he arrived in Paris in October 1921, where together with other artists he organized the group Cherez ("Across"), whose aim was to bring Russian
émigrés together with representatives of French culture. In 1923 he began his novel
Parizhachi, about four couples who agree to dine together in the
Bois de Boulogne; in the course of two and a half hours (each chapter has an exact time for a title, from 11.51 to 14.09) they all manage to betray each other, and the novel itself breaks all manner of orthographic, punctuational, and compositional rules. Zdanevich continued working on this "hyperformalist" novel (which he described as an
opis', or "inventory") until 1926, but it was not published until 1994. His second novel,
Voskhishchenie ("Rapture"), was published in a small edition in 1930 and was ignored at the time. Set in a mythical Georgia among mountaineers, on the surface a crime novel, it is actually a fictionalized history of the Russian avant-garde, full of allusions to world literature; it could be said to anticipate
magic realism. The language of the novel is innovative and poetic, and the Slavist Milivoje Jovanović called it "undoubtedly the summit toward which the Russian avant-garde was striving." Zdanevich's 1923 poster for his and
Tristan Tzara's
Soirée du coeur à barbe [Evening of the bearded heart] is a widely known example of
avant-garde typography and
graphic design. During the last forty years of his life in Paris, Zdanevich was active in a variety of areas. He did analyses of church elevations, created fabrics for Chanel, and above all dedicated himself to the creation of artist's books with the collaboration of Picasso, Max Ernst, Miro, and others, and which he published under the imprint "Le Degré 41", or "Le Degré Quarante et Un" (English, "The 41st Degree"). His innovative typographic and design work has been exhibited at the New York Public Library, MOMA, in Montreal, in Tbilisi in 1989 in a joint exhibition with his brother Kiril, and in many other venues. Catalogs for many of these exhibitions exist and contain considerably more detailed information about his life and works. In 1972, Iliazd published
Pirosmanashvili – 1914, which included a translation of an article he published on
Niko Pirosmani in 1914 in Tbilisi, and his new article
60 Years Later, for which
Picasso painted a portrait of Pirosmanashvili in etching technique. Ilia Zdanevich died on Christmas Day 1975 in Paris. He was buried at the
Georgian émigré cemetery at
Leuville-sur-Orge. ==References==