First Belgian period (1902–1919) After graduating, Kipiani taught at the St. Mary's School in
Khoni until 1901, when she decided to join her father in Belgium. She enrolled in the medical faculty at the University of Brussels in 1902. Within two years, Kipiani was expelled because of an inability to pay her tuition. After making a presentation which was well-received at the Sixth International Congress of Physiologists held in Brussels in 1904, the Polish scientist
Józefa Joteyko invited Kipiani to work in her laboratory at the
Solvay Institute of Physiology and paid for her tuition. The laboratory focused on studying
physiology, and specifically those functions that provided power to living organisms. Kipiani began studying how sugar could be used to combat fatigue. At the time,
Armand Gautier in Paris and Auguste Slosse in Brussels were studying the diets of workers in their respective cities to evaluate whether the nutritional level of the population was adequate to maintain the level of their industrial activities. Her aim in conducting the studies was to contribute to the understanding of how nutrition and physiology could be applied to improving society. Findings on a study promoting
vegetarianism sparked international discussion in newspapers, like
The New York Times, women's magazines such as,
Life & Health, and a book,
Good Health and How We Won It by
Upton Sinclair. Kipiani completed her studies in the medical faculty and graduated in 1907. Kipiani became involved in protests in Brussels, sparked by the
1905 Russian Revolution and aimed at the Russian tsar and ruling class. As a means of furthering knowledge about Georgia and its culture, she began collecting Georgian art and cultural artifacts throughout Europe. With other Georgian students, in 1908 she performed at the in an evening event which featured Georgian literature, music, and dancing. The students performed in various segments offering glimpses of Georgian culture. They acted in a drama, recited poetry, sang, and danced traditional dances in national costumes. In 1910, she attended the ('World Congress of International Associations'), where it was proposed that the ('World Palace') be established as a central repository for the world's knowledge. The original plan was to utilize one of the buildings from the
Brussels International Exposition, but a new location had to be found after fire destroyed several sections of the exposition site. Kipiani curated and directed the collection of Georgian historical and ethnographic artifacts for the Palais Mondial, now known as the
Mundaneum. She wrote to organizations in Georgia encouraging them to send books, pictures, or other items that could be added to the exhibit in order to improve exposure to Georgian achievements in education and technology. In 1913, when the collection was installed, she wrote to , one of the leaders of the Georgian independence movement, urging him to print at least 100 copies of a flyer to publicize the collection to members of the Georgian diaspora. In 1908, Joteyko founded and became editor of the '''', a journal which explored developments in the field of
psychology from a scientific and educational perspective. Kipiani was hired as its executive secretary. She published several articles in the journal between 1908 and 1914, as well as various studies examining
muscle memory, the adaptive multi-sensory practices of people with limited or no vision, vegetarianism, and
ambidexterity. Kipiani lectured on
psychophysiology and
psychology at various universities, including her alma mater, the
University of Liège and the
University of Paris. In 1911, she worked as a laboratory assistant to Joteyko who that year founded and developed the curricula for the International Paedological Faculty of Brussels. The goal of this facility was to scientifically study children and their development to improve educational methods for the benefit of society as a whole. She also taught a course for the faculty in
paedology practices, conducting laboratory studies on children's development. Paedology was an emerging science at the time, and the researchers of the International Paedological Faculty attempted to examine childhood development from both a physiological and psychological view as a basis for improving education. By 1913, Kipiani had been awarded medals by several learned societies and become a laureate of the in Paris. She was one of the invited speakers who participated in the Fourth Vegetarian Congress, held in
The Hague in 1913. The following year, with the onset of
World War I, all of the major universities in Belgium were closed. Joteyko left the country in 1915.
Return to Georgia (1919–1921) Around 1919, Kipiani returned to Georgia. She taught French courses at the Georgian Nobles Gymnasium and the 5th Women's Gymnasium, both in Tbilisi. She also served as an assistant to
Akaki Shanidze, the leading Georgian linguist and philologist, who had been one of the founders of
Tbilisi State University, the previous year. Kipiani, who spoke Georgian, Russian, and French, assisted Shanidze in his work at the university library. In 1921, the
Russian Red Army invaded Georgia. In the wake of the establishment of a pro-Russian government, opposition figures were suppressed through a
Red Terror campaign. Kipiani was one of the targets of the state-sponsored
political repression and fled the country, returning to Belgium.
Second Belgian period (1921–1950) According to the academic
Marc Depaepe, the goals of Belgian scientists in developing the field of paedology were not realized. Although they were at the center of the movement to ground education and teaching on scientific methodology, rather than philosophy, the field collapsed at the end of World War I primarily because the behavior of children could not be reduced to scientific formulas that could be molded into determining social ideology. The Belgian government reorganized its higher education facilities in 1927, establishing for the first time standards for scientific research and the
Fonds National de la Recherche Scientifique (National Fund for Scientific Research) to coordinate those policies. By that time, Kipiani had earned her doctorate and was reported in the ''
Australian Woman's Mirror'' as "Dr. Varia Kipiani-Eristavi, a distinguished professor at Brussels University". She had published works in French, German and Russian and her work had been recognized internationally. She taught
Georgian and Russian language courses at the university. Kipiani had become the guardian of the effects and archives of
Salome Dadiani and her husband Prince Achille Murat. In 1940, following the onset of
World War II, she began negotiations with , (also transliterated as Michael Tarchnisvili), a Georgian priest working in
Munich, to secure a monastery in
Rome to protect the items. She believed that Rome would offer safety for the cultural artifacts because of an international agreement to protect the city from the war. In 1941, Tarkhnishvili traveled to Belgium to secure the bequest of another Georgian
émigré, Sofia Goghieli, who had died in Brussels. He returned with the donations to
Berlin. Hoping to establish a
Georgian Catholic college and learning center in Rome, Tarkhnishvili worked with Georgian associated with
Nazi intelligence agents of
AMT IV. The agents intended to install an intelligence-gathering network and radio station within the building. Tarkhnishvili, unaware of the Nazi plan, located the villa of publisher Salvatore di Carlo on the Via Alessandro Brisse in the
Monteverde Nuovo neighborhood. He purchased the villa in 1943 with the bequeathed funds and supplemental monies provided by AMT IV operatives, which he was told came from a Georgian benefactor. When the collaborators attempted to recruit Tarkhnishvili, he refused to participate in their plans, which caused the Nazis to go ahead without his cooperation using a
mole. Renovations were begun, papal approval for the
Georgian college was granted, and students were recruited by operatives. Tarkhnishvili stored the Dadiani and Murat items in the villa. He also transferred the materials obtained from the Georgian Catholic Monastery in Constantinople to the facility. All but one of the students left having no actual interest in becoming priests. On 4 June 1944,
Rome was liberated by
Allied forces and all of the students as well as Tarkhnishvili were arrested when the partially-installed radio antenna was located at the villa. Tarkhnishvili was later released, but the Georgian college and monastery were abandoned. ==Death==