Kartveli Exhibit Opens at Free University - Tbilisi

Last week, the Kartveli Association contributed learning materials and model airplanes to the Free University. The purpose was to create a display for students to learn about the life and accomplishment of Alexander Kartveli.

It’s been a busy year for the Association. Earlier this year, we sponsored an exhibit at Georgia National Museum that ended after great success. The display inside Free University houses some elements of the museum exhibit. A screen playing the short film, Alexander Kartveli and His Life, adds an interactive element for visitors to learn about Kartveli and the mission of the Association.

We are grateful that a group of students and faculty helped assemble the materials.

The display illuminates the story of Alexander Kartveli’s life in detail.

A graduate of Paris Highest School of Aviation, Kartveli developed into an influential aircraft engineer and designer, a pioneer in American aviation history, and an early technology innovator.

He became a U.S. citizen by emigrating from Europe in the late 1920’s and escaping the rise of Bolshevik Russia and war-torn Europe.

Kartveli achieved breakthroughs in military aviation through aircraft design that proved to be essential to defeating Axis forces during World War II. He is considered to be one of the most important aircraft designers in U.S. and world history, yet Kartveli’s legacy remains largely unknown.

Kartveli spent most of his career at the Republic Aviation Corporation  -  an American aircraft manufacturer based in Farmingdale, Long Island, NY. Originally known as the Seversky Aircraft Company, the company was responsible for the design and production of many important military aircrafts. Its founder Alexander de Seversky was another Georgia-born individual who made a signification contribution to U.S. aviation history.

He is solely responsible for seminal design advancements related to legendary aircraft. In addition to designing the first metal plane to cross the Atlantic, Kartveli is credited with designs for the P-35 (the first single-seat fighter to feature all-metal construction), the P-47 Thunderbolt (used to win air superiority in World War II), the XF-103 (high speed bomber), and the F-105 (used extensively in Vietnam).

Kartveli’s contributions to hypersonic flight theory provided important contributions to NASA’s space flight ambitions. His advisory work at the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA), the predecessor to NASA, proved valuable to early space shuttle and orbital aircraft designs.

About the Alexander Kartveli Association. The mission of Kartveli Association is to curate Alexander Kartveli's life and accomplishments.   We believe that by protecting the past we can invent a better future.  Human brilliance is evenly distributed around the world, but opportunity is not.  We can change lives and bring opportunity to many by promoting core values and ideals that represent the main themes that defined Kartveli.  Chief among these values and ideals is perseverance, tenacity, creativity, imagination and learning.  And most important we want to tell an amazing story about an important innovator who brought to life some of the foundational aerospace technologies of today.  Our community outreach, education and museum contributions are made through our non-profit Alexander Kartveli Association based in Tblisi, Georgia.

About the Free University of Tblisi. The mission of Free University is to provide the country's most talented and motivated students a world-class, 21st-century education and produce graduates who can become leaders in their fields and bring wholesome and sustainable changes to a country still in development.

 

Georgian National Museum Exhibit Comes to a Close

Earlier this year, the Alexander Kartveli Association announced the conclusion of a dedicated exhibit at the Georgia National Museum in honor of Alexander Kartveli, one of the greatest military aircraft designers in history.

The Association worked with the Museum to curate an exhibit to celebrate the life and accomplishments of Alexander Kartveli. Over the course of six months, thousands of Georgians visited the exhibit.

Born in Tbilisi, Kartveli immigrated to the United States in his early 1920s to pursue a dream to design aircraft that tested the limits of aeronautical design.  The exhibit will highlight Kartveli’s extraordinary life and his enduring legacy of military aircraft design.  Kartveli is credited with major aircraft designs such as the P-47 Thunderbolt (used extensively in World War II by the United States), F-84 (used extensively in the Korean Wart and then by NATO forces), and the F-105 9used extensively in the Vietnam conflict).  Most remarkable is Kartveli’s A-10 “Warthog” design which remains in service today in the U.S. Air Force - its fifth decade as a vital close air support aircraft.  Kartveli also made significant contributions to the design and technology used in hypersonic propulsion and in early space flight.

Richard Rubin has embarked on a five-year endeavor to document and curate Kartveli’s values and life story. Richard Rubin, Chairman of the Alexander Kartveli Association says, “I am so pleased to contribute the rich content and media assets about this great aviation pioneer and innovator.  My team at the Alexander Kartveli Association has collected a vast trove of materials that paint a fascinating and inspiring story about a great Georgian who impacted world events through his individual contributions to aviation.  And most important of all, through the content at the exhibit, the people of Georgia will be able to enjoy of sense of national pride about Kartveli’s personal values that are an extension of his Georgian heritage.”

The exhibit will opened November 17, 2015 with a brief ceremony to discuss the vision and mission behind the exhibit.

Kartveli's Nephew Speaking at Georgian National Museum, courtesy AK Association

Kartveli's Nephew Speaking at Georgian National Museum, courtesy AK Association