In an unexpected turn of economic and artistic history, Georgia has made headlines with an astronomical surge in the import of paintings and sculptures. According to recent data from Sakstat, January 2025 saw a staggering 2 million percent increase in the import of paintings, totaling $481 million, and a 75,000 percent rise in the import of sculptures, amounting to $33 million. Together, these purchases accounted for almost a third of the country’s total imports for the month—a surrealist leap into the global art market.
But who is buying? The official importer remains a mystery, yet all signs point toward Bidzina Ivanishvili, Georgia’s wealthiest individual and de facto power broker. If so, this is not just a story about art; it is a case study in how economic policy, oligarchic influence, and art markets intertwine in the global financial ecosystem.
Art as an Economic Anomaly: When Imports Outpace Logic
Art is, by its nature, an elite commodity. The staggering increase in imports—occurring just months after Georgia passed a law exempting offshore asset transfers from taxation—suggests that these purchases are less about artistic appreciation and more about financial strategy. The sheer scale of this transaction forces us to ask: Is this an instance of asset laundering through art? Why would an individual or entity need to move half a billion dollars through paintings and sculptures? What does this tell us about the intersection of culture, finance, and political power? To answer these questions, we must turn to history.
From Napoleon to Freeports: The Art of Moving Wealth
The practice of using art as a vehicle for financial and political maneuvering is nothing new. Napoleon Bonaparte’s looting of Europe’s masterpieces was not merely an act of cultural theft—it was an economic and ideological conquest. The Nazi regime refined this process in the 20th century, systematically seizing artworks to both finance and justify their ideological project.
In more recent decades, the international art market has become a primary tool for wealth concealment and tax avoidance. Art is a unique asset class: it is highly valuable, easily transportable, and notoriously difficult to appraise. This makes it a perfect instrument for those seeking to move large sums of money without triggering traditional financial oversight mechanisms.
The rise of freeports, tax-free storage facilities in Geneva, Luxembourg, and Singapore, has allowed collectors (and oligarchs) to buy, sell, and store art without the burden of taxation. The anonymity of these transactions means that art sales can serve as a front for capital movement. In 2016, the Panama Papers revealed how Russian billionaire Dmitry Rybolovlev used offshore accounts to trade art while avoiding taxes and scrutiny.

Why Georgia? The Economic and Political Context
Georgia’s rapidly shifting tax laws create the perfect environment for such maneuvers. In April 2024, the Georgian Parliament passed a law that allows assets transferred from offshore accounts to be tax-free until 2028. This coincided with Ivanishvili’s sudden increase in wealth—up $955 million in 2024 alone.
The January 2025 import surge appears to be a direct consequence of this legal loophole. By importing half a billion dollars’ worth of paintings and sculptures, the importer has effectively converted offshore wealth into tangible, domestic assets—without triggering tax liabilities.
Furthermore, the decline in VAT revenue despite the massive spike in imports suggests that these transactions were either structured in a way to minimize taxable value or classified under exemptions. In many countries, including the US and UK (where the artworks reportedly originated), art transactions can be structured to limit taxation through charitable donations, museum loans, or deferred sales agreements.
What Happens Next? When Art Ceases to Be Art
Could this be the beginning of Tbilisi as a financial art hub, akin to Geneva’s freeports? If so, this would mark a shift in Georgia’s global economic role—from a post-Soviet transition economy to a key player in art-based financial engineering. When art is treated primarily as a financial instrument, its cultural and societal roles are distorted. Who gets to see these paintings? Who decides their value? Is this art destined for public museums, private collections, or discreet storage units?
The Georgian art import boom is not simply a statistical anomaly—it is a case study in how culture is instrumentalized for economic and political ends. If art’s primary function shifts from aesthetic and cultural enrichment to financial engineering, we risk turning paintings into banknotes, sculptures into ledgers, and galleries into vaults. What is happening in Georgia today is not just a matter of economic policy. It is a question of what culture means in an era when capital moves faster than meaning itself.
Op-Ed by Ivan Nechaev