RA NA President Hovik Abrahamyan Receives The Members Of Ago Group O

RA NA PRESIDENT HOVIK ABRAHAMYAN RECEIVES THE MEMBERS OF AGO GROUP OF THE COUNCIL OF EUROPE

National Assembly of RA
Nov 20 2009
Armenia

On November 20 the President of the National Assembly Mr. Hovik
Abrahamyan received the members of the Monitoring Committee of
Ministers’ Committee (Ago Group) of the Council of Europe (CoE),
led by the permanent representative of Romania in CoE, Ambassador Mr.

Stelian Stoyan.

Welcoming the guests, RA NA President introduced the developments
following the elections of 2008 and the undertaken actions in
overcoming the consequences of the March 1-2 tragic events to the CoE
Ago Group. Discussing in detail the developments of the last one year
and a half the sides agreed that serious progress has been recorded
in this sphere. The interlocutors also agreed that for strengthening
this progress it was necessary to continue the work, encouraging the
trust of the public towards the state instututions and the formation
of the public consent.

During the meeting the sides also touched upon the issue of the
normalization of the Armenian-Turkish relations without preconditions.

Still Life: Despite A Lifetime Of Tragedy, Arshile Gorky Made His Ma

STILL LIFE: DESPITE A LIFETIME OF TRAGEDY, ARSHILE GORKY MADE HIS MARK AS A PRE-EMINENT PAINTER OF THE 20TH CENTURY
By Ilene Dube

CentralJersey.com
Nov 20 2009

MUSEUMS often get calls from people claiming to have treasure in their
attics, valuable paintings created by great masters. These often
turn out to be false alarms, but in 2004, when a woman called the
Philadelphia Museum of Art about an Arshile Gorky under her rafters,
it turned out to be the key painting in a collection, and one that
would lead to a major exhibition, the biggest since the artists’
retrospective at the Guggenheim in 1981.

The caller’s father, an architect, just happened to have been a
roommate of Gorky’s in New York in the 1920s. He acquired "Woman with
Palette" before Gorky (1902-1948) had achieved recognition as one
of the last great Surrealist painters and a forerunner to Abstract
Expressionism. PMA Curator of Modern Art Michael Taylor could identify
the painting because of a related study, and it filled a gap in the
museum’s collection.

Although he lived less than half a century and experienced a barn fire
that destroyed many of his paintings, Gorky left behind a prodigious
body of work. The Philadelphia Museum of Art is presenting the first
major retrospective of his work in more than 25 years through Jan. 10,
2010.

Born in an Armenian province of Ottoman Turkey, Gorky lived through
the Armenian Genocide, witnessing the ethnic cleansing of his people,
the minority Armenians, by Turkish troops. After the family fled
with other refugees, the 17-year-old artist watched his mother die
of starvation in his arms. This was to have a profound effect on his
life and work. The focus of the PMA exhibit is on Gorky’s Armenian
heritage, and the impact of the genocide.

Born Vosdanig Adoian, he changed his name when immigrating, with his
sister, to the Boston area to reunite with their father. He chose
his new name in honor of the Russian writer Maxim Gorky, who himself
adopted the pseudonym to reflect his desire to tell the bitter truth.

With little means but great ambition, Gorky set out to educate
himself. He visited museums and galleries and was a voracious reader.

Just as Paul Cezanne had educated himself by studying the work of
artists he carefully observed in the Louvre, Gorky "apprenticed"
himself to Cezanne, systematically studying and copying his work. And
just as Cezanne had been a rule breaker, Gorky, too, went ahead to
break with tradition.

>From his Cezanne period, Gorky went on to Cubism, emulating Pablo
Picasso, George Braque and Juan Gris, immersing himself in European
Modernism. Ultimately he worked his way through the biomorphic designs
of Jean Arp and Joan Miro, developing his own imprint.

"He came to this country in 1920 with no education, having fought
against the Turks since 1915, lived in a refugee camp and had no sense
of what art is, and within four years of his arrival he was teaching
art in New York City and Boston," says Mr. Taylor.

The art critic Harold Rosenberg wrote that Gorky was "a lifelong
student, an intellectual to the roots."

In fact, Gorky could tell a tall tale: In addition to claiming to be
a cousin of Maxim Gorky, he told people he’d studied with Kandinsky
in Paris. "He could pull it off because he was such an adept artist,"
says Mr. Taylor.

When Gorky saw Giorgio de Chirico’s 1914 painting "The Fatal Temple"
(on view in this exhibit), he was inspired to create a series
of more than 80 drawings and two paintings, Nighttime, Enigma
and Nostalgia. "De Chirico’s painting is about an artist and his
mother," says Mr. Taylor, "and with its suggestion of the mother-son
relationship it must have resonated with Gorky" who, by this time,
had begun two large canvases on the theme of the artist and his mother.

Exhibited here side-by-side, the two paintings titled "The Artist and
His Mother" were based on a photograph of Gorky and his mother, taken
in 1912 and sent to his father to remind him of his family back home.

Gorky’s father had moved to Boston to elude being drafted into the
Turkish army.

As with many survivors of genocide, Gorky did not discuss his
experiences of having to leave his home and travel more than 100 miles,
only to see his mother die. The paintings were a place where he could
work out these feelings.

Gorky reworked these canvases many times during the ’30s and ’40s,
perhaps as a way to hold on to his mother’s memory and his love for
her, according to Mr. Taylor.

With a studio in Union Square, N.Y., Gorky was able to support himself
as a painter by creating murals for the Federal Art Project of the
Works Progress Administration. Before then, "he couldn’t afford paints
and canvas, so his drawings have the feeling of worked up paintings,"
says Mr. Taylor.

His first mural came out of the ink studies for Nighttime, Enigma
and Nostalgia, but this was rejected, perhaps too edgy for the WPA
and the post offices where the murals would hang.

In 1936 he received a commission to create 10 murals for Newark
Airport Administration Building on the theme of aviation. He worked
on them from his Union Square studio because "he didn’t think murals
should be painted on the wall, where it would be subsumed into the
architecture," says Mr. Taylor. Gorky painted the murals on canvas
that would be installed on the walls.

The machinist style owes a debt to Fernand Leger. "But the murals
were only on view a short time," says Mr. Taylor. "During World War
II, the airport became a military base and the murals were covered
over and forgotten. The airport was expanded into an important hub
and the old administration building was turned into a post office,
where the murals were covered with 14 coats of paint."

All that paint probably protected them, adds Mr. Taylor.

In 1972, a worker removed an exit sign and pulled a nail that had
red paint and canvas on it, and the murals were discovered. Only two
survived — the remaining eight had been destroyed — and both can
be seen at PMA, where they have been restored.

If the murals had been painted on the walls, instead of canvas,
they might not have survived, according to Mr. Taylor. "This is the
largest painting he ever made."

With the income he received from the WPA, Gorky worked on some of his
most important paintings, such as "Organization." "This is one of his
most austere, coming out of Picasso and Mondrian… with a kind of
Dada humor that gets lost in the final painting," says Mr. Taylor,
pointing to the accompanying drawings.

Whereas Gorky’s paintings from the ’30s are worked up in thick layers
of paint, with a single canvas weighing as much as 90 pounds, the
works from the ’40s are thinned out with turpentine for more ethereal
washes. In the ’40s, Gorky became consumed with what Mr.

Taylor describes as the urban milieu of Cubism, with cafes and collages
of newspapers, glasses of wine and rum. By 1943, with the painting
"Waterfall," Gorky started to find his own voice. He was thinning the
paint, dripping it, abstract but with a reference to nature. "It was
a real breakthrough, as if a weight were lifted," says Mr. Taylor.

He went with his new wife, Agnes Magruder, whom he called "Magouch," an
Armenian term of endearment, to her parents’ farm in Virginia. The rich
farmland and bucolic atmosphere of rural Virginia reminded him of his
father’s farm in Armenia and inspired him to make abstract drawings in
the grass. The observations from nature held memories of his childhood.

"These are the most lyrical he ever made, and led to paintings in
the following year. They are filled with images of fecundity — he
was the father of a young baby — and he was enjoying himself with
the flora and fauna and bugs, but there’s also a sense of Armenia. He
saw in the fields his father’s farm.

"He would bring them back to the farm to show Agnes," continues Mr.

Taylor. "She said he was like a fisherman going out and coming back
every day." (Mr. Taylor conducted five years of interviews with the
artist’s 88-year-old widow.)

Agnes was his wife and source of immediate feedback, and it was the
first time he enjoyed the comfort and security of a loving relationship
since his childhood, but they were only together for seven years. The
last years of Gorky’s life were deeply tragic, starting with a studio
fire in 1946 that destroyed 27 recent paintings, then a painful
operation for colon cancer and a lengthy recuperation.

>From the ashes of his suffering he created the Charred Beloved series
— he called his paintings "beloved."

"They are very haunting, with their charred sooty backgrounds," says
Mr. Taylor. "The worst thing for an artist is to see his paintings
destroyed — no artist should have to endure that."

Images of fecundity and eroticism turned to beasts, spiky and
jagged. "There’s a tragic undertone to everything he’s expressing,"
says Mr. Taylor.

An automobile accident in 1948 left Gorky with a broken neck and
paralyzed his painting arm. Then Agnes left him to have an affair with
his friend and mentor. A broken heart was more than he could endure,
and a few weeks later, Gorky committed suicide.

"In his short life, he changed the history of art," says Mr.

Taylor. "The hardest thing for an artist to do is to translate feelings
into art, and he was brilliant at doing that. He changed the way
painting looked in the ’40s and opened the door to Expressionism."

Arshile Gorky: A Retrospective is on view at the Philadelphia Museum
of Art, Benjamin Franklin Parkway at 26th Street, Philadelphia, though

European Court Rejects Jailed Armenian Scholar’s Appeal

EUROPEAN COURT REJECTS JAILED ARMENIAN SCHOLAR’S APPEAL

Armenia Liberty (RFE)
Nov 20 2009

Armenia — Murad Bojolian, a scholar and former government official,
pictured during his trial in 2002.

20.11.2009 Ruzanna Stepanian

The European Court of Human Rights has thrown out an appeal from
an Armenian scholar and former diplomat serving a ten-year prison
sentence given to him for alleged espionage in favor of Turkey,
it emerged on Friday.

Murad Bojolian, now 59, was arrested and charged with passing
"military, economic and political information" on to Turkish
intelligence in January 2002. He was tried and convicted of high
treason less than a year later.

Bojolian initially admitted to working for the Turkish intelligence
service MIT, but later retracted the pre-trial testimony and pleaded
not guilty to the charges. The former head of the Turkey desk at the
Armenian Foreign Ministry claimed during his two-month trial that
he fabricated the confession because he feared torture and wanted to
ensure the safety of his wife and three children.

Bojolian, who made occasional freelance contributions to Turkish media
after leaving the government in the late 1990s, lodged an appeal to
the European Court of Human Rights in 2003, saying that he was jailed
for his journalistic activities and never had access to state secrets.

He said the ten-year sentence which he received in December 2002
violated an article of the European Convention on Human Rights that
guarantees freedom of expression.

According to his lawyer, Arayik Ghazarian, the Strasbourg-based
court refused to even take up the case and hand down a ruling on the
case on the grounds that any cooperation with foreign intelligences
constitutes espionage even if it does not involve state secrets.

Ghazarian told RFE/RL that the decision was made on November 3 and
communicated to him and the Bojolian family on Friday.

Bojolian’s daughter, Alina, criticized it as unfair. "It was never
proved in the court or anywhere else that Murad Bojolian cooperated
with the intelligence services of any country," she told RFE/RL.

"We haven’t decided yet what to do, but we will continue our struggle,"
she said. "We will do everything to achieve justice."

In his initial pre-trial testimony, Bojolian, who was born and grew
up in Turkey, claimed to have passed a broad range of information
about Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh on to Turkish intelligence agents
in exchange for money. The testimony contained detailed accounts of
his alleged contacts with MIT during six different trips to Istanbul
between 2000 and 2001.

Although the defendant retracted the "false confession" during his
trial, Armenian courts found it credible. One of the trial prosecutors
said that its detailed descriptions "complement each other in a
logical manner." and "could not have been fabricated even with the
best imagination." The defendant and his lawyers, for their part,
insisted that Armenia’s National Security Service (NSS) failed to
come up with any other purported evidence of his crime.

In a lengthy speech delivered during his 2002 trial, Bojolian said
that he played a pivotal role in establishing direct communication
between the governments of Turkey and newly independent Armenia in the
fall of 1992. He said that made him the object of envy and jealousy
of his Foreign Ministry superiors whom he accused of spreading rumors
in 1992 and 1993 about his links with Turkish intelligence.

He said then Foreign Minister Vahan Papazian, a key member of former
President Levon Ter-Petrosian’s administration, told him to resign
or risk criminal proceedings. Papazian denied that, however, telling
RFE/RL in October 2002 that he fired Bojolian because the latter was
combining diplomatic work with retail trade in Turkish goods.

After leaving the Foreign Ministry Bojolian worked as a part-time
translator and specialist on Turkey in Ter-Petrosian’s staff. His
name is currently on the list of about two dozen jailed individuals
whom Ter-Petrosian’s Armenian National Congress regards as political
prisoners.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Opposition In Bed With Governing Leadership, Says People’s Party Lea

OPPOSITION IN BED WITH GOVERNING LEADERSHIP, SAYS PEOPLE’S PARTY LEADER KARAPETYAN

Tert
Nov 20 2009
Armenia

Armenia’s opposition is getting into bed with the country’s governing
leadership, People’s Party Leader Tigran Karapetyan stated at a press
conference today.

"Levon Ter-Petrossian’s last speech, where it was stated that their
[Armenian National Congress’] opinion on Armenia-Turkey border and
Nagorno-Karabakh corresponds to that of the governing leadership,
except for the point of creating a commission on Armenian Genocide,
makes us think that there is a rapprochement," Karapetyan said.

Besides, he said that the Armenian National Congress (ANC) didn’t
hinder the Armenia-Turkey rapprochement process; "it didn’t make
statements and didn’t organize protest demos."

According to Karapetyan’s forecasts, in 2012, "we will see that the
Pan-Armenian National Movement will have a seat in parliament, not
within the frames of ANC, but as a party."

Karapetyan cannot state clearly whether granting the motion by
political prisoner, Haykakan Zhamanak ("Armenian Times") chief editor
Nikol Pashinyan is a result of an arrangement. "But the leadership,
for the first time, made a concession. They could also have done it
formerly," Karapetyan said.

Karapetyan connects sustaining Pashinyan’s claim with the first
president’s speech.

Will Armenia-Turkey Protocols Make It To Constitutional Court?

WILL ARMENIA-TURKEY PROTOCOLS MAKE IT TO CONSTITUTIONAL COURT?

Tert
Nov 20 2009
Armenia

Republican Party of Armenia vice-president and parliamentary faction
leader, Galust Sahakyan, announced today that in the issue of ratifying
the Armenia-Turkey Protocols, the Armenian side will move according
to its already announced approach.

That approach, reiterated by Sahakyan, stipulates that the Armenian
side is waiting for Turkey’s Grand Assembly’s assessment, because the
border can’t open only through Armenia’s discussion and ratification
of the Protocols.

Sahakyan made this statement in response to Tert.am’s question whether
it’s possible that the Armenia-Turkey Protocols might not make it
into the Consitutional Court of the Republic of Armenia, which is
the first to give its conclusion in the ratification of the Protocols.

Governing Leadership Doesn’t Accept Ter-Petrossian’s ‘Welcome’

GOVERNING LEADERSHIP DOESN’T ACCEPT TER-PETROSSIAN’S ‘WELCOME’

Tert
Nov 20 2009
Armenia

"Levon Ter-Petrossian didn’t create an undercover, secret situation,"
Leader of Republican Party of Armenia parliamentary faction Galust
Sahakyan stated at a press conference today in response to the question
whether Levon Ter-Petrossian’s last speech was a proposal to cooperate
with the leadership.

Sahakyan said that the first president’s last speech can’t have an
influence on further political developments, adding that they accept
proposals of direct cooperation.

"The ‘welcome’ is unacceptable for us. We are for direct cooperation,"
the vice-president of the governing Republican party stated.

Armenia-Turkey Rapprochement: Russia’s Foreign Ministry Responds To

ARMENIA-TURKEY RAPPROCHEMENT: RUSSIA’S FOREIGN MINISTRY RESPONDS TO "NOISE" OF ARMENIAN MEDIA

Tert
Nov 20 2009
Armenia

Russia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesperson Andrei Nesterenko,
in a recently issued statement, responded to concerns in Armenian
mass media on the subject of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict settlement
process and establishment process of Armenia-Turkey relations.

The statement, in part, reads:

"In Moscow, they paid attention to the fact that some Armenian media
raised some noise over statements made by the Russian Federation
Ministry of Foreign Affairs’ official representative on November 17.

They insist that they changed their position in Moscow and presently
are connecting Nagorno-Karabakh issue with the establishment of
Armenia-Turkey relations. Russia’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Sergey
Lavrov numerously commented on Russia’s position. It has remained
unchanged. They are two different processes.

"Our attitude towards the bilateral document between Armenia and
Turkey, which specify the parties’ further actions, is positive.

"We are confident that the establishment of good neighbourly
relations between Armenia and Turkey will promote further steps of
establishing an atmosphere of security and peace in the Transcaucasus
[South Caucasus]."

Gagik Tsarukyan To Participate In United Russian Party Convention

GAGIK TSARUKYAN TO PARTICIPATE IN UNITED RUSSIAN PARTY CONVENTION

Tert
Nov 20 2009
Armenia

>>From November 20-22, 2009, a delegation headed by Prosperous
Armenia Party Leader Gagik Tsarukyan will leave for St. Petersburg
to participate in a convention of the governing United Russia Party,
inform Gagik Tsarukyan’s press staff.

Before the convention, an international scientific-business forum on
the "Social responsibility of political parties during the crisis"
will be held on November 21. Planned during the conference is a speech
by Tsarukyan.

Crimes Against Minors Primarily Committed By Adults, Says Police Col

CRIMES AGAINST MINORS PRIMARILY COMMITTED BY ADULTS, SAYS POLICE COLONEL

Tert
Nov 20 2009
Armenia

During 10 months of this year, 7,222 criminal offences have been
registered in Armenia — compared to 5,480 for the same period last
year, announced Head of Department of Criminal Investigations of RA
Police, Colonel Hovik Tamamyan.

At a press conference today, Tamamyan presented the complete picture
of crimes registered in Armenia by and against minors during a 10-month
period in 2009: during that time, 383 crimes were committed by minors,
which is 18 more cases than in the previous year. Out of this total,
96 crimes were committed by 14-15 year-olds, while 276 were committed
by 16-17 year-olds.

Out of the total criminal offences, 23 were committed by young women, 4
were committed by youth under the influence of alcohol, and 1 committed
by a juvenile under the influence of drugs. The majority of crimes were
committed by youth with varying occupations; excluding 24 delinquents
who were students. In any case, none of the crimes committed by youth
were murder cases. Tamamyan, speaking on the reasons for the crimes,
mentioned an noteworthy fact: according to the colonel, crimes against
juveniles were primarily committed by adults.

The picture of crimes committed against minors is not a pretty one.

During the current year, 155 crimes have been committed against
juveniles, 2 of which were murders, 2 were deaths caused by
carelessness, 3 resulted in suicides, 3 physical assaults, 4 sexual
assaults, and 25 sexual violations. What is distressing to note is
that the crimes committed by youth are nothing compared to those
committed by adults against youth.

And the icing on the cake? Today marks the 20th anniversary of the UN
Convention on the Rights of the Child, which Armenia adopted in 1993.

U.S. Senate Majority Leader To Co-Sponsor Armenian Genocide Resoluti

U.S. SENATE MAJORITY LEADER TO CO-SPONSOR ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RESOLUTION

Tert
Nov 20 2009
Armenia

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) has informed the Armenian
National Committee of America (ANCA) that he will once again support
legislation calling for U.S. reaffirmation of the Armenian Genocide,
according to an ANCA press release.

"We want to offer our appreciation to Majority Leader Reid for
joining with his colleagues in supporting this legislative effort
to put America on the right side of the Armenian Genocide issue,"
said Aram Hamparian, Executive Director of the ANCA.

Spearheaded by Senators Bob Menendez (D-NJ) and John Ensign (R-NV),
the Armenian Genocide resolution (S.Res.316) also enjoys the early
support of Senators Sherrod Brown (D-OH), Russ Feingold (D-WI), Dianne
Feinstein (D-CA), Jack Reed (D-RI) and Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI).

Senator Reid’s co-sponsorship comes as Armenian-Americans across
the U.S. continue to participate in the ANCA "Countdown to Erdogan"
campaign — a four-week campaign urging President Obama to speak
truthfully about the Armenian Genocide when he meets on December 7th
with Turkey’s Prime Minister Erdogan.

On each day until December 7th, the ANCA is organizing a new action
— ranging from online advocacy, call-in days, social networking,
coalition-building, community outreach, and fieldwork.