An Artistic Link Between Old And New

AN ARTISTIC LINK BETWEEN OLD AND NEW

The Irish Times
Tuesday, April 13, 2010

The Artist and His MotherPhotograph of Gorky and his mother, Van city,
Turkish Armenia, 1912, courtesy of Dr Bruce BerberianGarden in SochiThe
Plow and the SongIn this section "

Here comes the bride, digitally beautifiedAn Armenian refugee in the
US, Arshile Gorky assumed a new name and taught himself to paint
by imitating his heroes, but his importance lay in realising that
modernity should not mean rejection of tradition, writes AIDAN DUNNE

THE MISFORTUNES heaped on Arshile Gorky in his 44 years seem too
much for anyone to bear, and although it was desperately sad, one can
understand his suicide, in 1948, at his home in Sherman, Connecticut.

In the last two years of his life, especially, sorrows had certainly
come to him, as Shakespeare put it, not as single spies but in
battalions. And yet, the charming, spirited Gorky had a lot to live
for. He was at the height of his abilities as an artist, and had more
than begun to achieve the recognition that continued to grow after
his death.

A comparison between the retrospective of his work at Tate Modern and
The Real Van Gogh at the Royal Academy is instructive. Van Gogh’s
turbulent paintings reflect his troubled inner state with a blunt
directness that endears him to an empathic audience. Gorky, though
beset by all manner of personal troubles, made clear-headed paintings
that take a longer view, pursuing a dialogue with a classical European
tradition that opened up a new world of possibilities for American
art. He was hurting, but he got on with his work, which was something
apart. It was a question of professional pride.

If his importance has long been recognised in the US – the
retrospective, which is superb, originates in Philadelphia – he has
become something of a peripheral, even forgotten figure in modern
European art history. One can see why he has been consistently rated
in the US, where he is rightly regarded as pivotal in New York’s
usurpation of Paris as the world’s art capital, a modern classicist
who engineered a link between old and new, preparing the ground and
even inventing a language for near-contemporaries and a succeeding
generation. In stressing his role as a transatlantic go-between,
there’s a danger of overlooking his own singular achievement, and the
particular value of the show at the Tate is that it allows us to look
at his work in its own right.

GORKY’S MATURE paintings and graphic work spring from a dense nutritive
mix of European influences, classical and contemporary.

Largely self-taught, he didn’t disguise those influences. In fact, when
working as a teacher and painter in New York, he was still learning,
serving an apprenticeship in the time-honoured manner. He would square
up to an artist whose work he admired and absorb their way of thinking
and doing, not by just looking, or reading, but by painting. He copied
paintings, and he made paintings in the manner of other artists. The
first rooms in the exhibition provide a startling demonstration of
this, as Gorky works his way through Cezanne, Picasso, Leger and Miro,
among others, often making what come across as expert pastiches.

It was Picasso who remarked: "If it’s worth stealing, I steal it." And
Gorky methodically stole whatever was valuable, extending back to
Italian Renaissance painters, to Ingres, and up to his contemporaries,
notably Picasso and the surrealists. The point was not imitation,
but to learn, to get somewhere else. It seems obvious, but with a
premium on originality, such overt acknowledgement of influence was
regarded as somehow suspect, and perhaps still is. Willem de Kooning,
who befriended him, credited Gorky with allowing him to reconnect
with tradition and realise that modernity should not mean rejection
of the past.

Gorky was an adopted name, and to a large extent an adopted identity,
an elaborate performance. His given name was Vosdanik Adoian. He was
probably born in 1904 – he was vague about the year – and spent his
childhood near Lake Van in the Armenian village of Khorkom, wedged
between the Russian and Ottoman empires. It was a precarious and
vulnerable position. Gorky’s father set off for the US around 1908,
to avoid conscription into the Turkish army. Other family members
followed.

When Turkey entered the first World War on the German side in 1914,
its armed forces turned on the Armenian population within and without
its borders, embarking on a programme of genocidal aggression. This
is still a controversial subject in Turkey, as demonstrated by the
recent diplomatic rift between Turkey and the US, sparked by US
insistence that the systematic violence be termed a genocide.

Gorky, his younger sister and their mother, Shushan, endured siege
and famine. Gorky never spoke of his experiences but his sister said
he delivered ammunition to the fighters trying desperately to keep
the Turkish army at bay. Eventually he, his mother and sister managed
to reach Russian territory, but Shushan starved to death. She died in
Gorky’s arms. Brother and sister set off on a long, difficult journey
to the US, where they managed to reconnect with their extended family.

Gorky settled in very well and quickly became independent.

At some stage, having been told that an Armenian refugee would not
make it as a painter, he adopted his newly coined identity, presenting
himself as a Russian, indeed a relation of the writer Maxim Gorky
(whose name was also assumed), who had studied with Wassily Kandinsky,
no less, and who had undefined aristocratic connections. Gorky
translates as "bitter" and Arshile was derived from royal and mythic
sources in Armenian and Russian. Gorky affected a slightly superior
manner appropriate to exiled, bitter royalty. No one quite bought
it, but he was by all accounts genuinely charming. Tall and dashing,
there was also something slightly comic or clownish about him.

Even as he was pillaging the art of useful exemplars, he was working on
a series of realist portrait images, notably one based on a photograph
of himself and his mother. His later observation on painting is
relevant to these provisional-looking works. It’s writ large on the
wall in the Tate: "I never finish a painting – I just stop working
on it for a while. I like painting because it’s something I never
come to an end of." The portrait studies are pointedly unfinished,
their areas of blanked, obscured details suggesting the obliteration
wrought by time and history.

Dwelling on the past was a vital component of his breakthrough work as
well, in the form of idealised recollections of an Armenian pastoral.

It’s fascinating to see it happen as you progress through the
exhibition, like suddenly tuning in to a radio station. Surrealism was
vital because it allowed him to deal with content in an abstract way
but, rather than making pastiches or parodies of surrealist art, he’s
suddenly painting Gorkys. It’s late in the day in terms of his life,
at the end of the 1930s. From then on he was breaking new ground,
discovering rather than appropriating.

Building up surfaces in numerous thin, soft layers, he combined
luxuriantly textural painting with whiplash linear drawing (vitally,
de Kooning had introduced him to the sign-painters’ liner brush).

Through several wonderfully inventive series of paintings, he developed
a menagerie of ambiguous biomorphic forms, endlessly suggestive of
aspects of human anatomy and of animals, plants and insects, charged
with cartoonish energy. These were all deployed against and emerging
from a fuzzily indeterminate ground, a distinctive kind of pictorial
space that was significant for many American painters. Memory and
fantasy are at play in this enveloping dream-space; recollections
of childhood are continuously reinvented and explored with bountiful
lyricism.

THE 1940S promised to be wonderful for Gorky. De Kooning and his
partner Elaine Fried introduced him to Agnes Magruder, the daughter of
a naval captain, at a party early in 1941. She was much younger than
Gorky but they fell in love, she moved in with him and they married
that autumn. It was a move several rungs up the social ladder that
Gorky seemed to like. At the same time, he was making inroads into
another elite uptown grouping, centring on the expatriate surrealist
community in New York, which delighted him at first and then,
belatedly, appalled him. Matta became a friend. Gorky dropped de
Kooning, the person he had been closest to.

Then, from 1946, his life fell apart. A fire in his studio in January
destroyed a large amount of work. He bounced back from that with
admirable good grace and set about redoing what had been destroyed.

Then he was diagnosed with rectal cancer and had to have a colostomy.

As if that wasn’t enough, he broke his neck in a car accident,
temporarily paralysing his painting arm. The flashy Matta was pursuing
Agnes, and she eventually had an affair with him, later describing
it as the worst thing she had ever done in her life. Gorky found out
and became violent. Agnes left with their two young daughters. Within
days, Gorky killed himself.

Numerous accounts attest that he was utterly devoted to painting.

Through years of relative poverty, he lavished money on materials at
the expense of basic comforts. He was technically fastidious to the
extent that the boorish Pollock mocked him for the delicacy of his
painting. There is a delicacy to his work, a precision of colour,
tone and line that gives it a classical poise.

Many years after Gorky’s death, in an interview with David Sylvester,
de Kooning mentioned that he himself had been through rigorous academic
training in Europe, as Gorky had not: "He came from no place.

And for some mysterious reason, he knew lots more about painting,
and art – he just knew it by nature – things I was supposed to know
and feel and understand – he really did it better."

Arshile Gorky – A Retrospective . Tate Modern, Bankside, London. See
tate.org.uk. Sun-Thurs 10am-6pm, Fri-Sat 10am-10pm. Until May 3

In An Effort To Repair Bilateral Relations, Turkish Officials To Mee

IN AN EFFORT TO REPAIR BILATERAL RELATIONS, TURKISH OFFICIALS TO MEET ARMENIAN DELEGATION

TopNews.In
April 13 2010
India

It has been reported that Turkish officials are to meet in Washington
with an Armenian delegation in an effort to repair bilateral relations.

It was also reported that Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
is to meet his Armenian counterpart Serzh Sargsyan on the sidelines
of a nuclear conference in Washington.

The official Anadolu news agency reported on Monday that Erdogan,
prior to his departure to Washington, dispatched Feridun Sinirlioglu,
an undersecretary at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, to Armenia to
discuss bilateral ties.

Claims of genocide during the Ottoman Empire complicated Turkish
relations with Armenia. Recent ties were strained further over issues
regarding the region of Nagorno-Karabakh, an area of dispute between
Azerbaijan and Armenia.

It was also noted by some media reports that Turkey reacted angrily
to a series of measures passed in Sweden and the United States that
described the killing of Armenians in World War I as genocide. The
Turkish envoy to Washington was recalled briefly when a measure
narrowly passed March 4 in the U. S. House of Representatives Committee
on Foreign Affairs.

Leaders from Turkey and Armenia met in October, however, to sign
protocols aimed at restoring bilateral ties following years of
acrimony. (With Inputs from Agencies)

Armenian Central Bank Increases Refinancing Rate From 6.5% To 7.0%

ARMENIAN CENTRAL BANK INCREASES REFINANCING RATE FROM 6.5% TO 7.0%

ArmInfo
13.04.2010

ArmInfo. Central Bank of Armenia increased the refinancing rate by
0.5 percentage points to 7.0% in compliance with relevant decision
made by the CB Council on Tuesday, the CB press-service told ArmInfo.

In March 2010 versus February 2010 inflation totaled 0.8% falling
0.6 percentage points per year to 8.8%. The CB Board announced
that in conditions of the expanding monetary and taxation policies
implemented as part of the anti-crisis measures and against the
background of the upwards trends in the global economy rehabilitation,
the economic growth rates have exceeded the predicted level. In fact,
the current inflation environment was influenced by the above factors,
which meets the goals set by the Central Bank.

The CB Board predicts maintenance of the inflation environment in
the predictable period in conditions of the current macroeconomic
environment and increased tariffs for the main communal services
despite the downward trends of annual inflation.

The CB Board keeps on gradual toughening of monetary conditions aimed
to form real interest rate in conformity with inflation expectations.

Together with the government anti-crisis program, this will create
actual prerequisites for bringing inflation back into target. The
previous change of the refinancing rate was on March 9 2010 from 6.0%
to 6.5%.

Tuncer Kilinc Called Genocide "Normal Thing"

TUNCER KILINC CALLED GENOCIDE "NORMAL THING"

news.am
April 12 2010
Armenia

Those speaking at the events in Turkey, aimed at denying Armenian
Genocide in Ottoman Empire in 1915, spared no efforts to defend Young
Turks who exterminated 1.5 million Armenians. Two former Turkish high
ranking officials delivered ridiculous speeches at the conference in
Turkish city of Mercin.

Former National Security Council Secretary General Tuncer Kilinc
condemned Armenians for supporting Russians in 1915 and called decision
on forced displacement of Armenians normal.

In his turn, Turkish telecommunication Minister did not negate fact of
Genocide, but was proving that the word "genocide" was adopted in 1948
and events that occurred earlier can in now way be called Genocide.

Armenian President Extends Condolences To Polish People

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT EXTENDS CONDOLENCES TO POLISH PEOPLE

ArmInfo
2010-04-12 10:30:00

ArmInfo. President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan has sent a telegram
of condolence to Polish Sejm marshal Bronislaw Komorowski, Armenian
presidential press service reported.

The telegram says, in particular: "I am deeply shocked by the
air crash, as a result of which the Polish president, his wife,
parliamentarians and high-ranking officials of Poland died. On
behalf of Armenian people, I express my deepest condolences to you,
the families of crash victims and people of Poland. I share the
grief and pain of the Polish people and wish prompt recovery after
his tragedy, as well as courage and buoyancy to the relatives and
friends of those died".

To recall, TU-154 plane carrying President of Poland Lech Kaczynski
together with the Polish official delegation from Warsaw for
participation in the Katyn memorial ceremonies, crashed on April 10
morning in Smolensk region under the town of Pechyorsk on approach to
Smolensk airport in conditions of heavy frog. All 96 people on-board,
including the Polish president and his wife, died.

A 7-day mourning has been declared in Poland in view of the tragedy.

Mourning has been also declared in Russia and EU countries.

Kocharyan was not off-politics, so there is no return: Serzh Sargsya

news.am, Armenia
April 9 2010

Kocharyan was not off-politics, so there is no return: Serzh Sargsyan

19:05 / 04/09/2010`I consider that Mr. Kocharyan has always been on
politics, and some political circles’ nervous responses are surprising
for me that Kocharyan any move sets off ` tours, visits or expression
of opinion,’ said RA President Serzh Sargsyan in the course of his
April 9 visit to Tavush region.

According to him, it’s okay when Kocharyan voices his opinion on any matter.

In addition, he commented on the rumors of RA Premier’s dismissal,
saying `I do not intend to dismiss him or the government, the rumors
are groundless.’

`I would understand these gossips when the economy registered 15-17%
economic downturn, but our economy team has duly stood up to the
crisis,’ Sargsyan stated. `But today, when the economy revives, there
is no sense in speaking of the team’s incompetence or a need of
change.’

S.T.

If I Defend My Rights, I Will Be a ‘Bad Cop’

If I Defend My Rights, I Will Be a ‘Bad Cop’

16:51 – 10.04.10

One of the reasons the copyrights are violated in Armenia is that both
lawyers and authors in the sector work orally, i.e. without contracts.

In a press conference today Susanna Nersisyan, Director of the Center
for Protection of Copyrights, said that everything should be regulated
by contracts. In her words a new law on copyrights together with the
existing one will make all the parties involved sign contracts before
getting involved in such affairs.

She also said that the bill of the new law will soon be discussed in
the parliament, adding that the existing legislation is enough to
reveal violations, which are numerous in Armenia, and define fines for
the perpetrators.
Armenian composer Martin Aharonyan, in turn, said that the bill would
strengthen the protection of author’s copyrights, should it be adopted
in the parliament.

At the same time, according to Aharonyan, there are some strange
trends here in Armenia.
"In this sector the musicians, the performers are in a very close
relation with the organizers … And if I start defending my rights, I
will turn out to be ‘bad cop’," explained Aharonyan.

Another issue for concern in the sector is that the musicians and
authors do not want to be involved in the court proceedings, and that
they need lawyers support in this field.

Aharonyan also said he himself had come across some fake versions of
his own peaces of music oeuvres.

Tert.am

Parliamentarians Assess Serzh Sargsyan’s Two-Year Presidency

PARLIAMENTARIANS ASSESS SERZH SARGSYAN’S TWO-YEAR PRESIDENCY

PanARMENIAN.Net
April 9, 2010 – 17:55 AMT 12:55 GMT

Armen Martirosyan, Chairman of the Board of Heritage party, said that
no positive progress has been recorded in the country since Armenian
President Serzh Sargsyan’s inauguration two years ago.

"Those, who are guilty of 10 people’s death during the March 1, 2008,
tragic events, have not been revealed, all political prisoners have
not been released, while the judicial system of the country continues
implementing political orders," Martirosyan said during a briefing
in the RA National Assembly.

In her turn, head of Orinats Yerkir parliamentary group Heghine
Bisharyan noted that during Serzh Sargsyan’s presidency the tense
internal political situation in Armenia, conditioned by the March
1 events, has rather alleviated. Besides, Armenia has recorded an
unprecedented progress in the foreign political sphere, noted she.

"The tense internal political situation has alleviated during two
years, but due to a change in Armenian citizens’ attitude towards
the reality and not due to the leadership’s efforts," member of the
ARF Dashnaktsutyun parliamentary group Artsvik Minasyan said during
the briefing.

According to Minasyan, despite the relatively stable internal
political situation in the country, the situation is extremely tense
in the foreign policy sphere with respect to the Armenian President’s
initiative policy. "The tense situation in the foreign political sphere
may have a negative impact on the internal situation in Armenia,"
noted he.

Member of Prosperous Armenia parliamentary group Naira Zohrabyan noted
that Armenia has recorded a progress in the foreign political sphere,
as normalization of the Armenian-Turkish relations has switched
onto a normal track and active negotiations are conducted over the
Karabakh conflict settlement. She also said that the tense internal
situation has rather alleviated over two years. "The President made
a huge contribution to it, as he discusses the most important issues
not only in Armenia, but also in the Diaspora," noted she.

Head of the Republican Party parliamentary group Galust Sahakyan
said that during Serzh Sargsyan’s presidency Armenia’s positions have
significantly strengthened in the foreign political sphere. "Recently,
issues related to Armenia were always discussed at major international
forums. In other words, the international community already understands
Armenia’s problems," stressed he.

Tony Iommi And Ian Gillan To Collaborate

TONY IOMMI AND IAN GILLAN TO COLLABORATE

Artistdirect.com
April 5 2010

Duo are working to raise money for Armenia

Heaven & Hell guitarist Tony Iommi plans to collaborate on new music
with his former Black Sabbath bandmate, Deep Purple singer Ian Gillan,
according to Iommi’s interview with British rag Metal Hammer. Iommi
said the pair put a few songs down to try and raise money for Armenia,
as both musicians were honored in the country a few months ago,
since the both participated in Rock Aid Armenia 20 years ago.

The pair are working to raise money to finance a new school and
instruments in the country. They may even play shows in Armenia.

Would you go see Iommi and Gillan play in Armenia if you had the
means to do so?

–Amy Sciarretto 04.05.10

t-news/article/tony-iommi-and-ian-gillan-to-collab orate/6664042

http://www.artistdirect.com/entertainmen

Opposition Holds Procession In Yerevan

OPPOSITION HOLDS PROCESSION IN YEREVAN

news.am
April 6 2010
Armenia

At 8:30 p.m. local time, thousands of supporters of the opposition
Armenian National Congress (ANC) started a procession in the center
of Yerevan. The NEWS.am correspondent working at the scene reports
that the demonstrators demand the President’s resignation and early
elections, chanting anti-government slogans. The procession is moving
along Mashtots Avenue.

The demonstrators intend to go along Amiryan St. as far as Republic
Square. The procession will traditionally be finished on North Avenue.

The procession is led by young people with uniforms on, a symbol of
political prisoners in Armenia.

The ANC Chairman, Armenia’s first president Levon Ter-Petrosyan,
as well as the leaders of the other opposition political forces,
is at the head of the procession.