Visiting Montenegro President attends quarterfinals at Yerevan EUBC Men’s Elite European Boxing Championships

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 16:01,

YEREVAN, MAY 27, ARMENPRESS. President of Montenegro Milo Đukanović, who is on an official visit to Armenia since May 26, visited today the Karen Demirchyan Sports and Concert Complex in Yerevan to watch the quarterfinals of the EUBC Men’s Elite European Boxing Championships.

The Deputy Minister of Education, Science, Sports and Culture of Armenia Karen Giloyan, the Minister of Economy Vahan Kerobyan and the Mayor of Yerevan Hrachya Sargsyan accompanied the President.

Team Montenegro’s Cruiserweight Petar Luesevic and Lightweight Edin Alkovich had scheduled bouts during the May 27 quarterfinals and President Đukanović came to cheer for his country’s team. 

AW: “The Future of Things Passed” celebrates contemporary Armenian art

Collectors Preview of The Future of Things Passed (Photo: Atamian Hovsepian Curatorial Practice Facebook page)

NEW YORK, NY—The future of the Armenian community was on display at the opening reception of “The Future of Things Passed” exhibition in Manhattan on May 19th.

The exhibition features celebrated women artists of Armenian descent Eozen Agopian, Melissa Dadourian, Linda Ganjian and Judith Simonian. It is the first developed by the Atamian Hovsepian Curatorial Practice, co-founded by Christopher Atamian and Tamar Hovsepian. Part of the proceeds from art sales at the exhibition will be donated to the New York Armenian Students’ Association Scholarship Fund.

Eozen Agopian, Christopher Atamian, Judith Simonian and Tamar Hovsepian (Photo: Atamian Hovsepian Curatorial Practice Facebook page)

Atamian and Hovsepian launched the practice to promote representation of contemporary artists from marginalized backgrounds.

“We identified that we want to show marginalized groups—Armenian, women, LGBTQ+, people of color,” Hovsepian told the Armenian Weekly.

Hovsepian has previously worked with all of the artists featured in “The Future of Things Passed” in former galleries she has curated. She laments that while artists like Simonian, who gained renown within the downtown Los Angeles art scene of the 1980s, are internationally acclaimed, they are not as well known among Armenians. Through her joint curatorship with Atamian, she hopes to educate and cultivate a new generation of Armenian art collectors. 

“Larry Gagosian is one of the wealthiest, most famous art dealers, and he doesn’t have a single Armenian artist that he represents,” she offered as an example of the absence of support for contemporary Armenian art. “Why is there not a single art gallery in Chelsea that shows Armenian artists?”

Contemporary Armenian artists lack visibility both within the Armenian community and the broader contemporary art world, according to Hovsepian. She recalled the “Armenia!” exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, which displayed the artistic achievements of Armenian people up until the 17th century. 

“You can’t title an exhibition ‘Armenia!’ and stop and then not talk about what’s happening now. Where is the contemporary Armenian art?” Hovsepian asked. “Outside of Arshile Gorky, who do we have at the Museum of Modern Art?”

“The Future of Things Passed” explores how art can “deconstruct and uncover elements of the past through sense memory and found objects, while making lasting statements through these interpretations,” as stated in an essay presented to visitors at the gallery door. The orientation of the gallery toward the future is inspired by Armenian Futurism, defined by Sylvia Alajaji as “a realm in which re-imaginings and re-claimings of queer and otherwise marginalized Armenian pasts give way to futures of possibility and wonder.”

Atamian says that Armenian Futurism, theorized by artists like Kamee Abrahamian, Mashinka Firunts Hakopian and Hrag Vartanian, can inspire creativity and visionary thinking beyond pain and hardship. 

“How do we create an inclusive vibrant forward-thinking Armenian community that thinks about its future and being progressive and being at the cutting edge?” Atamian posed. 

Atamian, a celebrated writer, editor and translator, noted how the artwork on display repurposes memories and found objects from the past. For instance, Ganjian’s series “Map of Her Prayers, No. 1-6,” incorporates inscriptions from a prayer book her grandmother carried with her through Der Zor during the Armenian Genocide. 

Map of Her Prayers #5 by Linda Ganjian (Photo: Atamian Hovsepian Curatorial Practice Facebook page)

“How do you take something from the past and make something beautiful that’s forward thinking and that people want to collect?” Atamian said of the impact of Ganjian’s artwork.

Atamian believes that Armenians should support contemporary Armenian artwork, not only because it is beautiful, but also because it can promote Armenian political causes, such as Armenian Genocide recognition and the peaceful resolution of the Artsakh conflict, by generating an emotional investment in these issues. 

“People need to know who Armenians are,” Atamian said. “Americans and people in Europe don’t have a gut reaction to it, because they don’t know about it. If you have a piece of art or a book that is Armenian, you have an emotional connection rather than just a policy paper.”

K Sherbetdjian attended the opening reception and was struck by the emotional intensity of Ganjian’s artwork. 

“I’m looking at each individual component, and I’m wondering what the story is behind it and what the significance is for the artist, and then also what the significance is for me. The text that’s incorporated is in Armenian. I don’t speak Armenian. I just wonder what the passages are. It looks like there’s doorbells. I’m wondering if that is a signal to God or a signal for help. I like pieces where there’s a lot to think about,” Sherbetdjian reflected on “Map of Her Prayers.” 

As an artist, Caroline Gates recognized her own art studio within Studio Ballou, a painting of an art studio by Simonian. Gates wandered into “The Future of Things Passed” after a painting by Simonian near the door caught her eye. 

“Even in the abstraction you can hold onto something concrete. It does a really good job of taking us back through spaces that are familiar, but we could see it through every lens of the different times that we were there,” Gates said while studying Studio Ballou. “I feel very placed. I could stare at this forever.”

Studio Ballou by Judith Simonian (Photo: Atamian Hovsepian Curatorial Practice Facebook page)

Atamian and Hovsepian plan to continue curating exhibitions to place artwork by artists from marginalized backgrounds within institutions like museums and galleries. They hope Armenians will support their fellow artists by collecting contemporary art. 

“This is as beautiful as the art you find in any museum and community, so why not represent it?” Atamian posed. 

“The Future of Things Passed” will be on display until May 29, 2022 from 11 A.M.-7 P.M. on the ground floor of 138 West 25th Street, New York, NY 10001. 

Lillian Avedian is a staff writer for the Armenian Weekly. Her writing has also been published in the Los Angeles Review of Books, Hetq and the Daily Californian. She is pursuing master’s degrees in Journalism and Near Eastern Studies at New York University. A human rights journalist and feminist poet, Lillian’s first poetry collection Journey to Tatev was released with Girls on Key Press in spring of 2021.


AW: Shogher Margossian appointed assistant director of the Armenian Communities Department of the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation

The Armenian Communities Department of the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation is pleased to announce the appointment of Shogher Margossian as assistant director. Margossian has been working with the Foundation since 2018 as an external consultant.

With a master’s degree in music and culture from London, additional graduate work in Brussels and undergraduate and postgraduate degrees in English and literature from Beirut, Margossian brings interdisciplinary approaches to her work. Multilingual and multicultural, she has worked with international and Armenian organizations in art, culture, history and education, including online publishing and design. She has developed strategies and managed projects that bring new approaches to issues pertaining to contemporary experiences, and specifically, Armenian experiences.

“We are keen to have Shogher Margossian as an inherent part of our team,” said Razmik Panossian, the director of the Armenian Communities Department, adding, “her skills, knowledge and enthusiasm will strengthen our programming and reinforce our holistic approach to Armenian culture and language.”

Margossian will assume her duties on June 1, 2022.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 05/27/2022

                                        Friday, 
Armenian Defense Chief Lauds Russian Peacekeepers
Armenia - Armenian Defense Minister Suren Papikian meets with the commander of 
Russian peacekeeping forces in Nagorno-Karabakh, Major General Andrei Volkov, 
Yerevan, .
Defense Minister Suren Papikian praised Russian peacekeeping forces deployed in 
Nagorno-Karabakh when he met with their commander in Yerevan on Friday.
The Armenian Defense Ministry said Major-General Andrei Volkov briefed Papikian 
on the situation and “current developments” in the peacekeepers’ area of 
responsibility. They also discussed broader security in the region, the ministry 
said in a statement.
“The interlocutors praised the Russian Federation’s efforts to stabilize the 
military-political situation in the region as well as the course and 
effectiveness of the Russian peacekeeping mission in Artsakh (Karabakh),” read 
the statement.
Russian President Vladimir Putin and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian 
likewise noted the peacekeepers’ “decisive contribution” to the security of 
Karabakh’s population in a joint declaration released after their talks held 
outside Moscow on April 19.
The declaration followed Armenia’s criticism of the peacekeepers’ failure to 
prevent Azerbaijani troops from seizing a village in Karabakh and nearby hills 
in March. Pashinian repeatedly called on Moscow to investigate the “inactivity” 
of its troops.
The peacekeepers were also criticized for refusing to allow Armenian opposition 
parliamentarians to visit Karabakh on April 12. The Armenian Foreign Ministry 
said the ban ran counter to the terms of the Russian-brokered ceasefire that 
stopped the Armenian-Azerbaijani war in November 2020.
The Russian Foreign Ministry insisted, however, the Russian soldiers acted “in 
strict conformity” with the truce accord.
Aliyev Again Rules Out Status For Karabakh
Russia - Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev speaks after a trilateral meeting 
with Russian President Vladimir Putin and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian, Sochi, November 26, 2021.
Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev reportedly ruled out on Friday any 
negotiations with Armenia on the status of Nagorno-Karabakh.
Aliyev also said that the planned demarcation of the Armenian-Azerbaijani border 
will uphold Azerbaijani sovereignty over Karabakh.
In March this year, Azerbaijan presented Armenia with five elements which it 
wants to be at the heart of a peace treaty between the two nations. They include 
a mutual recognition of each other’s territorial integrity. Yerevan said they 
should be complemented by other issues relating to the future of status of 
Karabakh and the security of its population.
Baku effectively dismissed the Armenian counterproposals before Aliyev’s latest 
meeting with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian held in Brussels on Sunday. 
Pashinian indicated on Wednesday that the two sides continue to disagree on the 
agenda of talks on the peace treaty.
“Azerbaijan believes that the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict is resolved while 
Armenia believes that it’s not,” he told the Armenian parliament.
The Russian news agency RIA Novosti quoted Aliyev as saying that “there can be 
no talk of the status of Nagorno-Karabakh.”
“This is Azerbaijani territory and the whole world recognizes this,” he said. 
“This is why the first session of the commission on the delimitation of the 
border between Azerbaijan and Armenia is very important.”
Aliyev claimed that the demarcation process is “automatically and officially 
putting an end to the territorial claims made against Azerbaijan by revanchist, 
fascist forces in Armenia.”
Some Armenian opposition leaders have likewise said that by demarcating the 
border Yerevan will recognize Karabakh as a part of Azerbaijan. Pashinian and 
his political allies deny this, saying that Karabakh’s final status is a 
separate issue.
Armenian and Azerbaijani government delegations headed by deputy prime ministers 
of the two states held the first round of demarcation talks on Tuesday. 
Armenia’s Deputy Prime Minister Mher Grigorian said on Friday that they 
discussed “only organizational issues of further joint work.”
“In this sense, I consider the meeting totally constructive,” Grigorian told the 
TASS news agency.
He said the two sides have yet to agree on the date of their next meeting that 
will be held in Moscow.
Iran Reiterates Support For Armenia’s Territorial Integrity
        • Sargis Harutyunyan
Armenia - The Armenian flag is hoisted at a military base on the border with 
Iran, October 7, 2021.
Following further progress made towards the opening of Armenian-Azerbaijani 
transport links, a senior Iranian diplomat reaffirmed on Friday his country’s 
opposition to any exterritorial corridors that would pass through Armenia.
“All that should be done by respecting the internationally recognized borders of 
the countries,” said Abbas Badakhshan Zohouri, Iran’s ambassador to Armenia. 
“Iran will support all initiatives corresponding to international law and norms.”
Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev 
reportedly reached major understandings on the issue at their May 22 talks in 
Brussels hosted by European Council President Charles Michel. The latter said 
they agreed on “principles of border administration, security, land fees but 
also customs in the context of international transport.”
Aliyev told his Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan afterwards that he and 
Pashinian agreed to open a “Zangezur corridor” that will connect Azerbaijan to 
its Nakhichevan exclave through Armenia’s southeastern Syunik province bordering 
Iran. Armenian officials denied that, saying that Yerevan and Baku are 
discussing conventional transport links between the two South Caucasus states.
Aliyev had publicly demanded earlier that people and cargo using the corridor be 
exempt from Armenian border controls. Armenian leaders rejected his demands.
Armenia - Iranian Ambassador Abbas Badakhshan Zohouri visits a section of the 
Armenian-Azerbaijani border in Gegharkunik province, August 3, 2021.
Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi backed Yerevan’s position in January, telling 
Pashinian that Tehran supports Armenian sovereignty over all roads passing 
through Armenia. Zohouri reaffirmed that stance when he visited Syunik early 
this month.
Syunik is the only Armenian province that borders Iran. Some Iranian lawmakers 
accused Aliyev last fall of seeking to effectively strip Iran of a common border 
with Armenia.
Zohouri on Friday called for stronger economic ties between Syunik and Iran’s 
East Azerbaijan province bordering Armenia.
“It is obvious that very close cooperation between the two border provinces can 
have great advantages,” he told reporters in Yerevan.
The Iranian ambassador also emphasized Russia’s involvement in the efforts to 
open the Armenian-Azerbaijani border to trade and other cargo shipments. He 
pointed to the work of a Russian-Armenian-Azerbaijani task force dealing with 
practical modalities of the planned transport links.
Zohouri did not mention the European Union’s separate peace efforts criticized 
by Moscow.
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2022 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
 

Lawyers: Persecution of oppositionist Mikayel Badalyan ‘totally’ politically motivated

Panorama
Armenia –

The prosecution of opposition figure Mikayel Badalyan is politically motivated, his lawyers Erik Aleksanyan and Jirayr Gharagyozyan said in a joint statement on Friday. Badalyan was arrested for one month on May 24. The full statement is below.

“A motion to release Liberation Movement leader Mikayel Badalyan on bail has been filed to the Yerevan Court of General Jurisdiction.

It is known that Mikayel Badalyan, as a pro-Russian political figure, has always made efforts to ensure that public sentiments do not negatively impact Armenian-Russian relations and to further strengthen the centuries-old warm relations between the friendly states. However, his arrest shows that the Armenian authorities have deviated from the right path and have now stabbed their ally in the back.

The persecution of Mikayel Badalyan is totally politically motivated and is aimed at silencing him and stopping his pro-Russian activities.”

Karabakh MPs issues statement amid Avetik Chalabyan’s arrest

NEWS.am
Armenia –

Deputies of the Karabakh National Assembly have issued a statement in connection with the arrest of opposition politican Avetik Chalabyan.

“Expressing concern over the choice of a measure of restraint in the form of detention, knowing about the activities, professional and personal qualities of Avetik Chalabyan, we assure that his release will in no way interfere with a fair trial.

We ask you to take measures to change the decision made against Avetik Chalabyan and release the latter from custody, as well as to continue an impartial investigation in accordance with the letter of the law.”

We only note that the said statement bears the signatures of 10 deputies of the Karabakh parliament.

Criminal cases launched against two opposition MPs

NEWS.am
Armenia –

The law enforcement system of Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan has committed yet another ignorant and incomprehensible, clearly panicky actions, Artsvik Minasyan, secretary of the parliamentary faction of the Armenia opposition blo said at the French Square on Friday.

This, according to him, is about several specific incidents. Thus, a criminal case was opened against Artsvik Minasyan and MP from the opposition bloc I have the Honor Taron Markaryan.

According to Minasyan, he and Markaryan are suspected of distributing money to the participants of one of the opposition rallies.

“The criminal case was initiated on May 6 in the Armavir province. We were informed that Taron Markaryan and I allegedly handed out money to the participants of the action,” Minasyan said.

The parliamentarian assured that the case initiated against him and his colleague was fabricated.

“This is the political persecution of opponents by the current government and nothing more,” the opposition leader said.

Armoteca: HayPost launches new platform for promotion and export of Armenian goods

Public Radio of Armenia
Armenia –

Armenia’s post operator HayPost has launched the new Armoteca online platform, aimed at popularizing the best Armenian products and organizing their delivery to about 190 countries. Armenian wines, herbal teas, dried fruit, spices and other Armenian flavors and tastes — all will be available to customers.

It is possible to order the Armenian wines, sweets, honey, fruit jams, canned food both in Armenia and beyond its borders through Armoteca online platform. The scope of products will keep increasing every day.

HayPost CEO Hayk Karapetyan said: “Armoteca is a platform not only for Armenians living abroad, but also for everyone who appreciates the good wine, organic herbal teas, pure canned products from natural fruit. Thanks to Armoteca platform that we are launching, we create an opportunity for Armenian businessmen to present and sell their production all over the world, while we are going to deliver it in shortest period of time. We invite our producers of really high-quality products to present their goods on our platform.”

Within the framework of Armoteca online platform, HayPost will give the Armenian producers the possibility to ensure the availability of Armenian goods in about 190 countries.

Russian Ambassador informs Syunik Governor and Kapan Mayor about Russia`s efforts to ensure regional security

ARMINFO
Armenia –
Marianna Mkrtchyan

ArmInfo. Within the framework of the working visit of the Russian Ambassador to Armenia Sergey Kopirkin to Syunik region, the head of the diplomatic mission met  with governor of the region  Robert Ghukasyan and mayor of Kapan  Gevorg Parsyan.

According to the press service of the Russian Embassy in the Republic  of Armenia, noting the long- standing and strong ties of the  inhabitants of the region with Russia the governor of the region  presented the current socio-economic situation to the ambassador,  stressed the importance of the assistance of the Russian side in the  implementation of relevant programs, including through UN bodies, and  also expressed gratitude to Russia for its role in ensuring security  in the region.

For his part, Kopirkin emphasized the enduring relevance of  Russian-Armenian allied relations, close cooperation between  countries in a wide range of areas, as well as the centuries-old  friendship of our peoples. He noted that Russia is providing and will  continue to provide the necessary assistance to the residents of  Syunik.

Kopyrkin stressed that the Russian side is making active mediation  efforts both in resolving the situation on the Armenian-Azerbaijani  border, including delimitation, and in the process of normalizing  relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan as a whole in order to  create prerequisites for the peaceful development of the region.

Armenian, Serbian Presidents meet in frames of Davos Forum

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 17:09,

YEREVAN, MAY 25, ARMENPRESS. President of Armenia Vahagn Khachaturyan met with President of Serbia Aleksandar Vučić on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, the Presidential Office said.

The Armenian President congratulated Aleksandar Vučić on his re-election as President of Serbia, wishing him success and a productive work. Vahagn Khachaturyan said the friendly ties between the peoples of the two countries have a special warmth and mutual trust.

Both sides highlighted the consistent development and deepening of the relations in bilateral and multilateral platforms.

President Khachaturyan invited the President of Serbia to Armenia and he also received an invitation by President Vučić to visit Serbia.