ITAR-TASS, Russia Tuesday 2:19 PM GMT Russia ready to facilitate development of free economic zone between Armenia, Iran - PM EREVAN October 24 HIGHLIGHT: Russia is ready to participate in development of a free economic zone between Armenia and Iran, Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev said on Tuesday. /Update/ EREVAN, October 24. /TASS/. Russia is ready to participate in development of a free economic zone between Armenia and Iran, Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev said on Tuesday. "We have good relations with Iran, regardless of whether somebody likes it or not, therefore if our friends plan to create such a free economic zone, we are ready to take part in its development, including by inviting our Russian business there," Medvedev said. Armenia offered various format of co-investing during talks, the Russian prime minister said. "We will think of ways to implement that, probably with use of Russian development institutions, such as the Russian Direct Investment Fund and VEB," Medvedev added.
Category: 2017
Armenia Granted Asylum to 22,000 Refugees From Syria – Foreign Minister
Sputnik News Service, Russia Tuesday 4:43 PM UTC Armenia Granted Asylum to 22,000 Refugees From Syria - Foreign Minister YEREVAN, October 24 (Sputnik) - Armenia has granted asylum to more than 22,000 refugees from Syria since the beginning of the conflict in that country, Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian said Tuesday. "From Syria alone Armenia has harbored about 22.000 refugees, on per capita basis making our country the third largest recipient of Syrian refugees in Europe," Nalbandian said at the 2017 OSCE Mediterranean Conference on the refugee problems in Palermo, Italy. This has caused a number of challenges for a country with a population of just 3 million, which has already received hundreds of thousands of refugees from Azerbaijan in the recent past, the minister noted. The 110,000-strong Armenian community in Syria was considered one of the most powerful diasporas before the beginning of the conflict in the country. They mainly lived in Aleppo (60,000 people), Damascus (7,000), Latakia, Kessab and Qamishli. After the outbreak of the Syrian crisis, according to various estimates, more than 90,000 Armenians left Syria. Syria has been engulfed in civil war since 2011, with millions of people having to flee the country. According to the latest United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) data, a total of 5.16 million people left Syria, with over a million of them being hosted in Lebanon, some 600,000 in Jordan and more than three million in Turkey.
World-famous French singer Charles Aznavour to receive Wallenberg medal
The singer came to Israel as part of his world tour titled “One Night Only” and is due to perform in the Menora Mivtachim Arena in Tel Aviv on Saturday.
President Reuven Rivlin is due to meet Aznavour on Thursday and present him with the Raul Wallenberg medal in honor of the singer’s parents who hid Jews in their home during the Nazi occupation of France during WWII.
Aznavour and his sister Aida gave up their beds for the new guests and took part in what their parents were doing. While long keeping this to himself, he decided to speak about the experience of witnessing the destruction of the French-Jewish population and helping those who attempted to prevent it. A book about his and his sister’s memories by genocide researcher Prof. Yair Auron will be published in the near future.
The Aznavour family immigrated to France from Armenia, and Aznavour is active in pro-Armenian causes as well as other forms of charity. During his 70 years of performing, Aznavour sold more than a hundred million records and took part in over 80 films and television shows.
One of these movies had been the Soviet-French-Swiss production Teheran 43. Released in 1981, the film describes Nazi attempts to murder Stalin, Churchill, and Roosevelt while focusing on enduring romances between the various characters.
The theme song, Une Vie D’amour, became a hit in the USSR and is still one of the better known songs by Aznavour today.
Charles Aznavour. (photo credit:GAY FRIBS)
One of the greatest living French singers in the tradition of the chanson, Charles Aznavour, landed in Israel on Wednesday.
The singer came to Israel as part of his world tour titled “One Night Only” and is due to perform in the Menora Mivtachim Arena in Tel Aviv on Saturday.
President Reuven Rivlin is due to meet Aznavour on Thursday and present him with the Raul Wallenberg medal in honor of the singer’s parents who hid Jews in their home during the Nazi occupation of France during WWII.
Aznavour and his sister Aida gave up their beds for the new guests and took part in what their parents were doing. While long keeping this to himself, he decided to speak about the experience of witnessing the destruction of the French-Jewish population and helping those who attempted to prevent it. A book about his and his sister’s memories by genocide researcher Prof. Yair Auron will be published in the near future.
The Aznavour family immigrated to France from Armenia, and Aznavour is active in pro-Armenian causes as well as other forms of charity. During his 70 years of performing, Aznavour sold more than a hundred million records and took part in over 80 films and television shows.
One of these movies had been the Soviet-French-Swiss production Teheran 43. Released in 1981, the film describes Nazi attempts to murder Stalin, Churchill, and Roosevelt while focusing on enduring romances between the various characters.
The theme song, Une Vie D’amour, became a hit in the USSR and is still one of the better known songs by Aznavour today.
Raoul Wallenberg was a Swedish diplomat who saved tens of thousands of Jews in Nazi occupied Hungary by providing Jews with Swedish passports and housing that he officially claimed was out of the Nazi jurisdiction, as, like the Swedish embassy, it was a part of the territory of Sweden.
The chanson [from Latin, song] is an old artistic tradition in the French speaking world, the modern chanson often deals with romantic feelings, urban life, and the experience of the outsider. Other famous performers in that tradition include Édith Piaf, Georges Brassens, and Jacques Brel.
Greer Fay Cashman contributed to this article.
Music: Marcus Miller says put off his concert tour to perform in Armenia
World-famous jazz musician, two-time Grammy Award winner Marcus Miller said on Thursday, October 26 that he put off his concert tour for participating in Yerevan Jazz Fest 2017, Novosti Armenia reports.
The annual festival will be held in the Armenian capital from October 26 to November 3, with Miller’s concert slated for Thursday.
The musician said he had heard rave reviews about the Yerevan Jazz Festival before he was given the opportunity to come to Armenia and take part in it.
Miller said all his creative team has arrived in Armenia with him.
This year the festival is dedicated to the Avedis Zildjian Company, which is an American cymbal manufacturer founded in the 17th century.
Art: National Gallery to host an exhibition of Ara Shiraz works
The National Gallery of Armenia will host on November 10 an event titled “Retrospective Exhibition of Hovhannes Shiraz.” As Panorama.am leant from the National Gallery the exhibition aims to present the creative activity and the career of sculptor Shiraz- around 90 works – in all its volumetrical transformations including ornamental sculptures and graphic papers from the collections of the Gallery, the Museum of Fine Art and his family private collection.
It is noted that some of the graphic works authored by the sculptor are displayed for the first time.
Ara Shiraz was born in Yerevan in 1941. He graduated from the Yerevan Theatre and Fine Arts Institute in 1966. In 1979 Shiraz was awarded the State Award of Armenia for his ornamental sculptures decorating the facade of the Dvin Hotel in Yerevan. In 1977, he was granted the title of Meritorious Artist of Armenia. In 1987, he was elected the president of the Artists’ Union of Armenia, and a member of the Secretariat of the Artists’ Union of the U.S.S.R.
Shiraz’ most renowned works include the busts of Pablo Picasso, Yervand Kochar, Hovhannes Shiraz and Vruir Galstian.
Shiraz’s paintings and sculptures are found in many private collections throughout the world: Moscow, St. Petersburg, Tbilisi, Yerevan, Beirut, Paris, London, New York City, Los Angeles, Chicago, Detroit, Montreal, etc. Shiraz is also the author of Andranik’s statue (2002).
Art: Interest in Martiros Saryan’s art growing – director of Saryan House-Museum
Martiros Saryan House-Museum in Yerevan, Armenia hosts a conference today and tomorrow dedicated to the 50th anniversary of its activity.
The two-day conference has brought together the representatives of those museums in Armenia and Russia, which keep and display the works of Martiros Sarian, one of the greatest Armenian painters of the 20th century.
A jubilee concert is scheduled at Arno Babajanyan Concert Hall on Thursday, at 7 p.m as part of the events celebrating the 50th anniversary of the house-museum’s establishment.
Director of Martiros Saryan House-Museum, Ruzan Saryan, delivered opening remarks at the conference today, noting the Armenian artist has his own place in the world art. Interest in Martiros Saryan’s art is growing annually, as evidenced by the increased number of visitors to his house-museum.
“People from different countries pay a visit to the house-museum to see Saryan’s works in his native country for the first time. They experience a cultural shock by discovering the painter’s great creative potential,” she added.
Martiros Saryan House-Museum was founded on November 26, 1967, by the special order of the Armenian Government.
The museum building consists of a two- storey mansion where the artist lived and worked in 1932-1972 and a three-storey gallery attached to it in 1967.The author of the house’s project was Alexander Tamanian – the eminent architect of Yerevan. The museum part was designed by Mark Grigorian.
The museum was reconstructed in 2016.
Today it features four stories instead of the previous three, with the fourth-floor hall set to house events, temporary exhibitions and concerts.
Armenian artist Saro Galents passes away
Armenian artist, designer, professor, member of Artists’ Union of Armenia, Saro Galents passed away today aged 71, the union reported in a post on Facebook.
Saro Galentz was the founder-president of Galentz Cultural Foundation and professor of the Yerevan State Academy of Fine Arts.
He was born on October 15, 1946 in the family of well-known artists Haroutiun Galentz (1910-1967) and Armine Galentz (1920-2007).
In the spring of 1946, Saro’s parents, together with his elder brother Armen, moved for permanent residence from Lebanon to Armenia, their historical homeland.
He has graduated from Art Collage named after P. Terlemezian in 1965. From 1965 to 1970, he studied painting and textile design at Yerevan Art and Theater Institute, where he was actively involved in the activities of theatrical department, taking part in the design of student productions.
Since the beginning of 1970, Saro Galentz lived and worked in Moscow for about 20 years. In Moscow, he had been actively involved in the artistic environment of the Soviet metropolis. Besides painting, he had the opportunity to realize his interests in monumental art and design. From 1973 to 1987, art works of Saro Galentz participated in series of exhibitions – “Armenian Art” in Finland, Bulgaria, India, Sri Lanka, Syria, and Canada. In 1977, the young artist was awarded gold medal for the composition “Morning in Vilnius” at the All-Union symposium-exhibition in Vilnius (Lithuania).
In the late 1980s, when the movement for independence started in Armenia, Saro returned to Yerevan. He was invited to teach at the Yerevan State Academy of Fine Arts. Since 1992, he participated in the annual exhibitions of the Union of Artists of Armenia. In the 90s he carried out a number of trips to Europe and Asia, opened solo exhibitions in Paris (1998) and Nicosia (1996).
To preserve the heritage of the great artist, Saro Galentz together with his mother and brother decided to establish Haroutiun Galentz Cultural Foundation and Museum. The family has invested efforts and financial resources to replenish Galentz collection and build the museum.
In 2006 he was awarded Movses Khorenatsi medal for outstanding creative achievements in the areas of Armenian culture, art, literature, education and humanities.
Film: Andy Serkis interview: How a colleague’s family history led to his directorial debut
The actor who is known for his motion caption performances in ‘King Kong’ and ‘Planet of the Apes’ has turned his attention to directing a period drama about a man paralysed by polio in ‘Breathe’
Chess: Armenia’s Arman Mikayelyan among the leaders at Chigorin Memorial
The Chigorin Memorial is underway in St. Petersburg, Russia, where the games of the round 5 were played on Thursday. 14 players with 14 points lead the table with representative of Armenia GM Arman Mikayelyan among them.