Widow of Armenian soldier who died in April 2016 war returns to military service

News.am, Armenia
Feb 3 2019
Widow of Armenian soldier who died in April 2016 war returns to military service (PHOTOS) Widow of Armenian soldier who died in April 2016 war returns to military service (PHOTOS)

11:25, 03.02.2019
                  

Anush Hyusnunts, the wife of Armenian contract soldier Gegham Mkrtchyan who fell during the four-day war which Azerbaijan had unleashed against the Republic of Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh Republic/NKR) in April 2016, has recently returned to the army.

Hyusnunts, who had given birth to a daughter seven months after her husband’s death, went back to military service at a unit in Artsakh’s capital city of Stepanakert.

“After Gegham’s death, it’s psychologically hard to return to army again; my daughter is two years old, already,” she told Armenian News-NEWS.am. “They have allocated me an apartment in Stepanakert; that’s why I’m working at the military unit right here.”

Anush and Gegham had met during military service, and they were serving together at the military unit in Martakert town.

But Gegham had fallen six months after their marriage, and not knowing that her wife was pregnant. Their daughter was born in November 2016.

“There are many hardships as a widow,” Anush Hyusnunts said. “But now I’m just thinking about caring for and raising my daughter.”

Gegham Mkrtchyan was posthumously awarded several medals by the NKR and Armenia.

Brussels: Asylum and Immigration – Khmoyan family not sent back to Armenia

The Brussels Times, Belgium
Feb 3 2019


Asylum and Immigration – Khmoyan family not sent back to Armenia 

           Sunday, 02:20  

The Khmoyan family was not deported to Armenia on Saturday after all.

“The flight has been cancelled,” the family’s lawyer Bruno Soenen announced on Friday evening. He didn’t reveal why the flight had been cancelled. 

The family, two parents and two children aged eight and two, arrived in Belgium in 2009. An asylum request they submitted was refused and the family went into hiding after a failed deportation attempt in 2014. 

The family was found in Borgerhout (Antwerp) on the 8th of January and they were taken to the 127bis detention centre at Steenokkerzeel. 

A child psychiatrist diagnosed “early signs of an identity crisis and narcissism, plus signs of insecurity” in the oldest daughter Anna-Maria. These problems will get worse and worse as the family spends more time in detention.  

On Thursday, their lawyer was told they would be deported on Saturday. Mr Soenen said that news put the young girl under yet more stress. 

Now that the flight has been cancelled, the family will be moved to an open centre on Monday. 

Sarah Johansson 
The Brussels Times

Roskomnadzor [Media watchdog] blocks Russian-language version of an Armenian Internet edition

Kavkazsky Uzel , Russia
Feb 2 2019
Roskomnadzor blocks Russian-language version of an Armenian Internet edition
by Tigran Petrosyan
[Armenian News note: the below is translated from Russian]

The [Armenian] Aravot.ru.am website has been blocked in Russia for refusing to remove data about a businessman of Armenian descent from Sochi from the material about the cooperation of the Armenian Foreign Ministry with crime bosses, the editorial board of the edition reported.

Lawyers of the businessman from Sochi were the first to address the editorial board of Aravot with grievances. They were dissatisfied with the fact that the website reprinted materials about his detention in the Czech Republic. "They demanded that we deny the publication. For our part, we pointed to the fact that this was not our author's publication. However, no reaction followed. On 24 January, [Russian media watchdog] Roskomnadzor sent us a letter, which said that on 17 January, Tagansky Court of Moscow found a violation of law on personal data and warned that if the violation was not eliminated within one working day, the website would be blocked on Russian territory within three days," the editor-in-chief of the Internet edition, Anna Israyelyan, said.

Roskomnadzor's demand was satisfied, but on 29 January, the editorial board received a letter from the agency with a new demand. "They wanted us to remove personal data from another publication about a briefing of Shavarsh Kocharyan (deputy Armenian foreign minister – remark by Kavkazsky Uzel), who, in particular, commented on the interview (of the businessman), in which the businessman said that he was an adviser to the head of the Armenian Foreign Ministry, travelled in a car with a diplomatic number, and had an Armenian diplomatic passport," Israyelyan said.

In this publication, Shavarsh Kocharyan explained that the businessman from Sochi was a freelance co-operator of the Armenian Foreign Ministry. "There is a large Armenian community in Sochi and there are problems linked to the community. He often resolves problems successfully. As regards his being an adviser, he is no longer an adviser," Kocharyan said. It was noted in the material that Kocharyan refused to answer a question as to how often the foreign agency resorted to assistance from local crime bosses of Armenian origin to settle problems in specific countries. "Stop please," the report quoted the words by the deputy Armenian foreign minister,

Aravot refused to edit Kocharyan's words about the businessman from Sochi. "The court did not even discuss this issue. This is going to happen on 26 February. It follows that one district court in Moscow can take measures to secure a claim and prohibit the coverage of an interview of a deputy Armenian foreign minister without our involvement," the editor-in-chief said, drawing a conclusion in an article published on the Aravot website on 1 February.

The Roskomnadzor website confirmed that Tagansky Court of Moscow made the decision to restrict access to Aravot.am on 17 January.

Kavkazsky Uzel wrote earlier that on 26 December 2018, the court found the editor of BlogSochi, Alexander Valov, guilty of extorting money from a member of the State Duma and sentenced him to six years in a standard regime penal colony and a fine of R700,000 [about 10,700 dollars]. This case is a signal for the media, the journalist trade union said. The punishment the court has issued is extremely cruel. This is pressure on freedom of speech, Nadezhda Azhgikhina, vice president of the European Federation of Journalists, said.

Armenia buys four of Russia’s newest fighter jets

Defence Monitor Worldwide
February 2, 2019 Saturday
Armenia buys four of Russia's newest fighter jets
 
 
Yerevan and Moscow have signed a contract for the purchase of four Su-30SM multi-role fighters the Armenian Armed Forces will receive the aircraft in 2020.
 
The Armenian Armed Forces will receive new aircraft rather than second-hand aircraft for the first time in many years.
 
Russia sold the fighters on the cheap: in addition to the fact that Russia recently gave Armenia a loan of $100 million, Armenia received the airplanes at domestic Russian prices, rather than at export prices.
 
The concessions to Armenia were made given it is a member of the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO), acting under the auspices of Russia:
 
Despite the fact that the contract is commercial and the purchase is carried out at the expense of credit funds issued by [Russia], the cost of each [aircraft] for the Armenian air force will be as much as they cost for the armed forces of the Russian Federation. To Russia, such conditions look like a real gift.
 
In fact, this is the first contract concluded with the Armenian Defense Ministry under Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan. It was important for us to confirm the strength of our position with our ally in the CSTO, Kommersant reported, citing a top figure of the Russian aviation industry.
 
The Armenian Ministry of Defence has not specified the cost of the deal.
 
Back in 2012, Moscow and Yerevan signed a contract, according to which Armenia was to receive at least 12 fighters. However, that agreement never entered into force due to financial problems in Armenia.
 
Why does Armenia need Su-30s?
 
Military observer Leonid Nersisyan notes that this will be the first appearance of military aircraft in Armenia.
 
Warplanes become more and more outdated every year. In this light, it would be very convenient and logical to replace the existing machines with these Su-30SMs The shock capabilities of the Su-30SM, including the use of Kh-58E anti-radar missiles, make it possible to effectively fight against the air defense of Azerbaijan, especially since the Armenian arsenal also has the Iskander missile system, which can also be used for these tasks.
 
On the whole, the appearance of the Su-30SM fighters in service with the Armenian armed forces will markedly increase the offensive capabilities as well as jeopardize Azerbaijans strategic oil and gas infrastructure. 2019 Global Data Point.

Film: 100 years of upheaval and resilience through the eyes of Syrian artists

The National, UAE
February 2, 2019 Saturday
100 years of upheaval and resilience through the eyes of Syrian artists
 
by  India Stoughton
  
Nigol Bezjian explores loss and art in his new film 'Broken Dinners, Postponed Kisses'
 
In 'Broken Dinners, Postponed Kisses', Abo Gabi plays snippets of songs he has recorded since moving to France.
 
 
Abo Gabi looks away from the camera as he tells the story of how he came to be a refugee living in Nantes, France. His great-grandparents were Egyptian, he explains, but they moved to Palestine in the early 20th century, settled there and had children. Then came 1948 and the Naqba. They fled ­Palestine, travelling not back to Egypt but with the Palestinian community to which they now belonged.
 
They found a new home in Syria, in the Yarmouk refugee camp near Damascus, where Gabi was born. But the conflict in Syria precipitated a third wave of migration and Gabi was displaced twice more, moving first to Lebanon and then to France.
 
The musician and singer's identity is complicated. He is Egyptian, Palestinian, ­Syrian. Soon, perhaps, he will be French. His personal and family history is one that is familiar to thousands of people across the Middle East. It is one of constant upheaval, of uprooting and adapting, of settling and surviving, of adopting new identities while retaining old memories.
 
A story that needs to be told
 
The events he describes form part of a new feature-length documentary, Broken Dinners, Postponed Kisses, directed by Aleppo-born Armenian filmmaker Nigol Bezjian. It tells the stories of six Syrian artists, all from different areas and backgrounds and all working in different media. Together, they convey the pain of loss, in many forms, and the strength that allows people to rebuild even in the most difficult of circumstances. Bezjian says he wanted to make a film that would stand the test of time.
 
"It's a film you can watch 10 years from now – it has nothing to do with the war that's going on today," he says. "The inspiration and the initiative came from that, but in the film it's a period of 100 years that
 
I cover … it's about this situation of constant upheavals and wars in the region since forever, and how that is impacting our lives, our characters, our way of seeing the world, out art, our culture."
 
Broken Dinners, Postponed Kisses, is structured as a series of individual vignettes based on interviews with the subjects. Each story builds on the one before it, creating a layered, overarching narrative exploring loss, adaptation and the expressive power of art.
 
Vartan Meguerditchian, an Armenian actor living in Beirut, is the first to appear in the film, playing the role of Bezjian, who also lives in the Lebanese capital. This opening sequence blends fact and fiction, as Meguerditchian shares the story of the filmmaker's grandparents who survived the Armenian Genocide, eventually settling in Aleppo.
 
Actor Vartan Meguerditchian in the role of the filmmaker. Courtesy Nigol Bezjian
Focusing on the diversity of Syrian society
 
The rest of the film is a straight documentary, featuring interviews with Gabi; Ayham Majid Agha, a playwright and actor living in Berlin; Yara Al Hasbani, a dancer in Paris; Diala Brisli, a painter and illustrator in Provence; and Ammar Abd Rabbo, a photographer in Beirut.
 
The subjects describe their experiences of exile, examining how it has affected their work as artists. Bezjian spent a long time searching for the right people to interview, choosing a selection he felt represented the diversity of Syrian society.
 
"I wanted to have Syrians with different accents, different languages, different backgrounds, because this is Syria," he says. "We see how what they go through becomes part of their life, character, personality and way of thinking, and then, as creative people, how they process that and how that experience shows in their work."
 
Agha's interview is interspersed with scenes from a play he wrote and staged in Berlin about his journey from Syria and the struggle to adjust to a new culture. Gabi plays snippets of his music, explaining that since arriving in France he has found himself incapable of writing anything but sad songs.
 
'I don't want to have any images of war'
 
The two women in the film, Al Hasbani and Brisli, both tell very personal stories of loss. Al Hasbani recalls her father, who supported her passion for dance, but lost his life during the conflict in Syria. Her moving memories are intercut with beautifully shot footage of her dancing in silence on the steps and in the alleyways of Paris, seeking solace in her art.
 
Brisli describes how, having grown up in Kuwait where her father had work, she felt like an outsider when she first moved to Damascus, repeating a familiar motif of cross-cultural ties and nomadic lives. She shares moving scenes from an animation she has made, based on the story of her brother, who was conscripted to fight in the Syrian army.
 
Ayham Majid Agha takes a call about a role in Berlin, where he works as an actor and playwright. Courtesy Nigol Bezjian
 
"I decided that I don't want to have any images of war, which we have seen exhaustively – only if it's part of their work," says Bezjian. "The simple way to explain art, for me, is that when you take reality and elevate it to something else, it becomes art."
 
One of the main themes of the film is the power of memory. "As immigrants, refugees, people removed from your place, memory becomes an extremely important part of your mind and it grows," explains Bezjian. "The filmmaker talks about how, as he is growing older, the childhood memories are growing bigger than him, as if they're going to swallow him. But that memory is far removed from reality, in a way, because it takes on a life of its own."
 
'The idea is loss'
 
Bookending the film are the stories of Bezjian himself, as told by Meguerditchian, and Abd Rabbo, who describes his nomadic childhood, growing up first in Syria, then Libya, then Lebanon, each time displaced by political problems or conflict. He is filmed wandering the beautiful rooms of the Sursock Museum in Beirut, before retreating to the library to unwrap the first copy of a book featuring photographs he took of the conflict in Aleppo.
 
Filmmaker Nigol Bezjian. Courtesy Nigol Bezjian
 
"The idea is loss," says Bezjian. "If you look at the first character, the filmmaker, it's loss of childhood innocence … then you have Ayham, who talks about the loss of friends, lovers and what he had in Deir Ezzor, where he left his family behind. Then you come to Gabi and you see how as Palestinians they lost their land and they went to Syria. Then it becomes more personal with Diala and Yara, and then you come to Ammar and the loss of his mother … I thought they were enough to give as examples [and show] how, despite that, they keep living."
 
Bezjian funded the film himself and consequently worked on a shoestring budget. Long periods passed between the filming of each segment, which helps to lend each narrative a distinct atmosphere and sense of place. Scenes of grey skies and snow in Berlin, where Agha is staging his play, give way to summer heat and colourful blossoms in Provence, where Brisli paints barefoot in a lush garden.
 
Further underlining the themes of displacement and constant motion are scenes that show each character in transit, moving through buildings and crossing streets, sitting in trains or on buses as scenery flashes by.
 
_
 
The last scene of the film is the one Bezjian shot first: it shows pages of Abd Rabbo's book flying off the printing press to land in a neat pile. A photograph of two children on a bombed and deserted street proliferates second by second, multiplying this single moment, frozen forever in time. This closing sequence is a metaphor for many of the film's themes, echoing its power to fix stories into a lasting form and the uncertain futures of his subjects, whose lives, and therefore narratives, are unfinished.
 
"The film should not be finished when the lights come on in the cinema," Bezjian says. "It should be finished in the minds of the audience, who take it with them."

Music: Stars flock to funeral of legendary film composer Legrand

AFP – RELAXNEWS (English International Version)
February 2, 2019 Saturday
Stars flock to funeral of legendary film composer Legrand
 
 
The legendary French film composer Michel Legrand was laid to rest Friday after a final standing ovation in a Paris theatre decorated to look like one of his favourite movies.
 
The musician who scored such French screen classics as "The Umbrellas of Cherbourg" and "The Young Ladies of Rochefort" — both starring Catherine Deneuve and directed by Jacques Demy — died on Saturday aged 86.
 
Legrand won three Oscars for his work in Hollywood, most famously for writing "The Windmills of Your Mind" for "The Thomas Crown Affair" in 1969, as well as the music for Barbra Streisand's "Yentl" (1984) and the "Summer of '42" (1972).
 
A magic forest reminiscent of another Demy film, "Donkey Skin" — which also starred Deneuve — was created inside the Marigny theatre in Paris where his coffin was taken after a funeral service at the Alexander Nevsky Russian Orthodox cathedral.
 
Clearly on the verge of tears, Demy's widow, the legendary French director Agnes Vardy, led the moving tributes to Legrand at the theatre.
 
After the audience had risen to give him one last standing ovation, she said, "Having to talk next to Michel's coffin is a little difficult. The last time we saw each other we held each other's hands and I felt transported back to our years together with Jacques Demy."
 
– Musical genius –
 
The cream of the French music and showbiz worlds had earlier crowded into the church, with Deneuve recalling the genius and energy of the man, who was planning a concert tour for April when he died suddenly.
 
"We could feel the emotion that was coming straight from the music when we were recording 'The Umbrellas of Cherbourg'," she told French television on Thursday.
 
"I can still remember entire passages of the lyrics" from the hugely influential musical, in which every line was sung.
 
Brigitte Macron, the wife of French President Emmanuel Macron, was among the mourners, with Legrand taken from the theatre for burial at the Pere Lachaise cemetery in the east of the city.
 
Paris mayor Anne Hidalgo had a giant screen set up outside the city's town hall to show the highlights of Legrand's seven-decade career.
 
A musical prodigy, Legrand worked with the greats of jazz and popular music on both sides of the Atlantic from Miles Davis, Ray Charles and Frank Sinatra to Charles Trenet and Edith Piaf.
 
Born into a musical family near Paris, he started out by playing songs on the piano he had heard on the radio.
 
His father Raymond Legrand was a composer, and although he left the family home when his son was only three, he later helped him launch his career.
 
His mother, of Armenian origin, enrolled him at the Paris Conservatory at the age of 10. He was to spend seven years there, before graduating with top honours in 1949.

Art: Armenia! The new modern art hub of the Caucasus?

Asia Times, Hong Kong
Feb 3 2019
Yerevan, February 3, 2019 12:03 PM (UTC+8)

On a sunny, late October day, I strayed into a crumbling 19th century building in the centre of Armenia’s capital, Yerevan, attracted by a large poster for an exhibition called ‘This is You’.

Intrigued by the image and an opportunity to get inside one of the city’s few remaining abodes from the Czarist era, I walked through a crumbling corridor into a typical, pre-Soviet Yerevan backyard – the kind that is now as rare as hen’s teeth in a city totally transformed by the oligarchic building boom in the years since Armenia’s independence from the USSR in 1991. Sitting around the wooden porch, a group of alternative looking twenty-somethings were having drinks and a hearty laugh, which stopped for a moment when they saw me walk in.

When I asked to see the exhibition, a young man stepped up to show me around his studio, which also served as a living space.

The ramshackle interior, containing a mix of neo-expressionist paintings, vaguely surrealist sculptures, vintage pottery and kitschy Soviet memorabilia was more memorable than much of the young artist’s experiments with the entire backlog of modernist art. But when I looked up at the ceiling I gasped at the sight of a stunning round chandelier made out of recycled materials.

It was  executed overnight on a whim, my host explained, because he liked to re-use things that people found useless. It was the kind of object one would normally find in an upscale Berlin gallery made by some fashionable artist investigating the possibilities of politically-engaged design. When I asked how much he’d want for a copy, the young man chuckled.

Why don’t you come over for a drink one night and we can make one together,” he said, as if the idea of money was tantamount to an insult. I hadn’t even managed to tell him my name or that I was a curator.

Appreciation goes a long way in the country, especially when it is directed at young artists trying to do what they love in a country with next to no institutional infrastructure, public interest, or commercial enterprises for contemporary art. Despite these conditions, a large number of Armenian youth have in recent years worked to make a space for themselves in this sphere, making the country an untapped reserve for serious collectors. 

The state of contemporary art in Armenia offers a model that is puzzlingly outside of the normative market behavior that has defined the global tendencies in this field since the late 1980s. 

It was not that long ago that contemporary art from the countries of the ex-Soviet block was given enthusiastic international exposure in Euro-American arenas. After a flood of exhibitions in the 1990s, which rushed to expose the Western public to the surprises, provocations and guilty delights of the dissident and socialist-realist art from the now collapsed USSR, curiosity has turned into something resembling polite interest. To risk a blunt generalization, it could be said that the new art produced in these ex-socialist states has lately been subsumed into the network of international grant-based projects, various second-tier biennials, or left to answer to the demands of local socio-political contexts.   

In the smallest then-Soviet republic, Armenia, contemporary art travelled a checkered path. Despite its size, the country was renowned in the USSR for the quality and the comparable ‘freedom’ of its artistic production. This was compounded by a rich heritage of medieval art, (currently on display at the New York Metropolitan Museum’s blockbuster exhibition ‘Armenia!’) and a roster of world-famous Armenians such as Ivan Aivazovski, Martiros Saryan, Arshile Gorky, Ara Güler, Yousuf Karsh and Sergei Paradjanov, who have been a source of pride and inspiration even as they consistently overshadowed the work of living artists.

‘Untitled’ from the series ‘Secret Equations’ by Mika Vatinyan, 2018. Oil on canvas. Courtesy of the artist.

Art made by Armenians has evolved across fragmented communities dispersed from India to the United States and has resisted any kind of paradigmatic summation.

Little wonder then, that the international market – eager as it is now to mine the Middle Eastern deposits of modern and contemporary art – has not quite figured out what to make of and how to package ‘Armenian’ art.

It is not uncommon to see doyens such as Gevorg Bashinjaghyan, Martiros Saryan, Yervand Kochar or Minas Avetisyan categorized as ‘Russian’, ‘School of Paris’ or ‘Oriental’ artists at auction sales. Working artists rarely make the cut, unless they are based in the Diaspora. Recent events like Armenia’s 2015 win of the Golden Lion prize at the Venice Art Biennial or the hosting of the 2017 Standart Triennial of Contemporary Art have not had a tangible impact on the fortunes of local artists. 

Since the late 1990s, many Armenian artists were forced to seek their fortunes elsewhere and nearly all commercial galleries specializing in contemporary art have closed their doors. At the moment of writing, the country has no public collections or archives of contemporary art. The Yerevan Museum of Modern Art, for example, has no holdings of photography, video, new media or any other form of non-traditional art. There are no state or private institutions that teach contemporary art practice, no auction houses that sell it, no collectors to buy it or periodicals that write about it.

Were it not for the ongoing activities of the Armenian Center for Experimental Art, the occasional exhibitions of current art held at the upscale Cafesjian Center for the Arts or smaller outfits like the Dalan Gallery, along with projects initiated by independent curators and a few artist-run spaces, contemporary art would have remained entirely invisible in the otherwise hyper-active cultural life of Armenia’s capital.

Colombian artist Fernando Botero’s sculpture ‘Woman Smoking a Cigarette’ on display outside Cafesjian Center for the Arts in Yerevan. Photo: Walter Bibikow / Hemis

Against this background, the consistent pulse of contemporary art in Armenia begets standard explanations. What exactly propels it and who is it for? Enthusiasm, passion and political commitment are clearly at work here, but they can only go so far without some prospect of financial sustainability or, at the very least, social and institutional acknowledgement.

Young artists appear and disappear quite unexpectedly, emerging from intimate circles and self-mobilized clusters. They show their works through thematic exhibitions organized by an equally young generation of curators, many of whom, it should be said, are women. The curator has emerged in Armenia in the past two decades as a key driving force for both the production and presentation of new art. The shows they organize in and amongst their milieu can be wildly uneven in quality, yet they play an important role in providing the opportunity for fresh talent to manifest itself.

These efforts rarely attract the wider public and remain something of an acquired taste in the context of everyday Armenian culture. From my ongoing observations over the past decade, an exhibition of contemporary art will last, with few exceptions, for a maximum of two weeks and be seen by less than three or four hundred people.

Sales from these exhibitions are sporadic and prices can vary to such a degree that the only determinant may actually be the self-esteem of the artist.

Once I offered to close a bar bill (approximately $30) for an established artist friend, in exchange for two provocative drawings from a series I enormously admired. It was a joke, but he was only too happy to hand me over the pieces the next morning. In comparison, the 5,000 euros asked for a neo-avant-garde collage by one of the rising stars of Armenian art, Karen Ohanyan may seem astronomical, but is considerably more modest when taken in the context of international blue-chip art stamped for investment. As a rule of thumb, a buyer could walk away with a piece of contemporary art she admires – in all but the most monumental or costly media such as bronze sculptures – for under $5,000, which is significantly more than the average annual salary in the country.

A 2005 oil on canvas work by Armenian contemporary artist Karen Ohanyan, from the series Post-Utopias. His works can fetch 5,000€. Image courtesy of the artist.

As a rule of thumb, a buyer could walk away with a piece of contemporary art she admires – in all but the most monumental or costly media such as bronze sculptures – for under $5,000.

There are exceptions, of course.

The internationally renowned conceptual and performance artist Grigor Khachatryan, for example, demands prices that are more attuned to the undisclosed ‘bottom lines’ of high-end galleries in London and New York. This is more of an ideological, rather than a commercial stance by an artist who justly feels that his work is on par with his better-known contemporaries and should be valued accordingly.

But such valor is rare in an environment where sales of art by emerging and experimental artists are considered something of a privilege or happenstance. When I recently rushed to purchase a surrealist ceramic sculpture by the supremely talented Anush Ghukasyan, I felt compelled to apologize over and over again for being unable to offer more than her (ludicrously low) asking price. She was bemused to say the least.

Ceramic sculptures by Anush Ghukasyan from her solo show ‘111’ held in 2018 at Dalan Art Gallery, Yerevan. Photo: Vigen Galstyan

Though there are a number of dealers in Yerevan – the Antikyan and Arame Galleries in particular – which represent established contemporary artists of the older generation, none are exclusive and their transactions are rarely publicized. Often, works can be acquired at lower prices directly from the studios, provided that the buyer never declares what they paid for the work.

Potential sales generally depend on the largely profane tastes of the local elites or the nationalist pangs of diasporan collectors, what actually gets sold is rarely the good stuff.

David Kochunts, a young artist who paints explicit satires on Armenian sexual mores in a style redolent of grotesque comic-book illustrations, told me that his oligarchic customers only commission him to paint copies of 17th century Dutch landscapes or still-life and would be horrified to learn what his actual work looked like.

Potential sales generally depend on the largely profane tastes of the local elites or the nationalist pangs of diasporan collectors, what actually gets sold is rarely the good stuff.

Other artists work under similar situations, often churning out large, sleekly post-modernist or abstract canvases as a way of getting product ‘on the walls’. Their more unconventional oeuvre (such as installations or video) is reserved strictly for exhibitions and survives, in most cases, in photographic documentation only.

This situation will not be changed locally, but would require interest from major contemporary art museums, powerhouse auction houses, or ‘star’ private collectors.

In contrast, Armenia’s neighbors Georgia and Iran have managed to develop local contemporary art markets that primarily target buyers at home while consistently attracting foreign interest through the confluence of private capital and state-backed cultural policy.

The international focus particularly applies to another neighboring state, Azerbaijan, which has invested millions of dollars in promoting home-grown contemporary art across the world in an attempt to craft an image of a culturally-emancipated and progressive modern nation.

Such tactics are unheard of in post-Soviet Armenia, which has seen an alarming dwindling of state interest in arts and education gradually replaced by an emphasis on liberalizing the economy and the development of information technologies. Despite the May 2018 democratic revolution and the subsequent take-over of power by prime minister Nikol Pashinyan’s centrist My Step Alliance, this trajectory has not only remained consistent, but has been taken to quite extreme levels. Soon after winning the parliamentary elections in December, My Step representatives announced their highly controversial plans to close the Ministry of Culture and amalgamate its operations into a mega-ministry, which would oversee science, education, culture and sports.

While some have welcomed the decision as a means of finally ‘liberating’ the arts from a rotten bureaucratic left-over of the Soviet era, most see the Ministry’s closure as a sign of the new government’s utter indifference towards artists (contemporary or otherwise) and intellectual production. While the government has more pressing issues to handle – from military security to the derelict public transportation system – this denuding of culture from internal and foreign agendas is a marker of a new, highly ambivalent horizon that does not promise much to those young artists eager to fulfill their artistic ambitions. For a nation so eager to play the ‘cultural heritage’ card when it comes to proclaiming its relevance to and place in the world, this is strange to say the least.

All these circumstances have precluded any real possibility of establishing a stable industry of contemporary art in Armenia. But is this necessarily a bad thing?

Nazareth Karoyan, one of the founders of modern curatorial practice in Armenia thinks that the commodification of contemporary art is quite an old approach as today, the art world is no longer driven by the market alone.

“There are other engines at work now that promote production, like community-based activities, social and corporate responsibility and so on,” Karoyan said. 

Indeed, the communal aspect is a strong factor in defining the creative strategies of Armenian artists. Here, art is often a byproduct of long-lasting friendships, romantic relationships, activism, protests, day-long drinking and partying sessions, ongoing debates and fights. It is a deeply personal activity that is intrinsically tied with the need to affirm an experience, to assert a certain position in relation to the world at large. In other words, the making of art in Armenia is inseparable from the grind of everyday existence.

Most local practitioners between the ages of 20 and 50 support themselves through other means.

Hayk Paronyan, for instance, is a self-taught artist who produced his video works while working in the army. His wife, Sona Abargyan – the author of now-iconic, witty feminist paintings – made bags and other ‘trinkets’ as a side business prior to landing a teaching job at the well-funded TUMO Center for Creative Technologies. Mika Vatinyan, whose new series of conceptual paintings has just been exhibited at the Cafesjian Centre is an actor in TV crime series and the theatre. Louisine Talalyan, a key figure in local queer-art movement, taught art in a corrective facility for women. Others make money as designers, software programmers, commercial photographers, waiters, and even construction workers.

This is nothing particularly out of the ordinary. But for many of these artists, their creative practice rarely correlates with the notion of vending. Instead, it comes out of a certain exigency to resist the pressures of capitalism and the increasing alienation of our technologically-powered lifestyles. Which means that, at a certain level, Armenia has inadvertently become an artistic wilderness, where tribe-like groups of practitioners make and break their own rules, largely untouched by the pre-programmed global market mechanisms, burdensome institutional etiquettes and the demands of the mass media.

Yerevan has seen an influx of young art-makers from Iran and the Armenian Diaspora, who are attracted by the closely-knit underground scene and the more affordable living costs. 

This is not a case of disengagement from the larger developments in the world. On the contrary. Recent initiatives such as the Armenia Art Fair, the 2018 International Contemporary Art Exhibition, the International Print Biennale and an assortment of other events, all testify to the healthy interest in cross-cultural exchange and dialogue. Yerevan has also seen an influx of young art-makers from Iran and the Armenian Diaspora, who are attracted by the closely-knit underground scene and the more affordable living costs. 

As the history of contemporary Armenian art becomes more institutionalized with publications like Angela Harutyunyan’s The Political Aesthetics of the Armenian Avant-Garde, the prospect of renewed attention from major institutions and the global art market appears to be just a matter of time. This will certainly be helped by the 2018 ‘Velvet Revolution’, which has generated a benevolent focus on the country. It remains to be seen whether local artists and other players from the contemporary art field will take this opportunity to finally put Armenia on the map.

Armenia’s opposition leader Nikol Pashinyan waves to supporters at a rally in Yerevan on April 30, during the 2018 ‘Velvet Revolution’.  Photo: Vano Shlamov / AFP

Armenia has the potential to take its place in the global art market, industry professionals believe.

It’s a cliché, but we are at an interesting geographical crossroads, said Anna Gargarian, the director of nomadic outfit HAYP Pop Up Gallery in a recent interview.

She cautioned, however, that before you can nurture a market you have to create a culture … a culture of awareness, appreciation, interest, and a critical mass in the contemporary arts. This will happen through education and a foundational contemporary cultural institution.

Gargarian is putting her words into practice with plans to open a commercial gallery for contemporary Armenian art in Yerevan this year. Her task will be helped by the new online journal Critical Review – a desperately-needed scholarly resource on current art in Armenia.

But as it stands, a visiting collector or curator will not find a handy guide-book in some posh restaurant or a bookstore telling them which hot artists or ground-breaking exhibitions to look out for.

Collectors and curators will not find a handy guide-book in some posh restaurant or a bookstore telling them which hot artists or ground-breaking exhibitions to look out for in Armenia. 

Going to a late-night bar in the center of Yerevan or tracking people on social networks will be more productive. You might get in with the rowdy crowds at Studio 20 or the youngsters at the bohemian hang-out Ilik, which could lead to invitations to a traditional barbecue at the Institute of Contemporary Art, an electrifying techno-party at the Rambalkoshe co-working hub or the Embassy Club. You may find yourself at artists’ studios in the more remote corners of the country like Sisian and Gyumri, or a sit-in at a government building.

Whichever way one tunes in to the contemporary art scene in Armenia, it ultimately becomes an odyssey of personal discovery and relationship-building with a strong dose of emotional involvement.

Exploring this world as a collector, critic or simply an art lover will depend entirely on one’s own worldview, intellectual baggage and expectations from art. And it is advisable to leave aside the dictates that have demarcated so much of what is considered ‘worthy’ in contemporary art if one is to find the rewarding delights of the unexpectedly varied, uneven and even polarizing extremes of contemporary Armenian art.

Vigen Galstyan (PhD) is a curator, artist and art historian based in Yerevan and Sydney. He is the director of Lusadaran Armenian Photography Foundation.

http://www.atimes.com/article/armenia-the-new-modern-art-hub-of-the-caucasus/



Sports: Armenia’s Bachkov achieves win for Team Europe

News.am, Armenia
Feb 3 2019

2017 European champion and world championship bronze medalist Hovhannes Bachkov (Armenia) competed in the bouts between the European and Asian boxing champions, in the Czech capital city of Prague, the Boxing Federation of Armenia press service informed.

Bachkov (64 kg), who fought for Team Europe, defeated 2017 Asian championship silver medalist Baatarsükhiin Chinzorig (Mongolia) with a huge advantage, and Team Europe won by a score of 4-3.

Sports: Premier League: Man City, Arsenal starting XIs announced

News.am, Armenia
Feb 3 2019

The starters have been announced for Sunday’s English Premier League match between Manchester City and Arsenal.

But Armenian national squad captain and midfielder Henrikh Mkhitaryan, who has recovered from injury, is not on the Arsenal squad for this game.

Mkhitaryan, who turned 30 years old on January 21, has been out of action since December 19, 2018 when he had suffered a foot injury during Arsenal’s English Football League (EFL) Cup quarterfinal clash against Tottenham Hotspur.

As reported earlier, the Armenia international participated in the Gunners’ prematch training session, ahead of their clash against Man City.

The Manchester City vs. Arsenal match is slated for kickoff at 8:30pm Armenia time.

Verelq: Լևոն Մարտիրոսյանը հետ է կանչվել Կանադայում ՀՀ դեսպանի պաշտոնից

  • 01.02.2019
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Կանադայում Հայաստանի Հանրապետության արտակարգ և լիազոր դեսպան Լևոն Մարտիրոսյանը հետ է կանչվել իր պաշտոնից։


Ինչպես տեղեկացնում են ՀՀ նախագահի մամուլի ծառայությունից, այս մասին հրամանագիրը այսօր ստորագրել է Հանրապետության նախագահ Արմեն Սարգսյանը։


«Հիմք ընդունելով վարչապետի առաջարկությունը` համաձայն Սահմանադրության 132-րդ հոդվածի 1-ին մասի 2-րդ կետի` Լևոն Մարտիրոսյանին հետ կանչել Կանադայում Հայաստանի Հանրապետության արտակարգ և լիազոր դեսպանի պաշտոնից:


Հիշեցնենք, որ Լևոն Մարտիրոսյանն այս պաշտոնը զբաղեցնում էր 2017 թվականից։ Նա մասնագիտությամբ իրավաբան է։ Մասնագիտական գործունեություն է ծավալել 2003–2007թթ.–ներին։ Ապա` զբաղեցրել է ՀՀ վարչապետի, հետո ՀՀ նախագահի օգնականի պաշտոնները։ Լևոն Մարտիրոսյանը հայտնի հումորիստ Գարիկ Մարտիրոսյանի եղբայրն է։