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Achot Achot was born in Yerevan in 1961 and grew up in Armenia.
He now lives in Paris. In his spiritual afactum works photography
is not only juxtaposed against and mixed with abstract painting:
Achot Achot also reconciles two seemingly diverging views of life
with each other and synthesises them. His photographs of young women
with their palpable eroticism address as well as dissolve the separation
of body and soul that is so inherent in Christian-Occidental history.
Yet, in his meditative paintings evoking Far Eastern philosophies
such dualism no longer appears to exist. The borderline between
‘The Self and the Known’ becomes irrelevant, the yearning
for ‘The Infinite’ being the underlying goal . |
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Achot
Achot
www.afactum.com |
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Emily Artinian was born to an Armenian father in Pennsylvania in
1970. She now lives in London. Her involvement with artist’s
books and text-based art is a recurrent theme of her work and can
also be regarded as a reminiscence of the Armenian book culture
and tradition. Emily Artinian’s conceptual text works add
visual expression to abstract language which in turn is often reduced
to abstract language again. Her projects resemble translation processes,
cryptic, arcane messages which need to be deciphered to grasp their
true meaning. Identity is thus tantamount to cryptography and difficult
to decode. |
Emily
Artinian
www.emilyartinian.com
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Andrew Demirdjian, born in Springfield, MA in 1966, lives and works
in the greater New York city area. He made the video “Yerevan
dialogues” while he was in the Armenian capital on an artist
residency. It is the story of a sensual discovery tour of today’s
Yerevan. He asks passers-by and residents “What does Yerevan
smell like? What does Yerevan taste like? What does Yerevan feel
like?” From these individual impressions and personal responses
he compiled absurdly humorous statistics meant to scientifically
prove and demonstrate subjective feelings about the city. In his
recent videos the relationship between visual and aural elements
is increasingly at the fore of his work. Just like a choreographer
Andrew Demirdjian creates complex arrangements of images and sounds. |
Andrew
Demirjian
www.AndrewDemirjian.com
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Silvina Der-Meguerditchian is the granddaughter of Armenian immigrants
to Argentina and was born in Buenos Aires in 1967. She grew up in
Argentina and now lives in Berlin. A recurrent theme of her work
is the remembrance of the ethnic dislocation of the Armenian people
and the genocide they suffered. She uses photographic memorabilia
and official documents and merges them in her crochet collages into
individual painful stories. Silvina Der-Meguerditchian ties a net.
She connects the disparate, builds bridges between worlds apart
or seeks a dialogue with the unknown. Her work “Connexion
Obsession” is emblematic for this artistic fervour. Her main
focus is always on the actual process of joining and dissolving,
constructing and deconstructing identity. Silvina Der-Meguerditchian’s
work represents a type of mnemonics, namely the individual and collective
art of commemoration. |
Silvina
Der-Meguerditchian
www.silvina-der-meguerditchian.de
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Dahlia Elsayed lives in the US. In her work writing and painting
appear as two related processes complimenting each other. In her
delicate paintings comprising text and images she creates mappings
of her own inner self. Autobiographical and social experiences form
the basis of her work resulting in an imaginary geography and phantasmajoric
travel topography. Due to the precise descriptions of fictitious
places and landscapes, the landscapes of the soul and dream world
mapped out gain a certain idiosyncratic validity. Dahlia Elsayed’s
imaginary mappings tell the story of dislocations and individual
mementoes thereby representing the aesthetic matrix of cultural
reality that today’s immigrants are faced with. |
Dahlia
Elsayed
www.dahliaelsayed.com
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Sophia
Gasparian was born in the Soviet Republic of Armenia in 1972. At
the age of 15 she emigrated with her parents to the US and now lives
and works in Los Angeles. In her work she experiments with various
artistic media such as collages, language and print as well as film
and video. Sophia Gasparian’s unconventional works combine
the aesthetics of children’s drawings or graffiti with quizzical,
if not to say sarcastic social criticism. There is always a troubling,
eerie, even brutal element in her drawings such as “Save that
my grave is kept clean” of 2004 or “Help” of 2004.
The drawing “Let’s not chat about despair” deals
with the painful topic of remembrance and questions the impact this
has on the existence of those generations experiencing the traumata
of ethnic dislocation through the life and despair of their parents
and grandparents. |
Sophia
Gasparian
www.sophiagasparian.com
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Archi Galentz was born in Moscow in 1971. He comes from an Armenian
family with a long history of painters and now lives and works in
Berlin. A recurrent theme that is central to his artistic work is
the question of Armenian identity, especially in relation to political
factors such as the demise of the Soviet Union and the resurgence
of Armenian awareness. The search for a paradise lost as the central
theme of Archi Galentz’s work was already evident in “The
Black Garden” of 1997 in which the aspect and use of colour
were, however, key issues – painting as a medium to illustrate
the condensation of life and the strategies for survival. |
Archi
Galentz
www.arrieregarde.org
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