Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

What's in a Stamp?

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • What's in a Stamp?

    Sun-Gazette, PA
    Nov 28 2004

    What's in a Stamp?
    LKW dancer's perform for United Nations

    Stephanie Farr Sun-Gazette Staff

    Their bodies flowed fluidly before the canvases, recreating the
    pain and pleasure forever locked within the strokes of the paintings.

    Just as the artist used a paintbrush to capture the thoughts and
    visions only his mind knows, so too did their bodies use movement to
    bring his illustrations to life.
    When the LKW Senior Dance Team of Montoursville was invited to
    perform at the United Nations Postal Administration's Human Rights
    stamp unveiling, members knew they had a lot to live up to, and only
    two weeks to do it in.
    The artist who created the stamps, Yuri Gevorgian, specifically
    requested the dance team to perform at the unveiling ceremony at the
    Jacob Javits Center in New York City on Oct. 14.
    His hopes were that the dancers and their coaches would portray
    the progression of human rights as illustrated in each of the six
    stamps he designed for the United Nation Postal Administration.
    Alison Dean, a teacher at the LKW studio, was asked to
    choreograph the piece. All she had to work with under such strict
    time restrictions were photographs of the paintings that Gevorgian
    would release.
    "It was amazing," Dean said. "The work I've seen of his is
    beautiful. He's an incredible artist, but these were just
    breathtaking."
    As soon as she received copies of the paintings, Dean set to
    selecting the appropriate music and movements to portray the artist's
    work. She settled upon a modern lyrical dance choreographed to such
    songs as "Turning to Peace," "Fear Not My Child" and "Gloria" by Paul
    Schwartz.
    Dean said it was the inspiration of the paintings and events in
    her personal life which led her to pick the music and the movements.
    Gevorgian also gains inspiration from experiences in his personal
    life.
    Born in Soviet Armenia in 1956, he was one of the youngest
    artists ever to gain entrance into the famous Akop Kodjoyan School of
    Art in the Armenian capital of Yerevan. He then went to the Yerevan
    University of Art and Architecture, but upon graduation, realized his
    creative expression would be limited under the Armenian government.
    Gevorgian married a woman who gained entrance into the United
    States, but was not allowed to join her for seven years. During that
    time, he came to understand the true hopes and fears of refugees, and
    he continues to implement those themes in his paintings today.
    When Gevorgian was reunited with his wife in the United States,
    they realized that the separation had caused conflicts and that his
    commitment to his art form made it impossible to stay together.
    Moving out on his own, Gevorgian soon found himself homeless and
    living on the streets of Los Angeles. Out of discarded supplies he
    gathered from the sidewalks, Gevorgian created his "Hollywood
    Boulevard" series, an attempt to capture the unique spirits found
    within his homeless brothers and sisters.
    The series eventually lead to his artistic success, but he would
    also use it as an inspiration for both of his United Nations stamps
    series. Besides the Human Rights stamps which were unveiled in
    October, Gevorgian also designed the 2000 Respect for Refugees stamp
    series for the United Nations.
    The six Human Rights stamps depict the progression of human
    rights from the repression of creative and ethnic freedoms to the
    realization of individuality and the ability to take the first steps
    towards one's dream.
    Gevorgian's trade mark is the blue rose; a symbol of love,
    tenderness and compassion. This rose appears in a majority of his
    paintings, including each of the six Human Rights stamps. For the day
    of the unveiling, each member of the dance team had a blue rose
    painted on their arms as an homage to Gevorgian.
    After the ceremony, while signing autographs for the dance team
    members, he told them that they did more than dance the themes of the
    paintings, they brought them to life. The team then got a private
    tour of the United Nations building before returning home.
    "For us as performers it was nice to have a story to tell," Dean
    said. "And a story that is so powerful, not like I went to the mall
    and bought a dress."
    Kaitie Burger, a 14 year-old member of the LKW dance team,
    agreed.
    "It was a really great opportunity to get to go, and his
    paintings inspired us to dance," she said. "It was special because we
    had a really good reason why we were dancing and knew what we were
    trying to interpret."
    As a result of the performance for the United Nations Postal
    Administration, the LKW dance team has been invited to perform at
    many future functions in such cities as Los Angeles, Chicago and
    Philadelphia. The team has even garnered an invitation to the United
    Nations headquarters in Austria, a trip for which they are currently
    seeking sponsors to cover traveling expenses.
    What those in attendance at the unveiling experienced that day
    was more than a marriage between dance and art, it was a union of
    creative expression; a union born out mankind's love for freedom and
    his right to share that beauty with others.
    Gevorgian once said, "Most people think of human rights in epic
    terms. Every single thing we have and do in life is a human right. I
    can paint what I want, I can dress how I want and I can read what I
    want. Freedom is the ability to explore our minds, our bodies — our
    dreams."

    --Boundary_(ID_Zrj5VDzT6Ok63HVnRf5aDA)--
Working...
X