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  • Through the Brushes of Futurists: Children's paintings reveal an ide

    Armenia Now
    Oct 29, 2004

    Through the Brushes of Futurists: Children's paintings reveal an ideal Armenia
    By Gayane Abrahamyan
    ArmeniaNow Reporter

    When the think-tank Armenia 2020 released a book of "scenarios" with
    political scientists, journalists, and others speculating on Armenia's
    future, its publication also included paintings, done by children who have
    already seen the future, and put it on canvas.

    >>From 130 paintings submitted by three different painting clubs, 24 pieces
    were selected.

    "Very many serious people and mighty organizations often turn to children,
    expecting a fresh look, a frank or an imaginary answer the grown-ups usually
    lose the ability to find," said Artashes Ghazakhetyan, Armenia 2020 program
    manager. "Besides, the creators of the paintings are themselves the carriers
    of that future and it was necessary to know also their opinion and, why not,
    to reckon with them, too."

    At first the children were offered several topics: "Myself in the Future",
    "My Future President", "My Thoughts in the Future," "My Feelings in the
    Future", "My Country in the Future" and "Armenia in 2020". The topics were
    discussed in all of the clubs but as Sona Banoyan, head of the Gobelin and
    Painting Club of the National Aesthetic Center, points it out, the children
    were not guided by grown-ups; they have expressed only their own thoughts
    and ideas.

    During a number of lessons these ideas found their expression in color and
    image. Children's boundless imagination with unique manifestations was
    possible to perceive only through the prism of their interpretation.

    "I thought long what I would like to see in future, and I found out that the
    most indispensable thing is a tree curing of all diseases," says 13 year old
    Aramazd Khababyan.

    Aramazd's picture portrays a magnificent tree burdened with fancy fruits,
    each of which, according to the painter, cures a specific disease.
    "This flower with red fruits is the most important one - it cures cancer,
    and these are like thermometers, so they are fight colds, high temperature.
    The main sense of my idea is that the curing fruits of my tree will be
    distributed absolutely for free and only to kind people," interprets
    Aramazd.

    Along with the optimistic ideas of this boy's dream tree, Anush Ayvazyan,
    14, has raised another global issue that touches her greatly. By her
    painting, she says she expresses her protest against human cloning.

    "You shouldn't think I watch the 'Clone' soap opera and have chosen this
    topic under its influence. No, I've been concerned with this problem for a
    long time and I don't want people to be cloned in the future," sys Anush.
    Anushik has built several grounds for her painting. In the first one she has
    painted a woman carrying a kid in her arms in the traditional position of
    Blessed Virgin. Behind her there are numerous lilac silhouettes, and the
    farthest of them are crooked and deformed.

    "I portrayed the clones in lilac as it is a kind of mad color for myself.
    For instance, if one happens to live in a room painted lilac, one may one
    day go crazy. The same will happen to people if every day they see copied
    faces that are not born in a normal, divine way but are produced as a result
    of some experiments," says Anushik.

    She interprets that the last row of cloned peopled is crooked and
    disfigured, which symbolizes the idea of cloning doomed to failure.
    In the second ground, Anush portrays another four cloned people who, she
    says, look into water and see their distorted reflection. In the final
    ground of the picture the teenage girl has touched upon another important
    problem by painting the ozone layer with numerous darns that hardly bear the
    pressure of the earth pollution.

    Nine year old Hayk Hovsepyan has found a very beautiful reply to his older
    friend Anushik's concerns and has portrayed his future Armenia outside the
    planet Earth and its problems, on another planet. Hayk's "New Planet"
    pictures a beautiful city with tall buildings, blooming and blossoming
    gardens and broad streets. And the planet Earth heaves on the sight.

    "I imagine that in 2020 there will be so many of us we'll grow so mighty
    that we'll create a new Armenia on another more beautiful and wealthy
    planet," the little artist explains. "See, the technology has developed so
    much that the cars move without petrol and can fly in the air so that there
    is no traffic jam. They fly to the planet Earth any time they like and come
    back."

    Emma Ter-Avetisyan's "President of the Future" is well appropriate for the
    new Armenia created by Hayk.

    "I painted documents, a computer in the head of my dream president, so that
    I can show how smart he should be," says 12-year old Emma. "I painted the
    map of Armenia in one of the eyes, and the world map in the other. That is
    to say, he should see Armenia as a part of the world and cooperate with all.
    And, the most important, I placed not only people in his heart but also the
    flora and fauna so that he takes care of nature, too."

    At age eight, Emma made up her mind to become an architect. But she says her
    greater dream is that these children's paintings become a reality, so that
    the flying cars, the curing tree and many other wonderful ideas do not
    simply remain on canvas.

    To see all the works and read the scenarios, visit www.armenia2020.org
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