Sharon Advocate, MA
June 24 2005
Local artist depicts Armenian genocide
By Margret McGilvray/ Correspondent
Friday, June 24, 2005
What is the purpose of art? Some say it serves merely to delight the
senses, to create whimsical sensations that will carry us through
moments of boredom. Others say it lends us another's vision, which in
some cases changes us forever.
In the case of artist John Avakian of Sharon, the answer is
clear. The purpose of art is Truth. Through a process called
monotype, where color is applied to a glass or aluminum plate and
then transferred to a sheet of paper, Avakian uses historical black
and white photos, overlaid with plush colors of fragmented paper, to
reveal a gruesome period in history known as the Armenian Genocide.
"I want these images to appeal to people. I want them to be
drawn in," Avakian said. "You have the factual and horrible, and then
you have the beautiful and aesthetically pleasing."
Avakian's work is hauntingly pleasing to the senses. It's a
reflection of the richness of his spirit, yet a mirror into the
collective souls of people who have suffered at the hands of
brutality.
Each piece is completed with a border, carrying the names of
villages, cities and towns in the Turkish Empire, affected by the
genocide.
"My mother lived in Marash, Anatolia. Only three out of her
eight family members survived. My father was in Van. I don't know how
he escaped," Avakian said. "He ended up in Michigan as a cabinet
maker and eventually came down to Worcester."
Avakian said he grew up as an only child. His parents spoke
Armenian. His father worked at the Charlestown Navy Yard and often
wrote about the genocide.
"(My father) was always angry about everything. It was the only
way he could deal with everything. And my mother lived in fear," he
said. "She spoke in a hushed voice, like everything was a secret. and
there was nobody in the house, mind you."
According to armeniapedia.org, the Armenian Genocide began when
the Ottoman Empire began to crumble. Armenians, the only major
Christian minority, became isolated.
Some Armenians called for independence, while some Turks called
for a Pan-Turkic empire, spreading all the way to Turkish parts of
Central Asia. The Armenians were the only ethnic group between these
two pockets of Turkish speakers.
In an effort to get rid of the Armenians, the nationalistic Turks
ordered the "deportation" of millions of Armenians, which resulted in
starvation, dehydration, kidnap, rape and murder.
"The brutality was unbelievable," said Avakian. "They allowed
all the perverts, sadomasochists, and the insane out of their
prisons, and put them into battalions to feed off the caravans of
Armenians being deported."
Suffering became a common theme in Avakian's art. It began with
an obsession of an image he saw in the Boston Globe; an electric
chair. He began to explore interpersonal relationships, where
struggles were involved resulting in violence, which ultimately lead
him down a painful path of sociopolitical angst.
While much of his current work depicts horrific images of
starvation, mass graves, and public hangings, Avakian said he did
experience a period of artistic innocence. But even during that
innocence, there was an underlying theme of angst.
Avakian explained that a while ago, a friend of his had given
him some feathers. It was a light-hearted subject.
"Feathers- they are light, they just float," he said.
He used them in a series called "Lightness of Being." But when
he wrote a poem about the series instead of a statement, he
discovered that the feathers became symbolic.
"As time went on, the feathers became things that had somehow
lost their connection to their host of other feathers. They became
human beings," he said. "They were the survivors. The orphans. The
ones that made it over here. But they were all wounded. They were in
tremendous pain and needed somebody to help them find new meaning in
the world."
When Avakian shared his poem with his therapist, she liked it so
well she passed it out to some of her clients.
"There's an element in there that connects with people who are
drifting, are depressed, having difficulty making human connections,"
he said.
Avakian's artist career is quite extensive. He received his B.F.A and
M.F.A. from Yale University, and currently teaches at the School of
the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, as well as Northeastern University.
He has several collections at the Fogg Museum Print Department,
the New York Public Library Print Document, and the Boston Public
Library Print Department.
He's won awards as well. His piece Anatomy of a Genocide was
included in the 2003 North American Print Biennial Exhibition of the
Boston Printmakers, and won the Legion Paper Award.
Avakian's current exhibit, Lest We Forget, is now showing at
Providence College's Hunt-Cavanaugh Gallery through June 30
Sharon artist John Avakian's monoprint titled "Anatomy of
Genocide V," part of his solo show "Lest We Forget" at Providence
College's Hunt-Cavanagh Gallery. The last day of the exhibit is
Thursday, June 30.
June 24 2005
Local artist depicts Armenian genocide
By Margret McGilvray/ Correspondent
Friday, June 24, 2005
What is the purpose of art? Some say it serves merely to delight the
senses, to create whimsical sensations that will carry us through
moments of boredom. Others say it lends us another's vision, which in
some cases changes us forever.
In the case of artist John Avakian of Sharon, the answer is
clear. The purpose of art is Truth. Through a process called
monotype, where color is applied to a glass or aluminum plate and
then transferred to a sheet of paper, Avakian uses historical black
and white photos, overlaid with plush colors of fragmented paper, to
reveal a gruesome period in history known as the Armenian Genocide.
"I want these images to appeal to people. I want them to be
drawn in," Avakian said. "You have the factual and horrible, and then
you have the beautiful and aesthetically pleasing."
Avakian's work is hauntingly pleasing to the senses. It's a
reflection of the richness of his spirit, yet a mirror into the
collective souls of people who have suffered at the hands of
brutality.
Each piece is completed with a border, carrying the names of
villages, cities and towns in the Turkish Empire, affected by the
genocide.
"My mother lived in Marash, Anatolia. Only three out of her
eight family members survived. My father was in Van. I don't know how
he escaped," Avakian said. "He ended up in Michigan as a cabinet
maker and eventually came down to Worcester."
Avakian said he grew up as an only child. His parents spoke
Armenian. His father worked at the Charlestown Navy Yard and often
wrote about the genocide.
"(My father) was always angry about everything. It was the only
way he could deal with everything. And my mother lived in fear," he
said. "She spoke in a hushed voice, like everything was a secret. and
there was nobody in the house, mind you."
According to armeniapedia.org, the Armenian Genocide began when
the Ottoman Empire began to crumble. Armenians, the only major
Christian minority, became isolated.
Some Armenians called for independence, while some Turks called
for a Pan-Turkic empire, spreading all the way to Turkish parts of
Central Asia. The Armenians were the only ethnic group between these
two pockets of Turkish speakers.
In an effort to get rid of the Armenians, the nationalistic Turks
ordered the "deportation" of millions of Armenians, which resulted in
starvation, dehydration, kidnap, rape and murder.
"The brutality was unbelievable," said Avakian. "They allowed
all the perverts, sadomasochists, and the insane out of their
prisons, and put them into battalions to feed off the caravans of
Armenians being deported."
Suffering became a common theme in Avakian's art. It began with
an obsession of an image he saw in the Boston Globe; an electric
chair. He began to explore interpersonal relationships, where
struggles were involved resulting in violence, which ultimately lead
him down a painful path of sociopolitical angst.
While much of his current work depicts horrific images of
starvation, mass graves, and public hangings, Avakian said he did
experience a period of artistic innocence. But even during that
innocence, there was an underlying theme of angst.
Avakian explained that a while ago, a friend of his had given
him some feathers. It was a light-hearted subject.
"Feathers- they are light, they just float," he said.
He used them in a series called "Lightness of Being." But when
he wrote a poem about the series instead of a statement, he
discovered that the feathers became symbolic.
"As time went on, the feathers became things that had somehow
lost their connection to their host of other feathers. They became
human beings," he said. "They were the survivors. The orphans. The
ones that made it over here. But they were all wounded. They were in
tremendous pain and needed somebody to help them find new meaning in
the world."
When Avakian shared his poem with his therapist, she liked it so
well she passed it out to some of her clients.
"There's an element in there that connects with people who are
drifting, are depressed, having difficulty making human connections,"
he said.
Avakian's artist career is quite extensive. He received his B.F.A and
M.F.A. from Yale University, and currently teaches at the School of
the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, as well as Northeastern University.
He has several collections at the Fogg Museum Print Department,
the New York Public Library Print Document, and the Boston Public
Library Print Department.
He's won awards as well. His piece Anatomy of a Genocide was
included in the 2003 North American Print Biennial Exhibition of the
Boston Printmakers, and won the Legion Paper Award.
Avakian's current exhibit, Lest We Forget, is now showing at
Providence College's Hunt-Cavanaugh Gallery through June 30
Sharon artist John Avakian's monoprint titled "Anatomy of
Genocide V," part of his solo show "Lest We Forget" at Providence
College's Hunt-Cavanagh Gallery. The last day of the exhibit is
Thursday, June 30.