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    Foster's Online
    Thursday, March 17, 2005

    Exhibit commemorates Armenian Genocide and Jewish Holocaust with works of
    two survivor artists

    Samuel Bak's `Yiakor Theme.'


    KITTERY, Maine - Haley Farm Gallery will open `Survival Through Creativity'
    exhibit featuring works by Berj Kailian and Samuel Bak - two survivor
    artists of the Armenian Genocide and Jewish Holocaust respectively. The
    exhibit commemorates the 90th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide and the
    60th anniversary of the Jewish Holocaust.

    Opening receptions are Saturday, March 19, and Sunday, March 20, 2005, 3-5
    p.m. at Haley Farm Gallery, 178 Haley Rd., Kittery, Maine


    `Survival Through Creativity' reflects the artists' creative outlook toward
    life having endured, witnessed and survived the atrocities of the 1915
    Armenian Genocide perpetrated by the Ottoman Turks and the WWII Jewish
    Holocaust by Hitler's Nazi Germany. Works of Samuel Bak are available in
    cooperation with the artist and Pucker Gallery.



    Berj Kailian, myth and symbol series.


    Berj Kailian was born in Armenia in 1914. Her extended family was one of the
    last to be driven out. Her father, imprisoned and tortured was later asked
    to dig his own grave and was buried alive by the Turkish authorities. Only
    nine months old, Kailian was wrapped and tied to her mother's back and along
    with her three siblings began the forced marches through Armenia. Through
    the arduous trip her siblings were lost and are presumed dead. Kailian was
    wrapped in old newspapers to be kept warm; she was given away three times
    but returned to her mother to remain a survivor as they reached Yerevan,
    present-day Armenia's capital. Kailian's mother worked for the Armenian Red
    Cross and they lived with other wretched refugees in devastating conditions
    until 1919 when they were sent funds by an uncle in the to travel to America
    via Russia and Japan. Berj Kailian now lives in Weymouth, Massachusetts and
    is perhaps the only Armenian-American woman artist survivor of the Armenian
    Genocide.

    `I carry the memories with me every single day of my life. But you have to
    survive and you just have to accept that dark companion that is with you
    everywhere you go. Art was a natural selection because I could express a
    great deal of thought and emotion through it in my own way. I'm still doing
    it; maybe it's an escape,' says Berj Kailian. `I use earth
    pigments...everything comes from the earth. I tear, I dig, I use sand and
    earth, or gravel. I think that's the hurt...but I can't go beyond that. I've
    been fortunate. I'm a survivor. A slice of bread given to me by my mother
    was to be shared....and is to this day representative of nature and love for
    humans.'

    Samuel Bak was born in 1933 in Vilna, Poland and was recognized from an
    early age as possessing extraordinary artistic talent.


    As Vilna came under German occupation in 1940, Bak and his family were
    forced into the Vilna ghetto, and later to a labor camp, from which he was
    smuggled and given refuge in a monastery.

    At the end of the war, his mother and he were the only surviving members of
    his extensive family. Bak, has spent his life dealing with the artistic
    expression of the destruction and dehumanization which make up his childhood
    memories.

    He speaks about what are deemed to be the unspeakable atrocities of the
    Holocaust. He has created a visual language to remind the world of its most
    desperate moments.

    `I feel the necessity to remember and take it upon myself to bear witness to
    the things that happened in those times, so that human beings today and
    those of tomorrow, if it were only possible, are spared a similar destiny on
    earth. So I have chosen the way of creating images of a seeming reality,
    imbuing them with a multitude of layers, from clear and unknown symbols to
    the most private and intimate feelings of a world that has its own apparent
    logic. I hope that the complexity of these paintings might go beyond my
    private story and beyond the vicissitudes that mark the Jewish people and
    their fate.' says Samuel Bak.


    Haley Farm Gallery - Mainely Global Art Gallery, Gift Shop and Meeting Place
    - opened in January of 2005 and offers works by local, national and
    international artists, unique artistic gift items, and a meeting place. The
    gallery owners are Jackie Abramian and Harout DerSimonian.

    Haley Farm Gallery is located at 178 Haley Road in Kittery, Maine. Gallery
    Hours for March and April, 2005 are: Monday-Wednesday, 10 a.m.- 3 p.m.,
    Thursday & Friday, 2 p.m. - 6 p.m., with Saturday and Sundays by chance. For
    further information or to schedule a group visit, contact the gallery at
    (207) 439-2669, or email to [email protected], or visit
    www.haleygallery.com.
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