Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

"Survival Through Creativity" Exhibit Commemorates The Genocide

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

  • "Survival Through Creativity" Exhibit Commemorates The Genocide

    EXHIBITION "SURVIVAL THROUGH CREATIVITY" COMMEMORATES 90TH ANNIVERSARY
    OF ARMENIANS' GENOCIDE

    YEREVAN, MARCH 17. ARMINFO. 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.

    Foster's online reports, "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. Exhibit commemorates Armenian Genocide and
    Jewish Holocaust with works of two survivor artists

    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.
Working...
X