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Armenia at Venice Biennale-2005

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  • Armenia at Venice Biennale-2005

    PRESS RELEASE

    Armenian Center for Contemporary Experimental Art
    ("NPAK" in Armenian acronym)
    1/3 Pavstos Biuzand Blvd.
    Yerevan, Republic of Armenia
    Contact: Eva Khachatrian
    Tel: +3741 568225 & 568325
    Fax: +3741 560216
    E-mail: [email protected]
    Web: http://www.accea.info/

    ARMENIA TO TAKE PART AT VENICE BIENNALE
    FOR THE 6TH CONSECUTIVE TIME

    YEREVAN, ARMENIA, MARCH 27, 2005 - Ministry of Culture of the
    Republic of Armenia has one more time appointed the Armenian Center
    for Contemporary Experimental Art ("NPAK" in Armenian acronym) to
    organize the Pavilion of the Republic of Armenia at International Art
    Biennale of Venice. The upcoming Biennale will be hosted by the
    Makhitarian Congregation at Palazzo Zenobio (The Murad Rafaelian
    College) in Venice from June 12 through November 6, 2005.

    "This is the sixth consecutive time that Armenia is going to
    participate at Venice Biennale. We at NPAK are proud that we have
    been the initiator and organizer of this very important presence of
    the Armenian culture at this most significant international arena of
    the arts. We should not let this chain of continuity break. As
    before, we shall do our utmost to make it happen in 2005 as well,"
    said New York artist Sonia Balassanian, the Founder and Senior
    Artistic Director of NPAK.

    Dr. Edward Balassanian, Co-Founder of NPAK and the Commissioner of
    the Armenian Pavilion at Venice Biennale (1999, 2001, 2003 and 2005)
    proudly states that "since the very beginning (1995) funding of the
    Armenian Pavilion has been secured by Diaspora donations without
    burdening the National Budget of the Republic of Armenia. And this
    time is no exception."

    The interested public and art-enthusiasts are urged to respond to the
    fund-raising drive, which is underway now. Tax-deductible
    contributions can be made to "ACCEA" (81 Murray Street, New York, NY
    10007), tel. (212)732-3598.

    Venice Biennale veteran artist David Kareyan has been appointed to
    curate the pavilion. An open and competitive process of selection has
    taken place and artists of 2005 have been chosen. The statement of
    the curator of the pavilion, which includes introductory review of
    each artist's work, is presented below.

    * * *

    RESISTANCE THROUGH ART
    By David KAREYAN
    Curator of the Armenian Pavilion at Venice Biennale 2005

    >>From mid-nineties, the enthusiasm of revolution in post-Soviet
    Armenia has turned into an overall state of crisis. This is dominated
    by apathy, a subjectivist attitude towards social life, and mounting
    nostalgia for the bipolar world, where poverty and deprivation were
    compensated by the illusive pride of being a citizen of a nuclear
    superpower. This social phenomenon, which has accompanies the process
    of globalization, is one of the basic obstacles to democracy in
    post-Soviet republics.

    Globalization forces the artist to select between making a conscious
    choice or conforming. This is not a simple choice between the past
    and the future, east and west, war and peace, or between "mine" and
    "yours". This choice is an act of resistance. According to Theodor W.
    Adorno, "Affirmativeness resists the worst, the development of
    barbarism. ... Life asserts itself by means of culture, including the
    hope for a better, dignified, true and worthy human life."

    Building on this idea, the artists of the project "Resistance through
    Art", using psychological and aesthetic contradictions, display the
    "clash of the bodily with the spiritual", and ask whether it is
    possible to live without violence. What is man's natural environment?
    Why is culture, which is supposed to be the mechanism of sublimation,
    unable to determine the boundaries of our natural environment? Why do
    humans try to escape from the world they create?

    Diana HAGOPIAN in her video "The Logic of Power", by displaying the
    roles assigned to women together with statistics from opinion polls
    is directly asking whether it is possible to reconcile with violence.
    Is it possible to create a society where self-admiration and
    authority do not appear as "attractive games"?

    Images which follow one another in a fast "Rock and Roll" pace create
    a dynamic chain, which by its imagery reminds us of the positive
    effects of the emancipation movements of the 1960's and 70's.
    Diana Hagopian tries to take the viewer on a journey of emancipation
    which, however, is continuously colliding with various expressions of
    the neo-patriarchal justification of "the logic of power", its
    senseless exploitation and consumption.

    Sona ABGARIAN's video-installation "Tomorrow at the Same Time" is
    another example of a woman's inability to articulate her identity.
    The girl, by manipulating a monster's mask, simultaneously discovers
    her own: a mask she had worn in the past at an unknown party. Lonely
    and abandoned by the guests, she tries to show her present face to
    her past mask. The theatricality of movements and gestures
    demonstrate the total bankruptcy of the stereotypes of the mass
    culture, where the artificial veils its artificiality. The same act
    is repeated on a second monitor with a time-lapse, as if observing
    that the only origins of fear and emptiness are the signs of lust and
    untamed pleasure. On the photographs mounted on the backdrop of the
    monitors there are the same images, scratched and frayed, as a
    desperate attempt to flee from falling into the trap of the
    mass-consumption models of show business.

    Tigran KHACHATRIAN's video "Thodicy", according to the artist belongs
    to his "Corner of the Room" or "Garage Film Production" series, which
    he began in 2000. In this series the artist adopts a unique method of
    re-mixing, where the famous films of internationally acclaimed and
    commonly "leftist" film directors are revisited. The artist insists
    that this reenactment returns the original attributes of humanity and
    simplicity to the idolized films. Tigran Khachatrian believes that
    periodic retrospection of art is didactically effective for the
    self-consciousness of society: This, in his opinion, is a unique
    traditionalism.

    Vahram AGHASYAN in his double screen video-installation "Factories in
    the Sky" presents an abandoned, dilapidated factory from the era of
    "the glorious industrial achievement" of the one-time Soviet Armenia.
    He tries to break free from the prejudiced stare of the viewer who in
    post-Soviet artists' works searches for documentary description of
    financial cataclysms. In the passage between very closely placed
    projection screens the artist blows artificial "stage smoke", which
    is the only tangible reality. If history was written first and later
    attempted to be enacted, then the world has been turned into smoke.
    These four representatives of "The Art of Resistance" believe that
    art has an influence on life, hence on how the world should be. From
    the exhibition "Crisis" (1999) on, the basic feature of exhibitions
    organized at the Armenian Center for Contemporary Experimental Art
    (organizer of the Armenian Pavilion) is the fact that artists reflect
    upon their real human and social experiences.
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