Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ASBAREZ Online [03-17-2006]

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

  • ASBAREZ Online [03-17-2006]

    ASBAREZ ONLINE
    TOP STORIES
    03/17/2006
    TO ACCESS PREVIOUS ASBAREZ ONLINE EDITIONS PLEASE VISIT OUR
    WEBSITE AT <http://www.asbarez.com/>HTTP://WWW.ASBAREZ. COM

    1) Turkey Has Less Than Two Years to Meet EU's Political Accession Criteria
    2) Fifty House Members Call on Foreign Aid Appropriators to Maintain Military
    Aid Parity to Armenia And Azerbaijan
    3) US Urges Turkey to Open Border with Armenia
    4) Armenian Organizations Demand Introduction of Armenian as State Language
    5) Authorities in Tabriz Assure Normalization of Situation
    6) Courts Allow Turkish Demonstration in Berlin
    7) ANCA Joins Armenian Bar Association-Led Coalition in Fighting Armenian
    Genocide Denial in Massachusetts
    8) Burbank ANC Organizes Armenian Genocide Art And Essay Contest
    9) Armenian Genocide Documentary to Be Honored at 2006 Midwest Journalism
    Conference in April
    10) Armenia Fund Reconstructs Artik Hospital
    11) Third Pan-Armenian Writers' Conference to Be Held in Antelias
    12) Element Band Presents Armenian CD Yev O Phe
    13) Critics' Forum: Visual Arts: By Ara Oshagan

    1) Turkey Has Less Than Two Years to Meet EU's Political Accession Criteria

    BRUSSELS--Noting the slowing pace of reform in Turkey, the European Parliament
    has called on the Turkish government to take immediate steps to ends its
    discriminatory and repressive policies.
    In its recently adopted resolution on the "Commission's 2005 Enlargement
    Strategy Report," the Parliament called on the European Commission to define
    the geographical boundaries of the European Union. This report, prepared by
    Elmar Brok, a Conservative from Germany, Chairman of the Foreign Affairs
    Committee, aims to formulate a comprehensive enlargement policy before
    focusing
    on candidate nations (Macedonia, Western Balkans) and countries in negotiation
    (Turkey, Croatia).
    In the section of the report dedicated to Turkey, the European Parliament
    states that the priorities outlined in the Accession Partnership "have to be
    accomplished in the first phase of the negotiations" and "notes with
    satisfaction that the Commission now supports this view as well by stating
    that
    those criteria have to be fulfilled within one or two years."
    Based on these considerations, the Parliament therefore called on Turkey "to
    present as soon as possible a plan, including a timetable and specific
    measures, to meet these deadlines," and urged the Commission and the Council
    "to make the progress of the negotiations conditional on the timely
    accomplishment of those priorities."
    This demand comes in reaction to the slowing down of Turkey's reforms, which
    were noted in the resolution. The Parliament also formally asked Turkey "to
    remove all existing legislative and practical obstacles to full enjoyment of
    fundamental rights and freedoms by all Turkish citizens, notably freedom of
    expression, religious freedom, cultural rights and the rights of minorities."
    The Resolution also urged the Commission "to conduct a rigorous and thorough
    scrutiny of developments on the ground."
    The adopted text--for the first time in European Union history--also recalled
    that "the capacity for absorption of the Union...remains one of the conditions
    for the accession of new countries" and stressed that "defining the nature of
    the European Union, including its geographical borders, is fundamental to
    understanding the concept of absorption capacity."
    Thus, the Parliament requested that that Commission submit a report by
    December 31, 2006 "setting out the principles which underpin this concept" and
    invites it "to factor this element into the overall negotiation timetable."
    "We welcome the adoption of this resolution as a true expression of the
    growing will of the European Parliament to be involved in the Union's
    decision-making processes. This measure--like the many previously adopted
    resolutions on this matter--urges the European Commission and Council to
    not be
    satisfied with pledges and prolonged delays, but rather to demand genuine
    reforms in Turkey," said Hilda Tchoboian, Chairperson of the European Armenian
    Federation.
    "We are working with European democratic movements in order to require that
    Turkey meet its criteria within the next two years--including its full
    recognition of the Armenian genocide and the abandonment of its aggressive
    policies toward Armenia."

    2) Fifty House Members Call on Foreign Aid Appropriators to Maintain Military
    Aid Parity to Armenia And Azerbaijan

    WASHINGTON, DCCongressmen Frank Pallone (D-NJ) and George Radanovich (R-CA)
    were joined by forty-eight of their House colleagues today in urging the
    leadership of the House Foreign Operations Subcommittee to support
    pro-Armenian
    provisions in the fiscal year 2007 foreign aid bill, reported the Armenian
    National Committee of America (ANCA).
    Members of Congress cosigned a letter, addressed to the panel's Chairman Jim
    Kolbe (R-AZ) and Ranking Member Nita Lowey (D-NY), which would strengthen the
    hand of pro-Armenian members of the Subcommittee, most notably Armenian Caucus
    Co-Chairman Joe Knollenberg, Steve Rothman (D-NJ), Mark Kirk (R-IL), and John
    Sweeney (R-NY). Representative Sweeney, who joined the panel last year, is one
    of only two Members of Congress of Armenian heritage.
    The letter notes that members of Congress are "deeply troubled" that the
    Administration's request for military aid for Azerbaijan is considerably
    higher
    then the request for Armenia. By signing the letter, legislators will add
    their
    voice to the effort to ensure that the agreement struck in 2001 between the
    White House and Congress to keep aid levels to these two countries equal is
    fully respected. In addition, the letter calls for a hard earmark of at least
    $75 million for Armenia, a one-year $5 million allocation for Karabagh, and
    the
    preservation of Section 907 of the Freedom Support Act.
    Members of Congress joining Representatives Pallone and Radanovich in
    cosigning the letter included: Reps. Tom Allen (D-ME), Robert Andrews (D-NJ),
    Xavier Becerra (D-CA), Howard Berman (D-CA), Michael Bilirakis (R-FL), Eric
    Cantor (R-VA), Lois Capps (D-CA), Dennis Cardoza (D-CA), John Conyers (D-MI),
    Jim Costa (D-CA), Joseph Crowley (D-NY), William Delahunt (D-MA), David Dreier
    (R-CA), Chaka Fattah (D-PA), Mike Ferguson (R-NJ), Barney Frank (D-MA), Scott
    Garrett (R-NJ), Rush Holt (D-NJ), Michael Honda (D-CA), Dale Kildee (D-MI),
    James Langevin (D-RI), Sander Levin (D-MI), Frank LoBiondo (R-NJ), Stephen
    Lynch (D-MA), Carolyn Maloney (D-NY), Edward Markey (D-MA), Doris Matsui
    (D-CA), Thaddeus McCotter (R-MI), James McGovern (D-MA), John McHugh (R-NY),
    Michael McNulty (D-NY), Martin Meehan (D-MA), Grace Napolitano (D-CA), Donald
    Payne (D-NJ), Collin Peterson (D-MN), Bobby Rush (D-IL), H. James Saxton
    (R-NJ), Adam Schiff (D-CA), Joe Schwarz (R-MI), Christopher Shays (R-CT), Brad
    Sherman (D-CA), Rob Simmons (R-CT), Mark Souder (R-IN), Edolphus Towns (D-NY),
    Diane Watson (D-CA), Henry Waxman (D-CA), Anthony Weiner (D-NY), and Lynn
    Woolsey (D-CA).
    Representatives Knollenberg, Pallone, and Rothman also submitted individual
    letters citing their foreign aid priorities for Armenia and Karabagh, among
    other countries.
    The House Foreign Operations panel is set to review the FY 2007 foreign aid
    bill, which will then be considered by the full Appropriations Committee and
    then the full US House of Representatives. The Senate will finalize its own
    version, which will be reconciled with the House bill by a conference
    committee.

    3) US Urges Turkey to Open Border with Armenia

    ANKARA (Armenpress)--US Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian
    Affairs Daniel Fried and the OSCE Minsk Group US Co-Chair Steven Mann met in
    Turkey Friday with Turkish officials to discuss the Karabagh conflict
    settlement, Ankara-Yerevan relations, and energy issues.
    During the meeting, Fried urged Turkey to open up its border with Armenia
    as a
    step toward normalization of relations between the two countries, Anatolia
    News
    Agency reported.
    Fried said that the opening of the border between Armenia and Turkey will be
    beneficial for the two countries and the whole region. He said US will support
    it.
    The Turkish side refused, saying that it defends Azerbaijan and will not open
    its border with Armenia unless progress is made in the Karabagh conflict and
    Armenia steps back from its demand for recognition of the Armenian genocide.
    Referring to the Armenian genocide, Fried said that Turkey should seriously
    recognize the mistakes it has made in the past.
    Fried said, "The tragedies should be recognized. People must be truly and
    bravely interested in the issue. At the same time it is necessary to think of
    the future of the two nations."
    The US official also discussed with Turkish officials Iran's nuclear program
    and the Cyprus issue. Turkey and the United States share concern over the
    Iranian nuclear issue, but officials from both sides agree that it should be
    resolved through diplomatic means, Anatolia said.

    4) Armenian Organizations Demand Introduction of Armenian as State Language

    AKHALKALAK (Armenpress)The Virk and Javakhk organizations, which are based in
    the Armenian populated Georgian region of Javakhk, have demanded that Armenian
    receive the status of a second state language in the region.
    The organizations prepared a letter of appeal to the Georgian Parliament at a
    Thursday meeting in Akhalkalak.
    According to them, since the majority of the local population is of Armenian
    origin, they must be able to conduct official business in the Armenian
    language.
    Representatives of Virk and Javakhk also point out that Armenians already
    suffer frequent discrimination because of their ethnicity. They say Armenians
    are not hired as public officers and are often replaced by Georgians who come
    to Javakhk from other regions of Georgia.

    5) Authorities in Tabriz Assure Normalization of Situation

    TEHRAN (Alik)--An Azeri satellite television station operating in Iran has
    been
    disseminating Anti-Armenian propaganda and calling on the local population to
    engage in anti-Armenian demonstrations. Kevork Vardanian, Iranian Member of
    Parliament representing the Northern Iran Armenian community, went to Tabriz
    last Tuesday to check on the hostile situation created by the Azeri TV
    station.
    Vardanian has also been in touch with the governor's and interior minister's
    office in the meantime. He was assured that all the necessary security
    measures
    have been taken by the Iranian government to prevent an inter-ethnic clash
    between the local Azeri population and the Armenian community.
    "We were at the Prelacy until midnight and fortunately nothing happened. The
    local security officials called me and the Prelate to assure us that the
    situation is under control and nothing will happen. The most important thing,
    however, is that the Armenian community of Tabriz is leading a normal life and
    last week's concerns have all disappeared," he said.
    Vardanian also informed that local authorities visited the church and assured
    the public that "the security of the Armenian community is the responsibility
    of the Iranian security apparatus and that they will guarantee that."

    6) Courts Allow Turkish Demonstration in Berlin

    --Demonstrators cannot deny Genocide

    The German Court of Appeals allowed on Friday a demonstration organized by
    Turks against the recognition of the Armenian genocide and in honor of Talaat
    Pasha to be held Saturday, March 18. The court has allowed the controversial
    demonstration, but forbade demonstrators from denying the Genocide either
    verbally or in writing.
    The court also called on the police to strictly enforce this decision.
    The Berlin Police Department wanted the demonstration to be banned completely
    because they feared violence would erupt and because they suspected
    demonstrators would try to both deny and glorify the Armenian genocide.

    7) ANCA Joins Armenian Bar Association-Led Coalition in Fighting Armenian
    Genocide Denial in Massachusetts

    WASHINGTON, DC--The Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) has joined
    with a broad coalition of civil rights organizations in filing an amicus
    curiae
    (friend of the court) brief in Massachusetts Federal District Court to oppose
    attempts by the Assembly of Turkish American Associations (ATAA) to mandate
    the
    inclusion of Armenian genocide denial material in Massachusetts' genocide
    curriculum guide.
    The coalition led by the Armenian Bar Association, also includes the Irish
    Immigration Center, the Jewish Alliance for Law and Social Action, and the
    National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP).
    In support of the State of Massachusetts, the coalition filed its brief on
    March 8 urging the dismissal of the complaint filed by the ATAA, a lobbying
    group that actively denies the Armenian genocide and is calling for the
    inclusion of the ATAA website in a list of educational sources provided as
    part
    of a teacher's guide on genocide education. The complaint also calls for the
    addition of other websites, including that of the Embassy of the Republic of
    Turkey, which the ATAA had lobbied to include in the guide. These website were
    disqualified from the guide because they denied the Armenian genocide,
    contradicting the Massachusetts statute that requires the teaching of the
    Armenian genocide.
    In filing the brief, coalition members expressed their opposition to the
    inclusion of genocide denial material in Massachusetts' curriculum guide and
    refuted allegations that plaintiffs' free speech rights were violated. The
    brief argues, "This case is not about Plaintiffs' ability to express
    themselves, to receive ideas, or to access information. Nothing in the
    Massachusetts Guide to Choosing and Using Curricular Materials on Genocide and
    Human Rights has altered those rights. Rather, this case involves
    [Massachusetts'] right as a government to express its own official views on
    matters of historical importance and their place in education and to choose
    the
    specific content of its own message." Citing judicial precedent, the brief
    noted that courts cannot compel state governments to speak as plaintiffs
    demand: "The government is entitled to full control over its own speech,
    whether it speaks with its own voice or enlists private parties to convey its
    message, and the remedy for dissatisfaction with its choices is political
    rather than judicial."
    To read the entire brief, visit:
    www.armenianbar.org/amicus/BriefofAmiciCuri ae.pdf

    8) Burbank ANC Organizes Armenian Genocide Art And Essay Contest

    In the spirit of "learning from the past, shaping our future," the Armenian
    National Committee (ANC) of Burbank has organized an essay and art contest to
    commemorate and learn from the Armenian genocide of 1915-1923.
    The contests officially began in early March with the help of more than 80
    English, Art, and History teachers from the Burbank Unified School District.
    Contest packets were distributed to teachers and student. Students in grades
    10-12 were invited to take part in either the art or essay contest with the
    theme, "Learning From The Past, Shaping Our Future: What does the Armenian
    genocide mean to me?" Using any form of visual media or their own original
    writing, participating students of all ethnic backgrounds will have the
    opportunity to creatively express their thoughts and feelings about the impact
    of the Armenian genocide.
    "Our goal is to create an understanding among youth that this crime against
    the Armenians is not just past history and it still has a real impact on our
    lives today" said Tamar Krekorian, head of the Genocide Commemoration
    Committee
    of the Burbank ANC. "Through this contest, young people will learn the
    continuing lessons of the Armenian genocide and will be prepared to work
    together to prevent future atrocities."
    The Burbank ANC is also collaborating with a long time friend, the Burbank
    Public Library. The contests, running through March 24, 2006, will culminate
    in an award ceremony Saturday, April 1 at the Burbank Central Library.
    Student
    art will be on display and excerpts from winning essays will be read. Three
    winners for each contest will be awarded cash prizes. Representatives of the
    City of Burbank and the Burbank Unified School District present the winners
    with their prizes. The event is open to the public. For more information on
    the contest, visit <http://www.burbankanc.org/>www.burbankanc.o rg.

    9) Armenian Genocide Documentary to Be Honored at 2006 Midwest Journalism
    Conference in April

    A Regional Emmy nominated documentary about the Armenian genocide, The
    Armenian
    Genocide: 90 Years Later, will be honored at the 2006 Midwest Journalism
    Conference in Bloomington, Minnesota. The event, which is sponsored by the
    Northwest Broadcast News Association in memory of journalist Eric Sevareid,
    will take place April 1.
    As part of an ongoing series by the Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies
    in Minnesota (CHGS) about genocide and its lingering effects, [The Armenian
    Genocide: 90 Years Later] aired on public television in Minnesota last April
    and was nominated for the 2005 Regional Emmy in the category of "Best News
    Special."
    The documentary, which is being honored in the Talk and Public Affairs
    category, discusses events that led to the Genocide, issues related to
    Genocide
    recognition, and its effects on Turkish democracy. The film also addresses
    current issues about revisionism and the repression of viewpoints that deviate
    from the official position in Turkey.
    The program discusses this phenomenon and raises questions about how the
    issue
    of the recognition of the Armenian genocide fits into the context of
    understanding the current status of Turkish democracy, academic freedom in
    universities, and issues involving language and identity for minorities. Most
    poignant in the program is the testimony of those whose family members
    survived
    the Genocide and lived to tell about it. They discuss how the memory of the
    Genocide is embedded in the identity of many Armenians.
    Discussants include Taner Akçam, Stephen Feinstein, and Eric Weitz, from the
    University of Minnesota, as well as descendants of survivors, and members of
    the community who explore issues related to the genocide.
    The documentary is a co-production of Twin Cities Public Television and the
    University of Minnesota Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies, (CHGS) and
    is distributed by the Armenian Genocide Resource Center in Richmond California
    through a special arrangement with CHGS.
    The Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies in Minnesota has been at the
    forefront of education on the Armenian genocide for many years. It was
    established as an Independent Center with its main administrative relationship
    with the Department of History. CHGS is also affiliated with The Institute for
    Global Studies, The Humanities Institute, Department of German, Dutch and
    Scandinavian Languages, The Human Rights Program at the University of
    Minnesota
    School of Law, and The Center for European Studies.
    Its director, Professor Stephen Feinstein, has been at the helm of the Center
    since its creation in 1997 and has expanded its website to include eyewitness
    survivor testimonies, documents, teaching guides, online streaming video and
    audio, and other materials about the Armenian genocide. Some of the materials
    were provided to the Center over the years by the Armenian Genocide Resource
    Center (AGRC), including an expanded reference guide for teachers and
    students,
    and are available through its website.
    The Armenian Genocide: 90 Years Later DVD is available from AGRC for a
    special
    price of $14.95 plus $4.00 shipping and handling. Send check or money
    order to
    AGRC, 5400 McBryde Avenue, Richmond, CA 94805.

    10) Armenia Fund Reconstructs Artik Hospital

    YEREVANThe British affiliate of Armenia Fund has embarked on a vital hospital
    reconstruction project in the Republic of Armenia. The Artik Hospital the
    Shirak Region of Armenia will undergo major renovation in order to meet the
    growing needs of the region.
    Presently, the project is in its design stage. The scope of the
    reconstruction will include strengthening of the building and its foundation,
    construction of a boiler-house, installation of a modern heating system, as
    well as installation of new doors and windows. The hospital will also undergo
    crucial seismic retrofitting in order to prevent collapse in case of an
    earthquake. In addition to key structural upgrades, new restroom facilities
    will be built and new flooring will be installed throughout the facility. Part
    of the new plan will encompass a new electrical conduit system, as well as
    safe
    and reliable wiring throughout the building. After its completion, the
    hospital
    will have a new, independent sewage system. The surrounding landscape of the
    hospital will be redesigned as well.
    After a close assessment of the hospital, healthcare specialists
    determined that the condition of the hospital is critically deteriorating.
    Construction experts revealed major structural damage due to a lack of repair
    and maintenance over the years.
    Over the past twenty years, the hospital has been moderately renovated.
    Unfortunately, the catastrophic earthquake of 1988 crippled the hospital's
    structural support and foundation structure. Currently, only one out of four
    buildings is being used for patient care.
    The hospital currently has 40 beds and serves as the main healthcare facility
    for the town of Artik. Due to a lack of readily available healthcare
    facilities, the hospital serves the Shirak region's growing 60,000 population.
    Armenia Fund plans to expand patient capacity as soon as reconstruction works
    are completed.

    Armenia Fund, Inc., is a non-profit 501(c)(3) tax-exempt corporation
    established in 1994 to facilitate large-scale humanitarian and infrastructure
    development assistance to Armenia and Karabagh. Armenia Fund, Inc. is the US
    Western Region affiliate of "Hayastan" All-Armenian Fund.

    11) Third Pan-Armenian Writers' Conference to Be Held in Antelias

    ANTELIAS (Combined Sources)--The Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia, based in
    Antelias, Lebanon, will host the third Pan-Armenian Writers' Conference on
    April 6-9, according to a press release by the preparatory Committee.
    The conference will be the third meeting of writers from Armenia and the
    diaspora. In consultation with the presidency of the Union of Writers of
    Armenia, the Committee has already sent invitations to writers in Armenia,
    Karabagh, and the diaspora. More than 170 writers from Armenia, Karabagh,
    Syria, Lebanon, Iran, Turkey, Egypt, Cyprus, France, Germany, Greece,
    Switzerland, England, Australia, Georgia, the United States and Canada have
    already accepted the invitations.
    All writers can participate in the conference. Interested individuals can
    contact the preparatory Committee for more information by emailing
    [email protected].

    12) Element Band Presents Armenian CD Yev O Phe

    --Band incorporates sounds of Europe and the Mediterranean, while maintaining
    purity of original compositions

    Titled Yev O Phe, Element Band's first Armenian CD brings a refreshing and
    long-awaited sound to Armenian music by partnering distinct vocals with
    colorful, warm, and exotic arrangements.
    While the sounds of Europe and the Mediterranean come to life through the use
    of classical guitar, violin, bass, accordion, bouzouki, mandolin, and
    keyboard,
    Yev O Phe remains free to be distinctively Armenian.
    The band takes great pains to keep the Armenian songs pure, but uses bold
    arrangements and genuine sounds of instruments to introduce exciting twists
    and
    compositions of traditional songs.
    Element Band first captured the attention of audiences with their performance
    at the John Anson Ford Theatre in May 2005, as the opening act for the French
    gypsy band Bratsch. They later opened for the legendary Demis Roussos at the
    Kodak Theater in November 2005.
    Element Band members include Ara Dabandjian (arrangements, keyboards,
    classical guitar, accordion, string instruments), Saro Koujakian (songwriter,
    vocals, guitar), Gars Sherbetdjian (vocals), Shant Mahserejian (violin), and
    Jeremy Millado (bass).

    Yev O Phe

    During the Middle Ages, as a result of greater and more enduring contact
    between Armenia and the West, the 36-letter Armenian alphabet incorporated two
    additional letters, o and phe, to better reproduce the sounds of European
    tongues--all the while, needless to say, remaining utterly Armenian. As a
    result, the modern Armenian alphabet can almost perfectly replicate the
    pronunciations of various languages.
    So it is with Element's Armenian compositions that incorporate the sounds of
    Europe and the Mediterranean, while remaining untethered, simply free... to be
    Armenian--uniquely.
    Yev O Phe will be available on March 19 at www.cdrama.com, www.amazon.com,
    www.cdbaby.com, and at a store near you.

    13) Critics' Forum: Visual Arts

    Of Man and Nature, Layers and Fragments: The Art of Vasken Brudian

    By Ara Oshagan

    Vasken Brudian is an architect and artist. He has held one solo exhibition,
    but his work has been part of many group shows across the country over the
    past
    few years. After a long hiatus, Brudian has returned to the art scene with
    brand new work and the publication of a monograph titled, "Paintings and
    Collages: Towards a New Aesthetics." In conjunction with this publication,
    Brudian's work will be on display in a solo exhibit at the Harvest Gallery in
    Glendale, from March 24 to April 2.
    Brudian's work draws together a wide array of concepts and ideas and
    employs a
    plethora of media: from architectural drawings, paint, acrylic and ink, to
    photography, alphanumeric texts, philosophical writings, poetry, literature,
    and essays by well-known writers. And complementing his range, the sizes of
    his
    works also vary from the very intimate to ones over 20 feet in length. His
    work
    is expansive and inter-disciplinary and does not lend itself to easy
    categorization. It attempts to strike a difficult and delicate balance of
    form,
    color, and concept.
    Brudian is best known for his "architectural paintings"though these two words
    are not nearly sufficient to describe what this work is. These "paintings" are
    the product of a process that combines free-hand painting (the paint and
    brush)
    with modern technology-based methods (the computer and plotter). Paint and
    pencil is used to begin a painting on a surface, typically mylar. Then, after
    it is dry, architectural forms (everything from lines to beams to numbers to
    sections of buildings and stairways) are drawn over it with a large-scale
    plotter. Then more paint is added, then more plotting. This process is
    repeated
    several times, layer upon layer, until a dense and multi-storied canvas
    emerges. Obliteration is used as a tool of construction here. Each layer fully
    or partially obliterates the one before it. It obliterates and also fuses into
    it and builds on top of itconstructing a painting in the same way one
    constructs a building, perhaps. Technology is inherent to the creation of
    these
    worksthey cannot be conceived or made without the use of computer technology.
    The end result of this process is that paint and architectural fragments are
    held in tension, the fierce linearity of bits and bytes tussle with the
    free-flow of the hand, instinct is interwoven with technology. Are the two
    fusing or clashing? This is a question that is raised by Brudian over and over
    again.
    In his monograph, Brudian includes some of this earlier work but also adds a
    host of new work, some of it continuing in the vein of architectural painting
    and some of it departing from it completely. The new work takes its
    inspiration
    from various literary works, poems, and essays. These fragmentary textual
    references are a strong presence, and they also serve as platform on which
    Brudian develops his explorations of various themes. This series also
    introduces photographic images, mainly landscapes. And although they are at
    times altered, their essential photographic quality is retained. In the new
    work, these large natural landscapes are fragmented and altered and then
    juxtaposed with fragmentary texts or abstractions or architectural paintings.
    Nature, as a concept, makes itself known.
    Where the landscape photograph is brought together with poetic fragments, the
    result is overtly and simply emotional. "The Caged Bird"which combines a
    scenic
    landscape photograph cast to red with Maya Angelou's verse about a bird
    singing
    of freedomis idyllic in its presentation of nature and the bird's romantic
    musings about freedom. "Two Butterflies," which presents a very similar
    idyllic
    and idealized scene of nature, adds poetry by Emily Dickinson about waltzing
    butterflies. It is nearly impossible to not imagine butterflies waltzing in
    those trees or to not see the flight of a bird. These works are like reveries,
    simple invitations to stop and contemplate nature, to bathe in the serenity
    and
    emotional flow of verse and landscape.
    It's quite a leap from these pieces to the much more challenging and
    compelling ones that bring together nature and man via architecture and
    technology. This work is a direct continuation of Brudian's architectural
    paintings but extends their reach significantly. While the earlier work was
    based on a process of layering and melding of diverse forms, Brudian's new
    work
    begins with a clash, a conflict, but goes furtherthat is, it turns in on
    itself. In his best work, Brudian tiptoes along the razor-sharp edge between
    man and nature, conflict and harmony, instinct and technology.
    These larger canvases are composed of two totally distinct and disparate
    partsa color-washed photographic scene of nature on one side and a
    Brudian-style architectural painting on the other. The works are juxtaposed
    and
    placed next to each other and forced to inhabit the same frame. The two sides
    of the frame are pitted against each other, and while in one moment they are
    clashing and tussling, in the next they suddenly seem to flow together in a
    strange harmony.
    The best example of this is "/Twisting the Separatix/," where underneath a
    serene row of upright trees (cast to blue) mad architectural forms crisscross.
    At first, it seems the ground ends and underneath the soil, architecture and
    art begin, i.e. manthe dividing line, the front is demarcated, the trenches
    are
    dug. But then, those architectural lines and forms begin to echo strange
    rootscold, hard rootsthat seem to feed the trees themselves, and suddenly the
    two parts of the canvas flow into each other, give and take from each other.
    Nature and man are at war, yes, but also at peace and perhaps even nurturing
    one another.
    The work, at its best, is a constantly shifting perspective, asking and
    answering and suddenly losing hold of the answer and questioning again. The
    effect is thought-provoking and inquisitive: are the two sides clashing or
    complementing each other? What is the relationship between the natural and the
    man-made? These are the critical questions Brudian poses in his work.
    Brudian's monograph is a bold attempt at embracing a plethora of diverse and
    difficult concepts, using nearly as many diverse media. In his best pieces, he
    manages to strike a delicate balance between a host of extremesideas, forms,
    and colors, all pulling in different directions. Brudian's reentry into the
    art
    world is refreshing and welcome.

    Ara Oshagan has degrees in Physics and English Literature from UCLA and a
    degree in Geophysics from UC Berkeley. He used to be a scientist and now is a
    photographer. But everything still comes from Literature.
    You can reach him or any of the other contributors to Critics' Forum at
    [email protected]. This and all other articles published in this
    series
    are available online at www.criticsforum.org. To sign up for a weekly
    electronic version of new articles, go to www.criticsforum.org/join. Critics'
    Forum is a group created to discuss issues relating to Armenian art and
    culture
    in the diaspora.

    All subscription inquiries and changes must be made through the proper carrier
    and not Asbarez Online. ASBAREZ ONLINE does not transmit address changes and
    subscription requests.
    (c) 2006 ASBAREZ ONLINE. All Rights Reserved.

    ASBAREZ provides this news service to ARMENIAN NEWS NETWORK members for
    academic research or personal use only and may not be reproduced in or through
    mass media outlets.

    --Boundary_(ID_jwqj3O+APTY7OLnOXyXc4Q)--
Working...
X