Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Atom Egoyan explores genocide in new art exhibit

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

  • Atom Egoyan explores genocide in new art exhibit

    Atom Egoyan explores genocide in new art exhibit

    CTV Toronto
    June 05, 2009

    By CTV.ca News Staff

    Atom Egoyan has two Oscar nominations and a Cannes Film Festival award.
    But his latest project, "Remains to Be Seen," is a new art exhibition
    showing in Toronto.

    Produced under the umbrella of The International Institute for Genocide
    and Human Rights Studies in Toronto, the multi-media show hopes to raise
    the public's awareness about genocide.

    Featuring work from 16 artists across North America, Egoyan says the
    show at Toronto's Lennox Contemporary gets to the core of what human
    genocide really means.

    "It's one thing that a journalist's piece can do. But an artist's work
    can pierce the heart in a different way," says Egoyan, 48.

    "In the case of genocide there's been such a history of denial about
    that," the Canadian director told Canada AM today.

    Delving into the subject matter in 2002's "Ararat," Egoyan's movie was
    loosely based on the Siege of Van during the Armenian Genocide of the
    early 20th century, an event that is denied by the government of Turkey.

    That film explored the specific impact of that historical event. It also
    examined the nature of truth and its representation through art.

    As Egoyan says of "Ararat," "I wasn't so much talking about the historic
    event, but rather how that denial had created a transmission of trauma
    from one generation to another."

    That tragedy holds deep personal meaning for Egoyan and his wife,
    actress Arsinée Khanjian

    The pair are supporters of The Zoryan Institute of Canada, Inc.

    Together with The Zoryan Institute for Contemporary Armenian Research
    and Documentation in Cambridge, Mass., this non-profit research
    institute is devoted to scholarly research that documents, studies, and
    disseminates material related to the life of the Armenian people in the
    recent past and the present within the context of larger world affairs.

    In 2003, the couple launched the "Atom Egoyan and Arsinée Khanjian Fund"
    to support the Zoryan Institute's Genocide and Human Rights University
    Program.

    The after-effects of genocide are clearly evidenced in the works by
    Ulysses Castellanos, Joyce Lau, Steven Loft, Katie Pretti, Shannon
    Scully, Veronika Szkudlarek, Bill Wolff and Arie Galles.

    "It's a non-propagandistic kind of show," says artist and educator
    Galles, who was born in 1944 in Uzbekistan and raised in Poland.

    Galles's contributions to this show are based on aerial photography
    taken during the Second World War. But each artist's entry, he says,
    explores the intensity of what it is to be involved or witness a genocide.

    "These works have incredible strength," says Galles, who appeared with
    Egoyan on Canada AM. "Any genocide does not happen in a Martian
    landscape. It happens on this earth. The horror is that humanity can
    perpetrate it on this incredibly beautiful blue marble we are flying on."

    On display until June 7, "Remains to Be Seen," says Egoyan "Is both open
    to interpretation but able to be emotionally devastating."


    PHOTO CAPTION: Acclaimed Canadian filmmaker Atom Egoyan appears on CTV's
    Canada AM, Friday, June 5, 2009.

    http://toronto.ctv.ca/servlet/an/local/CTVN ews/20090605/atom_egoyan_050609/20090605?hub=Toron toNewHome
Working...
X