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Arto Chakmakjian In Armenia, Once Again

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  • Arto Chakmakjian In Armenia, Once Again

    ARTO CHAKMAKJIAN IN ARMENIA, ONCE AGAIN

    http://www.reporter.am/go/article/2009-10-1 6-arto-chakmakjian-in-armenia-once-again
    Friday October 16, 2009

    The Naregatsi Art Institute in Yerevan hosted world-renowned sculptor
    Arto Chakmakjian in Yerevan on October 16. Art lovers had the chance
    to meet with the sculptor and discuss his work.

    Arto Chakmakjian was born in Egypt in 1933. His father owned a
    bookstore and his grandfather was a sculptor. At the age of 12, the
    young Arto starts experimenting with clay, which would later help
    define the rest of his life.

    In 1948, the Chakmakjian family moves to Soviet Armenia during the
    Great Repatriation, when almost 100,000 Armenians from around the
    world repatriated to Armenia. He immediately enrolls at the Terlemezian
    Art Institute where he studies sculpting and painting.

    The aspiring artist went on to become a researcher at the Academy
    of Arts and Sciences while continually and consistently creating
    sculptures that won international recognition.

    Arto Chakmakjian was one of the first Armenian artists to try and
    break through rigid ideological concepts of social realism and tried to
    introduce news styles in sculpting. For this reason, he was persecuted
    by Soviet authorities.

    In 1975, the sculptor, heartbroken moves with his family to Montreal,
    Canada. He is now a member of the L'Academie des Beax Arts and has
    created many notable sculptures and received many awards for his
    creations.

    Today, he occasionally returns to the homeland.

    The "Naregatsi" Art Institute, incorporated in 2002 in Armenia, is
    a non-profit organization dedicated to serving Armenia's existing
    cultural heritage through supporting Armenian contemporary artists
    and creating a forum in which the spirit of art and the common voice
    can resonate freely.

    By nurturing the expression of human creativity and documenting
    artistic accomplishments, Naregatsi Art Institute seeks to enrich the
    understanding and the exposure of Armenian art today, the ancestry
    from which this art has stemmed, and the future which creativity,
    social consciousness, and collaborative energy will lead to.

    Naregatsi Art Institute (NAI) is dedicated to serving the spirit
    of art, and in doing so sets forth objectives and goals based upon
    nobility and benevolence found at the heart of the artistic aim.
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