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ISTANBUL: Sarkis Zabunyan enhances art space with own `fingerprints'

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  • ISTANBUL: Sarkis Zabunyan enhances art space with own `fingerprints'

    Sunday's Zaman, Turkey
    March 21 2010

    Sarkis Zabunyan enhances art space with his own `fingerprints' in `Opus'

    `Opus,' the newest collection of works by contemporary artist Sarkis
    Zabunyan, is on view until April 10 at Galerist in Ä°stanbul.
    `I rebel with love, and I still have so much love to give them,' says
    Sarkis Zabunyan, an influential and leading Turkish contemporary
    artist, explaining his approach to the architectural structures that
    have become the masterpieces -- the magnum opuses -- of various
    civilizations.

    As Zabunyan carries on his own struggle to make art live and breathe
    and as he celebrates his 50th year in a career in art, which can be
    said to have started with his first exhibition at the Ä°stanbul Art
    Gallery in 1960, he invites people to rediscover the existence of the
    architectural structures through his unique interpretation, titled
    `Opus' and currently on view at Galerist in Ä°stanbul's Galatasaray
    quarter.

    The exhibition comprises a range of the artist's works that include
    large paintings based on architectural plans of historic structures
    and his neon light installations, created for the occasion and
    displayed for the first time.

    Music and interpretation

    `I've been interpreting all the works that I've been doing since
    1975,' the 72-year-old artist explains in an interview with Sunday's
    Zaman. `When an installation or a work of mine goes somewhere, it
    takes all the interpretations with it because works don't want to
    cease anywhere and they require to be continuously interpreted.'

    `I call this the `prize of war',' Zabunyan says, explaining what he
    understands from interpreting and his consideration of art as a living
    entity. `I recognized this when I was in Berlin. You go to a museum
    and enter, for example, a hall where African statues are on exhibit,
    and in another hall you see statues from the North Pole. One was born
    in minus 40 degrees Celsius, while the other was born in 40 degrees
    Celsius, and both have now been frozen at 20 degrees. You take these
    works and capture them, and there remains only the image where the
    living aspect of the work dies. My war is against this.'

    `In Turkey, we don't have any exhibitions created inside museums,'
    Zabunyan says, talking about the approach of museums and art centers
    while explaining his intentions in his previous exhibition, `Site,'
    which was displayed at Ä°stanbul Modern. `Museums have always taken
    exhibitions as a whole and put them in their halls, leaving them
    motionless. That is not an exhibition for me. An exhibition is born in
    the space [it is displayed at], and I believe that museums should
    create exhibitions.'

    `And in this process, the interpretation is revealed spontaneously
    just as in the interpretation of musical works. A song can be
    interpreted, and there are partitions in music that are realized in a
    different way by every musician. Some musicians perform the
    compositions of certain composers better because they either feel very
    close to that music or they analyze them better. The same holds true
    for art. I consider plans as partitions and I'm trying to perform them
    with my hands.'

    In his exhibit, Zabunyan also uses watercolor applied with his own
    fingertips on paper. `I used a new medium for the interpretation,' he
    says. `I use the prints left by my fingertips just like musical notes.
    And in every plan the way I touch changes, too. I learn how to stroke
    and I begin to summarize. This is the same in music. There are some
    orchestra conductors who summarize the whole partitions and, just like
    that, I began to perform my works like a musical partition.'

    With the enchanting addition of the artist's own `fingerprints,'
    Zabunyan takes the audience to the world of architectural plans, from
    architect Sinan's Selimiye Mosque and Atik-i Valide Mosque to other
    examples of Ottoman architecture, such as the Rumeli Fortress and the
    Ulu Mosque as well as the most significant figures of modern
    architecture, such as the Cathedral of Le Corbusier in Ronchamp,
    Libeskind's Jewish Museum in Berlin and the Parliament Social Complex
    in Bangladesh by Louis Khan. Zabunyan expanded the range of his works
    with his reinterpretation of the Ryoanji Temple in Japan and the
    Ajanta Caves in India.

    `This is the plan of the Hagia Sophia of 1453,' notes Zabunyan,
    explaining that the later version of the plan is quite intricate due
    to the additional structures built during the Ottoman period. `But I
    guess I will work and try to interpret that plan one day,' he says.
    `How did Ottoman architecture touch this structure? I have to observe
    it very carefully because there are two different architectural styles
    interpenetrating. But I have not solved this yet. I'm working on it,
    and I will do it one day.'

    Magnum opus

    Even though the architectural plans on view at the exhibition are from
    very different places and cultures, there are some points in common
    among these structures for Zabunyan. `They are all spaces or plans
    which enrich me and influence me a lot,' Zabunyan says and asks: `Why
    does an architectural structure become a masterpiece? Why do you want
    to go and see these places continuously? And why do you want to leave
    some places immediately? Because these places are consumed in 30
    seconds, and you feel this. For example, when you examine the plan of
    the cathedral of Le Corbusier, you see that it is like a signature.
    And this brought to my mind the Rumeli Fortress. And so they began to
    intersect in my mind.

    `There are many religious structures in this exhibition, but this was
    not something I intended to do,' Zabunyan notes. `There aren't many
    civil structures in this exhibition. This also reveals the analysis of
    the concept of sacred. I'm not searching for the relationship between
    the sacredness of art and of religion; rather, I believe an artwork
    has sacredness inherent in itself.' In this respect, Zabunyan does not
    discriminate between religions; there are monuments belonging to the
    Jews, the Christians, the Muslims and the Buddhists. `There is always
    dialogue between cultures,' says Zabunyan, who has had an
    intercultural influence in his own background. `Even though my family
    is Gregorian Armenian, they sent me to Catholic school so that I could
    learn French,' says Zabunyan. `But I couldn't embrace that culture.
    After some time, you begin to realize where and how to nurture
    yourself. For example, when you go to the Hagia Sophia, there's a fear
    because there is darkness when you enter; you can't even see yourself.
    A mosque is very different. For instance, you feel yourself in the
    Selimiye; that huge dome doesn't scare you, and I can work very well
    there,' Zabunyan says about the Selimiye Mosque, where he has his
    unique rituals, such as going there every year and observing the
    mosque being washed under the daylight right at 9 at 12 o'clock. `But,
    I can't do this for some places because some plans in this exhibition
    have never been built,' he concludes.

    The common ground among the architectural structures is reflected in
    the neon writing as well in one which expresses this character in the
    clearest way: that of `Sinan Kahn.' `There's a vast silence both in
    Sinan and Kahn, and a voice,' says Zabunyan. `They both have an
    impression as if they were raised out of the soil. Kahn was an
    American Jew, and he realized his monumental works in India and Dhaka.
    I was so fascinated.'

    One of the structures that influenced Zabunyan the most is the
    Mütevekkiliye Mosque in Samara. `I don't know the architect of the
    mosque,' says Zabunyan, `but ¦ it is unbelievable. It is such a modern
    structure, just like minimalist art. A mathematical plan was employed
    in its [design, made] in the eighth century. It was impossible for
    this plan not to influence me.'

    The exhibition `Opus' is on display until April 10. In addition to
    another solo exhibit at the Centre Georges Pompidou in France, the
    artist is now working on his future exhibitions to be shown at the
    Museum of Contemporary Art in Geneva and the Yapı Kredi Kazım TaÅ?kent
    Art Gallery in Ä°stanbul.



    21 March 2010, Sunday
    HATÄ°CE AHSEN UTKU Ä°STANBUL

    http://www.sundayszaman.com/s unday/detaylar.do?load=detay&link4948

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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