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'I Am A Blender': Vahe Berberian On Coffee, Art And Life

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  • 'I Am A Blender': Vahe Berberian On Coffee, Art And Life

    'I AM A BLENDER': VAHE BERBERIAN ON COFFEE, ART AND LIFE

    epress.am
    10.06.2011

    US-based actor, comedian, artist and playwright Vahe Berberian sees
    himself as a blender. "Whatever happens to me goes in that blender and
    whatever comes out in my art is the mixture of all that happens to me."

    "People ask me what does this painting mean? It's impossible for me
    to describe. Whatever goes in that blender, it's the mix of all that
    comes out," he added.

    Berberian talked about his art and what it means to be an artist
    at a public forum organized by Civilitas Foundation at Moscow House
    on Thursday.

    On Coffee:

    The much-loved comedian, who mainly took questions from the floor,
    opened the forum with a story. A friend of his, having recently
    returned from a trip to Indonesia, gave him a gift of world-famous
    Sumatra coffee, or Kopi Luwak. Berberian described how a small animal
    (the Asian Palm Civet) knows how to select the best berries of this
    coffee. After the civet eats the coffee berries and digests them,
    it defecates, with the beans keeping their shape. The actual coffee
    is harvested by gathering the berries from the civet's fecal matter;
    then the beans, of course, are washed, dried, roasted and brewed.

    Berberian shared this story because he wanted to make an analogy
    between the Asian Palm Civet and artists.

    "For the luwak's [sic] skill is in searching for the best berries and
    for artists, art is the process, not the end product itself," he said.

    "This is very interesting for me."

    On Art:

    An audience member opined that he doesn't see the development of art
    in Armenia the same way as it was developed and encouraged in the
    past. "What is the artist's role in society? Is art for the sake of
    art, or for the people and their future?" he asked.

    "I don't think an artist has to teach, to be a teacher - I see
    self-conceit or arrogance in that," Berberian responded. "An artist
    is an artist. His profession is his art. He can share his art,
    but not in a didactic way. This is one of the difficulties I see,
    especially in Armenia."

    Speaking about the artist's role in society, he drew on his experience
    as a comedian, saying that the comic has an obligation to say something
    wise on stage, and in general, not to "feed garbage" to the public
    because that's what they want.

    As for the development of art in Armenia, Berberian began by
    saying he's not an optimist and that he's concerned that the entire
    understanding of entertainment comes from the West ("Madonna, Lady
    Gaga, etc"), but "fortunately I see in youth a certain drive to find
    their identity."

    On Life (and Life Outside of Facebook):

    The artist and comedian focused a lot on how much people consume,
    how much society is force-fed a lot of garbage ("especially in the
    West") and how much this takes up space in our brains. The comedian
    also criticized Facebook, which he considers to be full of useless
    information.

    "For example, why am I interested in [the fact that] 52 people liked
    someone else's Las Vegas photos on Facebook? I don't even know that
    other person," he said.

    "The work of separating the garbage is much more difficult now,
    everywhere," he surmised.

    But the most vivid description of life Berberian gave by again drawing
    on analogies and coming back to art:

    "Life is like a cocktail party you've gone to: there are different
    types of drinks and you begin to drink. That 1 cup of vodka is your
    mother's death, those 2 cups of beer are your close friend's death,
    and the martini is that girl who writes you letters occasionally.

    "An artist creates his art by sticking his finger down his throat and
    throwing that all up. You do that till you can no longer get anything
    out. And then go back and continue drinking because you can't not."

    Photo of artist (from artist's own website & Facebook page) by
    Christiane Georgi.


    From: Baghdasarian
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