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Arthur Pinajian At The Zorayan Museum

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  • Arthur Pinajian At The Zorayan Museum

    ARTHUR PINAJIAN AT THE ZORAYAN MUSEUM

    "The unlikely discovery that
    has rocked the art world."

    -ABC's "Good Morning America" 03/10/13

    May 1 - 3, 2013
    A special evening honoring
    ARTHUR PINAJIAN
    (1914-1999)
    over 50 oil paintings
    No. 4687. Untitled, 1960. Oil on canvas, 29 x 40 inche

    "He can be ranked among the best artists of his era."

    "He pursued his goals in isolation with the single-minded focus of a
    Gauguin or Cezanne."

    -Professor William Innes Homer

    Untitled, 24"x30" oil on canvas

    OPENING RECEPTION
    WEDNESDAY, MAY 1, 2013
    7:00 P.M. - 10:00 pm

    EXHIBIT RUNS THROUGH MAY 3, 2013
    THURSDAY & FRIDAY 1:00 - 9:00 P.M.

    Under the Patronage of Diocesan Benefactors
    Mr. & Mrs. Gerald and Patricia Turpanjian

    AT
    ZORAYAN MUSEUM
    3325 N. Glenoaks Blvd., Burbank, CA 91504
    (818) 558-7474

    Please contact Linda Stepanian, Director of Stephanie's Gallery and
    Representative of the Pinajian Estate Collection at
    (818) 790-4905
    [email protected]

    IMPORTANT LINKS:

    New York Times
    http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/09/arts/design/saved-from-obscurity-arthur-pinajians-paintings-shown-in-gallery.html?_r=0

    ABC NEWS
    http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/video/arthur-pinajian-art-fortune-found-garage-york-man-18682520

    HUFFPOST ARTS & CULTURE
    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/03/07/arthur-pinajian-art-in-garage-worth-30-million_n_2827395.html

    LOS ANGELES TIMES-VALLEY SUN
    http://www.lacanadaonline.com/entertainment/tsn-vsl-0320-armenian-american-painter-arthur-pinajian-being-shown-and-sold-locally,0,6543964.story

    Rediscovered
    MASTERS

    "THE UNLIKELY DISCOVERY THAT HAS ROCKED THE ART WORLD"
    Burbank, CA: A special art exhibition, "The Pinajian Discovery,"
    will open on Wednesday, May 1st and run through Friday, May 3rd at the
    Zorayan Museum in the Cathedral of the Western Diocese of the Armenian
    Church. The paintings have been selected from artist's estate
    collection by Linda Stepanian, Director of Stephanie's Art Gallery, in
    cooperation with the Zorayan Museum Committee.

    In 2010 Stepanian featured the first Pinajian exhibition at the
    Zorayan Museum to much acclaim. Then in March 2013 the Pinajian
    extraordinary story exploded when the collection made its debut New
    York City. National and international press reports about the
    discoveryof Arthur Pinajian - an important artist whose life's work
    had been relegated to the garbage but rescued just in time - resulted
    in a media blitz. On ABC's "Good Morning America" it was featured as
    "the unlikely discovery that has rocked the art world."

    http://gma.yahoo.com/video/gma-york-man-finds-30-080000337.html
    Hundreds of other news outlets around the globe ran the story,
    including a major piece byThe New York Times
    http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/09/arts/design/saved-from-obscurity-arthur-pinajians-paintings-shown-in-gallery.html
    and Los Angeles Times-Valley Sun
    http://www.lacanadaonline.com/entertainment/tsn-vsl-0320-armenian-american-painter-arthur-pinajian-being-shown-and-sold-locally,0,6543964.story

    Art historians nationwide are still expressing astonishment that works
    of such caliber could have remained completely unknown. Many major
    private collectors have already purchased the paintings and at least
    six are headed to museums through Stephanie's Gallery. Art historian
    Peter Hastings Falk, curator of the collection, explains that the
    artist was a hermit his entire life. After Pinajian's death in 1999,
    five decades of accumulated artwork were found stacked up in the
    one-car garage and attic of the Bellport, Long Island, cottage he
    shared with his sister. He had left instructions for his collection to
    be discarded in the town dump. At the last moment an artist cousin
    refused to let the garbage truck haul away the paintings. Instead,
    Professor William Innes Homer [1929-2012], then dean of American art
    historians, was asked to examine the life's work of the unknown artist
    and was stunned by what he found: a large body of extraordinary
    abstract landscape and figurative paintings by a highly gifted artist
    who was completely unknown in his lifetime. Homer urged Falk to head
    the project. Soon a team of art historians was conducting research
    into the life and art of Arthur Pinajian.

    As a boy growing up in an Armenian community in West Hoboken, N.J.,
    Pinajian was a completely self-trained cartoonist. During the Great
    Depression he became one of the pioneers in a new medium: the comic
    book. In 1940 he created "Madam Fatal," the first cross-dressing
    superhero, for Crack Comics. After World War II, he enrolled at the
    Art Students League in Woodstock, N.Y. Although he knew a number of
    the New York Abstract Expressionists, such as Franz Kline and Philip
    Guston, he was largely reclusive. For 22 years his life revolved
    around Woodstock while he passionately pursued his painting. His
    admirable poetic color combinations are linked to the tonalities of
    his better-known fellow Armenian, Arshile Gorky [ca.1904-1948]. Late
    in life, he moved with his sister to Bellport. There, in a tiny
    bedroom-studio he strived for visual and spiritual conclusions
    regarding flatness and color that parallel the goals of the Abstract
    Expressionists.

    The exhibition is accompanied by a 128-page hardcover book with essays
    by art historians Falk,
    Richard J. Boyle, and the late William Innes Homer; art critic John
    Perreault; conservator Jonathan Sherman; bestselling author Lawrence
    E. Joseph, owner of the collection; and, Pinajian's artist-cousin,
    Peter Najarian. The collective essays present one of the most
    compelling discoveries in the history of 20th-century American art.

    Dr. Homer writes: "Even though Pinajian was a creative force to be
    reckoned with, during his lifetime he rarely exhibited or sold his
    paintings. Instead, he pursued his goals in isolation with the
    single-minded focus of a Gauguin or Cezanne, refusing to give up in
    the face of public indifference. In his later years he could be
    compared to a lone researcher in a laboratory pursuing knowledge for
    its own sake. His exhaustive diaries and art notes make it clear that
    he dedicated all of his days to his art. He was passionate and
    unequivocally committed."

    An Intriguing Literary Connection
    It is interesting to note the astonishing resemblance between Pinajian
    and the hero in Kurt Vonnegut's Bluebeard: The Autobiography of Rabo
    Karabekian, a 1987 novel about an eccentric painter. Both Pinajian and
    Karabekian, a.k.a. Bluebeard, were Armenian-Americans, raised by
    parents who survived the 1915 Turkish genocide of approximately one
    million men, women and children who then made their way to the United
    States where they raised their families during the Great Depression.

    Both men then served with the United States Army during World War II
    in the European theater, each earning a host of ribbons and medals,
    including the Bronze Star. After the war, both abandoned their careers
    as illustrators for higher artistic pursuits, joined the Art Students
    League in New York, and hung out with the Abstract Expressionists at
    the Cedar Tavern in Greenwich Village. Both eventually moved to Long
    Island's East End near the ocean, where they kept their paintings
    tightly locked away in a garage.

    "Ultimately Pinajian's work reflects the soul of a flawed, yet
    brilliant, artistic genius. When he hits the mark, especially in his
    abstractions, he can be ranked among the best artists of his era . . .

    His life is, above all, a model for those who feel that they must
    follow their calling despite a lack of public acceptance," concluded
    Dr. Homer.

    ABOUT PETER HASTINGS FALK AND REDISCOVERED MASTERS

    "Call me the Peter Finch of the art world," says Peter Hastings Falk,
    referring to the actor's memorable rant "I'm as mad as hell and I'm
    not going to take it any more!" in the film Network. "I'm angry that
    art history and the art market have proven to be ruthlessly forgetful.

    With Rediscovered Masters my mission is to illuminate excellent late
    career artists and those deceased who, for various reasons, have not
    expanded or sustained the exposure they deserve. No one embodies this
    more than Arthur Pinajian."

    According to Falk, Rediscovered Masters will provide a singular and
    valuable service for exhibition planners, connecting museum curators,
    gallerists, historians and critics with important, gifted artists
    about whom tastemakers might not be aware. Admission is by invitation
    only. Once an artist is admitted they are represented online with a
    thematic exhibition, a critical biography and other essays. Artists
    are identified through an Art Advisory Board composed of a cadre of
    museum directors and curators, art gallery owners, and other art
    professionals. The Senior Advisor is Peter Selz, former Curator of
    Paintings at The Museum of Modern Art and founder of the Berkeley Art
    Museum.

    Opening eyes while fighting ageism, Rediscovered Masters expands upon
    Falk's 37 years of identifying and promoting excellent late-career
    artists and artist estate collections. Falk is author and publisher
    of what has long been regarded as the most exhaustive biographical
    dictionary on American art, Who Was Who in American Art, a
    three-volume opus that won the Wittenborn Award for the Best Art
    Reference Book published in North America, awarded by the Art
    Libraries Society. Falk also pioneered the documentation of art
    auction prices with his massive annual Art Price Index International
    and that data is now online at Artprice.com, the leader in art market
    information.

    Location:
    The Zorayan Museum at the Cathedral of the Western Diocese of The
    Armenian Church
    3325 N. Glenoaks Blvd.

    Burbank, CA 91504
    (818) 558-7474

    Hours:
    Wednesday May 1, 7:00 PM to 10:00 PM
    Thursday and Friday 1:00 PM to 9:00 PM.

    Contact:
    Linda Stepanian, Director of Stephanie's Gallery and Representative of
    the Pinajian Estate Collection at
    [email protected]; (818) 790-4905
    stephaniesartgallery.com
    (High-resolution jpeg images are available upon request.)

    STEPHANIE'S ART GALLERY, INC
    466 Foothill Blvd.

    La Canada, CA 91011
    (818) 790-4905

    www.stephaniesartgallery.com

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