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Chicago Artist Marks Centennial Of Armenian Killings With Guernica-S

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  • Chicago Artist Marks Centennial Of Armenian Killings With Guernica-S

    CHICAGO ARTIST MARKS CENTENNIAL OF ARMENIAN KILLINGS WITH GUERNICA-SIZE WORK

    Reuters
    March 23 2015

    Mon Mar 23, 2015 9:17pm EDT

    By Tracy Rucinski

    CHICAGO (Reuters) - One hundred years after the mass killing of
    Armenians, a Chicago artist has created a monumental painting to
    honor the victims and celebrate a culture that nearly vanished.

    The 1915 massacre of Armenians by Ottoman troops became a defining
    element of Armenian national identity.

    Seeking to promote awareness of the tragedy and Armenian culture,
    Chicago-based artist Jackie Kazarian embarked on a painting of enormous
    scale in an endeavor called Project 1915.

    The painting, which Kazarian has titled Armenia (Hayastan), will be
    displayed for the first time in Chicago's Mana Contemporary gallery
    from April 17 to May 29.

    The work is a semi-abstract landscape splashed with bold images and
    text from ancient Armenian maps and church architecture, united by
    a pattern of needle lace by Kazarian's Armenian-born grandmother and
    with colors and symbols from illuminated manuscripts.

    Kazarian, who has Armenian roots, drew on Pablo Picasso's epic painting
    Guernica, which depicts the horror of a northern Spanish village's
    bombing during Spain's civil war, for her painting.

    It is the same size as Guernica at 11.5 feet by 26 feet.

    "No one would have known what happened in Guernica if it wasn't for
    that painting," Kazarian said.

    The nature and scale of the killings of Armenians by Ottoman forces
    during World War One remain highly contentious.

    While a number of countries define the massacres as genocide and
    while Turkey accepts that many Armenians died in partisan fighting,
    the Turkish government denies that up to 1.5 million were killed and
    that it was an act of genocide.

    Last year, Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan made unprecedented
    condolences to the grandchildren of Armenians killed at the time, but
    the legacy remains an obstacle to reviving frozen relations between
    Turkey and neighboring Armenia, a small former Soviet territory.

    In Kazarian's painting, two open hands span the bottom corners, as if
    holding up the work and an entire culture. It is a gesture Kazarian
    said she remembered her grandmother often using.

    "This is a very visceral, emotional project. But like any art that
    references a painful past, it is about remembering, healing and
    educating ourselves to make a better world," Kazarian said.

    After its Chicago exhibition, the painting will be displayed at
    universities and galleries across the United States and the world.

    (Editing by Fiona Ortiz, Richard Chang and Peter Cooney)

    http://ca.reuters.com/article/entertainmentNews/idCAKBN0MJ27O20150324?sp=true

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