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From Close Up – Shariss

You are invited to the opening of Shariss’s solo exhibition titled “From Close Up”.

Date: October 16, 4:00 PM
The exhibition will run until October 31.

From Close Up
Shariss’s approach is photographic. He captures moments from daily urban and natural scenes in France, Armenia, and Italy, where he intermittently resides. Spontaneity is a key aspect of his creative process. The image catches his eye, which he documents with a cell phone, and then revisits with his analog Nikon camera.

Shariss states: “I see beauty in insignificant things… broken objects seem more free. Humanity is imperfect, and what we create is a reflection of that. That is beauty for me.”

His works have a didactic nature, often compelling the viewer to confront images that are difficult to recognize as fragments of reality.

For Shariss, there are two realities: the human and the natural. The first is flawed, while the latter is an unattainable ideal. His goal is not to compare the two but to observe how they infiltrate one another. Are intertwined plant stems pipes? Cracked paint or tree bark? From close up, this is ambiguous. Through black-and-white photography, the artist abstracts his subjects, directing the viewer’s attention to texture, pattern, and form.

Shariss’s visual language of unexpectedly cutting the image, the contrast of form and light, and the use of repetition follow the modernist tradition of Bauhaus, Neues Sehen (New Vision), and American Straight Photography. However, his approach to photography is far from purist. Often, he applies metallic paint to the photographic surface, and at times, he “finishes” his image with drawing. His deliberate choice to print on drawing paper emphasizes the graphic quality of the images and highlights the importance of drawing in his creative practice. The relationship between these two media—photography and drawing—reflects the artist’s dual perception of reality, mechanical lens versus hand-drawn sketch, spontaneous versus conceived.

Regardless of the media choice, Shariss’s creative practice is an exercise in observation. The exhibited works invite the viewer to notice the insignificant, discarded objects, and the unexpected beauty of imperfection.

Anna Gargaryan
Yerevan, September 2021

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“The Bird of the Holy Spirit” – Kristina Oganezz’s Solo Exhibition

The Contemporary Art Museum of Yerevan will host Kristina Oganezz’s solo project “The Bird of the Holy Spirit” from September 30 to October 3. This project is a unique exhibition-campaign that aims to inspire every Christian to recognize God through the Bible and make the New Testament their daily reading book, immersing themselves in faith and devotion to God.

“This idea was born when I asked God, ‘What do You want me to do for You? How can I serve You with the talent You have given me?’ I believe it was the Holy Spirit who inspired me to make this project a reality. The concept involves painting the titles of chapters and verses from the Bible in golden ‘bird letters’ on a black canvas. These letters and symbols are derived from the ancient Armenian alphabet and decorative motifs—’bird letters,'” explains the artist.

Notably, Armenian bird letters and their cultural expressions have been included in UNESCO’s representative list of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity since 2019. For the first time, the public will see not only the bird letters but also bird numerals, a concept created by Kristina Oganezz. These bird numerals will make their debut within the framework of this project, showcasing unique ornaments of Armenian culture.

The exhibition “The Bird of the Holy Spirit” is curated by the renowned art curator and critic Giuseppe Usani d’Escobar.

Born in Armenia, Kristina Oganezz entered the art world at just three years old by attending the Henrik Igityan National Center for Fine Arts. As a talented child, she participated in numerous exhibitions. During her teenage years, she continued painting and later studied graphic design and photography. She has taken private art lessons from well-known Armenian artists to further refine her painting skills. In addition to her art education, she has a background in linguistics and economics.

Kristina Oganezz is a member of the International Association of Artists (Estonia) and an honorary member of the Armenian Union of Artists. She has showcased her work in solo and group exhibitions both in Armenia and internationally. Her artworks are featured in private, state, and museum collections, including the History Museum of Yerevan. In 2020, she received the Frida Kahlo Award in Milan, Italy, for her portrait of Charles Aznavour.

The official opening ceremony of the exhibition will take place on September 30 at 6:30 PM.

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Armenia-France: A Cultural Dialogue

With the support of the Ministry of Education, Science, Culture, and Sport of the Republic of Armenia and the French Embassy in Armenia, and organized by the Contemporary Art Museum of Yerevan, the exhibition titled “Armenia-France: A Cultural Dialogue” will take place from September 25 to October 24, 2021. This event will be part of the European Heritage Days and will be hosted in several locations:

– Gyumri: September 25-28, at the Museum of Popular Architecture, Urban Lifestyle, and National Architecture (Dzitoghtsonts House-Museum). The opening ceremony will be on September 25 at 15:00 and will feature a film about Armenian-French cultural ties and the lives and works of the artists, accompanied by a performance by the “Cadence” musical group (artistic director H. Jaghatsapanian). The exhibition will also include recordings of works by French-Armenian composers and musicians (e.g., Charles Aznavour, Michel Legrand, Jean Garvarentz). Address: Victory Avenue, 47, Gyumri.

– Vanadzor: October 1-4, at the Vanadzor Museum of Fine Arts. The opening ceremony will take place on October 1 at 15:00 and will include a film about Armenian-French cultural relations and the artists’ lives, along with recordings of French-Armenian composers’ works. Address: Tigran Mets Avenue, 52, Vanadzor.

– Yerevan: October 17-24, at the newly opened exhibition hall of the Arno Babajanyan Concert Hall. The opening will be on October 17 at 15:00. Address: Abovyan Street, 2, Yerevan.

A bilingual catalog (Armenian and French) of the exhibition will be published with the support of the French Embassy in Armenia, and its presentation will be held during the opening of the Yerevan exhibition on October 17.

Workshops:

– “Monotype and Mixed Techniques: Creating Together” workshop, led by art historian and painter Lusine Naghdalyan, will be held:
– September 26 at the Museum of Popular Architecture, Urban Lifestyle, and National Architecture (Dzitoghtsonts House-Museum) in Gyumri.
– October 2 at the Vanadzor Museum of Fine Arts.
– Start time: 13:00.

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“Motherland” – Group Exhibition

Motherland
Olga Ganzha (Netherlands)
Veronika Babayan (Netherlands)
Tatevik Ghukasyan (Russia)
masharu (Netherlands)
Curator: Susanna Gyulamian

The exhibition explores the theme of “Motherland” through various interpretations such as Mother Earth, Great Mother, motherhood, heroic mother, homeland, patriotism, citizenship, and nationality. It is a collaborative international project by Veronika Babayan, Olga Ganzha, Tatevik Ghukasyan, and masharu.

The exhibition encourages a critical response to patriarchal pressures in Armenia that expect women and young girls to accept their roles as reproductive instruments, raising sons who will eventually grow up to become soldiers. In this society, women growing up are continuously reminded that their mission is to conceive and give birth to as many Armenian boys as possible. Resistance to this dominant ideology may be perceived as unpatriotic or a refusal to serve the nation’s future.

Although the fear of extinction among Armenians is often justified, women cannot accept that their primary, or even sole, purpose is considered to be gender-selective reproduction. In today’s world, women are no longer defined or validated by their ability to give birth to healthy boys.

Two early feminist authors, Adrienne Rich and Sarah Ruddick, have provided radical views on the historical construction of motherhood (1972-1996). Rich praises motherhood as a means of engaging in anti-war activism, while Ruddick advocates for motherhood as a politics of peace.

Certain discourses link women specifically to the environment due to their traditional social roles as nurturers and caregivers. Some ecofeminist scholars argue that the connection of women to nature is not due to their being female or “feminine,” but because, like nature, they are oppressed by predominantly male forces. Marginalization is evident in gendered language used to describe nature, such as Mother Earth or Mother Nature, and in the language used to describe women. Ecofeminists who think this way believe that these connections highlight socially attributed values associated with “femininity,” such as nurturing, which both women and nature share.

In the Soviet Union context, Mother -Motherland statues, studied by Olga Ganzha in Ukraine, Russia, Georgia, and Armenia, use contemporary representations of “Great Mothers,” associated with fertility, birth, life, and protection. The imagery of Mother Earth as a symbol of unity also recalls soldiers who died defending the “earth” and symbolizes “patriotism” with the entire discourse of power embedded in it, resonating with wars, self-sacrifice, and sanctified violence.

Veronika Babayan uses traditional women’s practices to explore the concept of transgenerational trauma and understand how maternal care functions as a tool for shaping a child’s identity. Her work uses the tradition of making sour lavash as a vessel to circulate evidence of destroyed transgenerational trauma beyond the realm of territory, language, and citizenship.

Based on her research, masharu began to think about Earth as a transient element in the construction of a “world citizen” identity. Following ancient practices, masharu eats the soil of the countries he visits as a means to connect himself with different countries. In a sense, by consuming the edible soils of many countries, he enriches his biological and spiritual composition on the path to becoming a “world citizen.” Thus, the approach of the “Museum of Edible Earth” is connected to a more general narrative of Mother Earth, providing access to all individuals without discrimination.

Tatevik Ghukasyan investigates the collective trauma of the Armenian Genocide through different relationships with Earth—”having land” versus “belonging to the Earth.” While traumatic experience is rooted in the pain of “lost land” and longing for it, the sense of connection to the Earth, the artist believes, can instead become a healing and reconciling tool. Tatevik recounts her journey to Turkey, where she performed a ritual of reuniting with the Earth and reconciling with traumatic events by planting trees and commemorating the victims.

In the context of intercultural dialogues, the artists explore the symbolism of Earth (Land), extending it between the opposing ideas of Motherland and Mother Earth, one for a few and the other for many. The artists question what it means to relate to and care for the Earth in response to the current political climate of ecological crisis and rising nationalism. They then examine the gender of the Earth, relating it to non-patriarchal structures versus exploitation in the capitalist system.


Olga Ganzha (Volgograd, 1981) is a Russian multimedia artist currently living and working in the Netherlands. She holds a Master’s degree in Language and Literature from Volgograd State University (Russia) and a Bachelor’s degree in Graphic Design from the St. Joost Art Academy (Netherlands). Olga now works on independent projects, navigating the boundary between design and art. Her work often seeks balance by linking unrelated elements or different domain elements through an interdisciplinary approach, ritualizing personal memories of history and culture in “artistic” forms.

Olga Ganzha has been a resident artist multiple times and has participated in numerous exhibitions and collaborative projects across Europe, Africa, and former Soviet countries.
www.olgaganzha.nl

Veronika Babayan (Munich, 1994) is an artist, writer, and teacher whose work emerges between Armenia and the Netherlands. She employs a meta-autobiographical approach to study pedagogical types that influence the continuous production of national identity. Addressing motherhood, she works with collective memories to provide alternative explanations compared to widely accepted narratives. By using traditional women’s practices, she highlights the role of feminism in challenging hegemonic authority in patriotic memory. Veronika uncovers common elements, symbols, and signs in conflicting histories, revealing how they might transcend nationalist narratives and create spaces for transnational belonging. Veronika Babayan studied at the Yerevan State Academy of Fine Arts, followed by Willem de Kooning Academy (Rotterdam) and obtained her Master’s degree at Sandberg Institute (Amsterdam) in 2020. She has been a visiting lecturer in Critical Studies at Willem de Kooning Academy and is currently a coordinator of public programs at the Melle Art Institute (Rotterdam). She is working on the publication of her thesis, “Dear Mother: Fluid Mechanisms of Belonging.”
www.veronikababayan.com

Dr. masharu (Moscow, 1984) is a creative with a mathematical background. His projects merge scientific research with personal experience and cultural practice. In 2011, masharu earned his PhD in Mathematical Analysis of Images from Eindhoven University of Technology and completed the Photography Academy of Amsterdam. From 2013-2014, he was a resident at Rijksakademie van Beeldende Kunst (Amsterdam). In 2018, he was an associate artist at the Netherlands Institute for Advanced Study in the Humanities and Social Sciences (NIAS-KNAW). Masharu’s work has been exhibited and published in Australia, Austria, China, Croatia, Cuba, Czech Republic, Denmark, France, Germany, Guatemala, Indonesia, Italy, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Netherlands, Nigeria, Portugal, Russia, South Korea, Spain, Suriname, Sweden, Ukraine, United Kingdom, and the United States, in venues and events such as the African Artists Foundation in Lagos, Spanish Cultural Center in Guatemala City, Design Week Eindhoven, Reditex Gallery (Paramaribo), Jakarta Contemporary Ceramic Biennale (Jakarta), European Ceramic Centre (Oisterwijk), Sustainica in Düsseldorf, Dutch Transnational Festival (Amsterdam), Moscow Contemporary Art Biennale, and Bilbao Maritime Museum.
www.masharu.nl
In 2021, masharu’s “Museum of Edible Earth” project received support from Creative Industries Fund NL, Tijl Fonds, and Prins Bernhard Cultuurfonds.
www.museumofedible.earth
The artist’s practice is supported by the Mondriaan Fund.

Tatevik Ghukasyan (Yerevan, 1984) is an artist, facilitator, embodiment therapist, and coach with a background in human rights and peacebuilding. Born in Armenia and moved to Russia with her family at the age of nine, Tatevik grew up in Moscow and received a Master’s degree in Linguistics and Intercultural Communication, later studying Social Philosophy at the Russian State University for the Humanities. Among other roles, she has taught at universities, coordinated educational, cultural, and peacebuilding projects, and worked with teams and communities on human rights, deep ecology, and embodied conflict resolution. Tatevik is a co-founder of the “On the Edge” project, editor of the documentary book “It Is Possible to Know: Stories of a War” and the film “Immersion Sounds.”
https://refugee.ru/…/kazhdyj-molchit-o-svoem-istorii…/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=37uDKMfqSRs

The exhibition is organized within the framework of the international projects of the “Laboratory of Art and Cultural Studies.”
On September 18, the exhibition is open for visiting from 17:00 to 19:30.
On September 22, from 17:00 to 20:00, there will be a meeting with the artists and a reception.
The working hours of the Contemporary Art Museum of Yerevan are from 11:00 to 18:00.

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Artist Anna Grigoryan’s Experimental Project “Room”

The subject of Anna Grigoryan’s experimental project, titled “Room,” is the physical, psychological, sexual violence, and femicide against women. Although the statistical data and narrative presented in the video are directly related to the realities of Armenia, it is well known that gender-based persecution, various practices of subordination, including physical violence, and the killing of women and girls are pervasive issues around the world. This underscores that the problem remains unresolved and is in desperate need of ongoing discussion and continuous struggle for its complete eradication.

Despite the focus of the video on violence, the artist refrains from using images that depict violence. The report on criminal cases related to the murder of women is paired with bodily figurative elements, staged by the artist as a metaphorical space where the discourse on gender, bodily boundaries, and patriarchal order is revived and recontextualized through artistic expression.

The public presentation of this project has been made possible within the framework of the “Art and Cultural Studies Laboratory” programs, thanks to the support of the Canada Council for the Arts.

After relocating from Armenia to Canada in 2012, Anna Grigoryan completed her studies in Art and Photography at Concordia University (2018). While she began developing her artistic practice in Montreal, she remains committed to the creation and realization of art projects in Armenia. The artist’s conceptual efforts are directed toward socio-economic, individual, and public welfare issues, as well as other politically charged matters.

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Samvel Karapetyan – Days of Remembrance

Invitation to the Exhibition in Memory of Samvel Karapetyan

We invite you to the exhibition dedicated to the memory of Samvel Karapetyan, a monumentologist, historian, folklorist, and cartographer.

Samvel Karapetyan was born on July 30, 1961. He graduated from the Misisak Manushyan Secondary School No. 48 in Yerevan in 1978. Since 1975, he traveled across the territory of the Armenian SSR to study its nature, and from 1978 onwards, he photographed, measured, and described Armenian monuments throughout historical Armenia. Over three decades, he researched and cataloged thousands of examples of historical Armenian architecture. He studied not only the monuments within Armenia but also those located abroad. He authored numerous valuable books and works, including scientific studies on Armenian monuments, historical volumes on Armenian history, as well as separate books and periodicals.

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“European Heritage Days – “The Bunker Art Group”

On September 26-27, 2020, the Contemporary Art Museum will present an online project by “The Bunker Art Group” as part of the European Heritage Days, which this year are held under the theme “Heritage and Education: Lifelong Learning.”

This year, the Contemporary Art Museum in Yerevan was set to celebrate the 30th anniversary of “The Bunker Art Group” with a major exhibition. Due to understandable reasons, the event could not take place, so we are turning to the project in an online format.

The Bunker Art Group is a team of dissenting artists from the former Soviet Union. Their art is as unique as they are as artists. Formed in Soviet Armenia, the group has since become international.

Works by the first generation of “The Bunker Art Group” were valued by art critic Henrik Igitian 30 years ago and were included in the permanent collection of the Contemporary Art Museum in Yerevan, where they continue to be a part of the permanent display.

Today, Bunker continues to expand, opening its doors to new opportunities and new generations. The group now also includes poets, musicians, writers, and more.

The online project features photographs, videos, and interviews that highlight the Soviet, post-Soviet, and contemporary activities of Bunker’s new generation.

Interviews are conducted by artist/curator and Bunker Group member Larisa Pilinski (in Russian).

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 Carlo Montarsolo: Light, Sound, Color 

The Embassy of Italy in Armenia and the Contemporary Art Museum of Yerevan are delighted to invite you to the opening of the solo exhibition “Light, Sound, Color” by renowned Italian artist Carlo Montarsolo (1922-2005).

The works of Italian artist Carlo Montarsolo (1922-2005) will be exhibited at the Contemporary Art Museum in Yerevan from January 15 to February 29. The opening will take place on Wednesday, January 15, at 16:00.

Carlo Montarsolo’s works continue to travel worldwide, drawing public attention to the art of one of post-war Italy’s notable painters.

Selected from the “Associazione Montarsolo” archives, 30 works represent various periods of the artist’s career, with particular emphasis on his unique approach to the use of light. The exhibition showcases the diversity of the artist’s rich legacy, starting from the 1960s (geometric abstraction and light), themes of nature (sea, volcanoes, etc.), and the 1970s “Signs and Sounds” series, up to his later period, where the artist explores the vast realm of creative expression. This later period includes the featured work “Shattered Assup” from 2003, chosen as a hallmark for this exhibition. To highlight the final creative period, the exhibition will be guided by a projection of this work.

Some of the displayed paintings have received special recognition both nationally and internationally. These include “Nude on Vesuvius” (1958) and “The Mandatory Nature of Confirmation,” which received a special prize at the national Quadriennale in Rome in 1972.

For this exhibition, a catalog has been prepared, curated by Giorgio Ainizola, who will present the artist at the opening ceremony.

The exhibition is organized by “Associazione Montarsolo,” with support from the Embassy of Italy in Armenia, in collaboration with the Contemporary Art Museum of Yerevan and under the patronage of the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation. Technical sponsorship is provided by Italia Cargo.

**Carlo Montarsolo (1922-2005)** was born in Marmore (Terni) and grew up in Portici (Naples). He began painting at the age of 16, inspired by the surrounding nature, Vesuvius, and the Mediterranean Sea. During the 1960s, he brought his experience of Neapolitan analytical cubism. The artist’s unique use of painting techniques and special attention to light made him one of the prominent abstract artists in post-war Italy. He was never interested in developing a particular style; instead, he preferred an expressive synthesis that reflected his flexible and multifaceted personality. He was always open to innovation while remaining faithful to traditions. Throughout his career, Montarsolo participated in numerous prestigious exhibitions and received numerous awards, which allowed him to present Italian art in Melbourne, Sydney, and New York. His works are housed in prestigious museums both in Italy and abroad, including the Collezione Farnesina of 20th-century Italian art.

Throughout his extensive career, Montarsolo also stood out as an advocate of art. Since 1975, he has been frequently invited to lecture at Italian art institutes and to participate in contemporary art conferences and seminars in North and South America and Europe.

After the artist’s death, the honor of presenting his work has been given to his son, Federico Romanelli Montarsolo, who continues to showcase Italian art through exhibitions in Italy and abroad.