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Zuleyka Bazhbeuk-Melikian: They Saw And Appreciated Me In Armenia

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  • Zuleyka Bazhbeuk-Melikian: They Saw And Appreciated Me In Armenia

    ZULEYKA BAZHBEUK-MELIKIAN: THEY SAW AND APPRECIATED ME IN ARMENIA

    Noyan Tapan
    March 31, 2008

    YEREVAN, MARCH 31, NOYAN TAPAN - ARMENIANS TODAY. Frankness,
    clarity and intimate emotions prevail in paintings of
    Zuleyka Bazhbeuk-Melikian, daughter of famous artist Alexander
    Bazhbeuk-Melikian. A personal exhibition of this female painter opened
    at the National Picture Gallery of Armenia last week.

    77 works created by this Georgia-based painter in various years, from
    the 1960s to "Appointment" painted recently, are on display in three
    halls of the exhibition. Among these works are still life pictures,
    landscapes, portraits and compositions. Armenian colors have given
    a unique Armenian quality to Zuleyka's canvases.

    This is the first personal exhibition of Zuleyka in Yerevan. "I have
    taken part in several group exhibitions in Yerevan but a personal
    exhibition is something quite different. All responsibility is on one
    painter, and you should be able to organize and present your works
    in such a way that everything will be clear and understandable to
    visitors." In her words, the impressions were very strong. "Everybody
    was so delicate and tender; everybody was so attentive and impressed. I
    am quite satisfied with this exhibition because my greatest wish has
    been fulfilled: they in Armenia saw and appreciated me as a painter
    with an original and distinctive style."

    However, Zuleyka has another dream: to hold a personal exhibition
    at the Union of Painters of Armenia and to publish a catalogue and
    an album in Yerevan. "Of course, it will happen later. After a bit
    of work. I want to paint more and to express the best feelings in my
    soul - the whole humanity needs such feelings today," Ms Zuleyka said.

    She started to paint at the age of 20. In her words, at first she liked
    literature, then she grew fond of music but later she started painting
    and it was the beginning. "At first I used to work continuously,
    10 hours a day.

    Father said that while being by his side, I have my own handwriting
    and distinctiveness. It is wonderful: I do not copy anyone but I
    paint as an individual," Zuleyka recalls.

    Paintings of Zuleyka Bazhbeuk-Melikian are kept at state and private
    picture galleries in various countries, including Russia, Germany,
    Bulgaria, etc.

    As a creative personality, she attaches importance to one thing: to
    express her inner state in her paintings: "When I fail to do what I
    want to, I paint in my soul, then I erase it. However, when this state
    is over, the most important thing, which a painter has to convey to
    a canvas, remains deep inside - it is a state when motions of your
    hand and what you want to say are in harmony with each other. This
    is most essential, these are my feelings and colors that complete
    each other and appeal to everybody."

    In the opinion of Zuleyka, it is important to be a true
    artist. Influence is not so essential because the painters, poets
    and musicians who have created universal values do not belong to
    one nation. They are universal and belong to everybody - people
    like Arshil Gorki, Sarian and Bazhbeuk-Melikian. "I am sure that
    they cease belonging to a nation, they belong to the world and
    humanity. In this respect we should have culture like the one which
    France has developed over centuries for non-French artists living in
    this country," she said.

    "I love both Armenia and Georgia. Both countries are native to me:
    in one I was born and grew up - it is all my life, while my roots
    and my land are in the other country."

    At the conclusion of the interview, the painter said that she has a
    great desire to paint the unique, divine snow-covered mountains and
    dark clouds of the road from Tbilisi to Yerevan. "I worship Armenia
    and its inimitably colored nature."

    She wished that there would be peace and quiet, infinite harmony of
    soul and nature in Armenia.
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