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Artist Draws On Family History In Painting Commemorating Armenian Ge

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  • Artist Draws On Family History In Painting Commemorating Armenian Ge

    ARTIST DRAWS ON FAMILY HISTORY IN PAINTING COMMEMORATING ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    WLS-TV - ABC
    April 22 2015

    By Frank Mathie
    Wednesday, April 22, 2015 04:45PM
    CHICAGO (WLS) --

    It happened almost exactly 100 years ago - the systematic extermination
    of 1.5 million Armenians by the Turkish rulers of the Ottoman
    Empire. Now, a Chicago artist is remembering that terrible time in
    a very big way.

    In an old Pilsen warehouse now occupied by Mana Art Center, artist
    Jackie Kazarian is showing us her latest creation, and it's a big one.

    It's part of her family's story about very dark times in Armenian
    history.

    "It's a large monumental painting called 'Armenia' and it's marked,
    created to mark the 100th year anniversary of the Armenian genocide
    when one and a half million Armenian, Assyrians and Greeks were
    killed," Kazarian said.

    It was April 24, 1915, near the beginning of World War I. The Christian
    Armenians were considered a threat to the new young Turkish leaders
    of the Ottoman Empire. And in a preview of what would happen in World
    War II, the genocide began.

    "The government of the Ottoman Empire took it upon themselves to rid
    their country of Armenians, and especially those in Eastern Armenia,"
    Kazarian said.

    A million and a half men, women and children were killed. Kazarian
    doesn't show that in her painting; she takes a much more subtle
    approach using just names.

    "The names are the villages and cities involved in the genocide,"
    Kazarian said.

    At 12 feet high and 26 feet wide, this is a huge painting. And you're
    probably wondering, how did she do it?

    First of all, it was hard work. It took five and a half months to
    complete. And then she invented something she calls the boardwalk.

    "The boardwalk was a large plank on wheels that would roll over the
    canvases while they were on the ground, so I could reach every surface
    of the painting," Kazarian said.

    She said she did it to honor her grandparents who survived the
    genocide. Now she will travel the world with her painting so everyone
    remembers.

    http://abc7chicago.com/society/artist-draws-on-family-history-in-painting-commemorating-armenian-genocide/676651/


    From: Baghdasarian
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