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The Artist Inside Dr. Death Jack Kevorkian To Open Exhibition Of His

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  • The Artist Inside Dr. Death Jack Kevorkian To Open Exhibition Of His

    THE ARTIST INSIDE DR. DEATH JACK KEVORKIAN TO OPEN EXHIBITION OF HIS PAINTINGS AT ARMENIAN MUSEUM IN WATERTOWN
    by Erica Noonan Globe Staff

    The Boston Globe
    October 2, 2008 Thursday
    MA

    GLOBE NORTH 1

    The art is severe, and at times disturbing.

    So is the artist, Dr. Jack Kevorkian, who will be in Watertown on
    Sunday to unveil an exhibition of 16 of his paintings owned by the
    Armenian Library and Museum of America.

    This weekend's planned appearance will be a rare out-of-state trip for
    Kevorkian, a former pathologist from Michigan who earned the nickname
    "Dr. Death" for his advocacy of assisted suicide, and who by his
    estimate helped 130 terminally ill people take their lives. Kevorkian
    has been free on parole since June 2007, after serving eight years in
    prison. He was convicted of second-degree murder in 1999 for giving
    a lethal injection to a 52-year-old man with Lou Gehrig's disease.

    Visiting the museum is a homecoming of sorts. Kevorkian, 80, is the
    child of two Armenian genocide survivors, and the anguish suffered by
    his ancestors is reflected in several of his pieces. "1915 Genocide
    1945" mixes real human blood with paint to commemorate the extinction
    of 1.5 million Armenians at the hands of the Ottoman Turkish empire,
    and three decades later the murder of 6 million Jews under Nazi
    Germany.

    In a phone interview last week, he said he doesn't consider himself
    an artist, just someone who "puts in paint the condition of the world
    that we live in."

    Kevorkian said he began to paint as a hobby when he was a young
    man. But he kept delving into the topics of life and death that he
    dealt with as a medical examiner. "Everyone was painting landscapes
    and clowns and I couldn't see the value in that. I guess the rebel
    in me was thinking I'll shock them," he recalled.

    That urge provoked him to paint "Very Still Life," a brightly rendered
    image of an iris bloom growing through a denuded skull and scattered
    bones.

    "I thought I'd shake them up and they'd be shocked," he said of
    the piece. But instead, he said, his classmates and instructor
    "were fascinated."

    Most of Kevorkian's artworks are political or religious in nature,
    although the exhibition includes a later triptych tribute to composer
    Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and his music that portrays a brighter view
    of life, said museum curator Gary Lind-Sinanian.

    Many of his original works were stolen from a storage unit in
    California, where Kevorkian was living in the late 1970s, but he
    repainted many from memory. He donated them and other personal effects
    to the Watertown museum before entering prison in Michigan to serve
    a 10- to 25-year term, which was shortened for good behavior and
    because Kevorkian was ill with hepatitis and diabetes.

    The exhibition will feature some new works, including portraits of
    the artist's parents, that are on loan to the museum, Lind-Sinanian
    said. The 3 p.m. reception Sunday is part of a slate of provocative
    events at the museum this fall, including an appearance next Wednesday
    by Mark Krikorian, author of "The New Case Against Immigration,
    Both Legal and Illegal."

    Bringing Kevorkian to the library and museum may upset some people
    who disagree with physician-assisted suicide, acknowledged director
    Mariam Stepanyan. But its mission is "to preserve the heritage of
    Armenians for future generations, and to make it relevant for current
    generations," she said, and the doctor is among the world's most
    famous Armenian-Americans.

    "His art and how he intersects it with religion and the present day
    is informed by the experience of the Armenian people," she said. "He
    is very connected to his heritage."

    Kevorkian is scheduled to follow his Watertown appearance with an
    open forum Monday at Harvard Law School, where he expects to discuss
    his current run for Congress, among other topics.

    "My platform is talking about the real problems in this country,"
    he said. "I call myself a radical, which some people think implies
    violent behavior. But it comes from the Latin root, which means
    `growing straight from the ground.' I see it as getting straight to
    the gist of a problem."

    He runs as a independent, Kevorkian said, because belonging to a
    political party "straitjackets your mind."

    Kevorkian, who was stripped of his Michigan medical license in 1991,
    is forbidden under his parole agreement to discuss specific euthanasia
    techniques or his assisted-suicide work, including the 1998 case
    that led to his conviction after a videotape of the procedure was
    broadcast on "60 Minutes." He must also get special permission to
    travel out of Michigan.

    Kevorkian's political platform includes prison reform, public
    education overhaul, and constitutional rights. He's also quick to
    opine on the news of the day, including the current economic meltdown:
    "The solution is not so simple as to throw a lot of money at it,"
    he said. "It will just make leaders more corrupt."

    His art will stay on public display in Watertown for two months. "We're
    hoping people come and keep an open mind and see the rest of the
    treasures that are here," said Lind-Sinanian.

    The opening reception for "The Doctor Is Out: The Art of Dr. Jack
    Kevorkian" is 3 to 5 p.m. Sunday at the Armenian Library and Museum of
    America, 65 Main St., Watertown. The show will run through Dec. 5. More
    information is available at www.almainc.org.
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