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From Obscurity To Abstract Master: Armenian-American Artist Wins Pos

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  • From Obscurity To Abstract Master: Armenian-American Artist Wins Pos

    FROM OBSCURITY TO ABSTRACT MASTER: ARMENIAN-AMERICAN ARTIST WINS POSTHUMOUS FAME

    http://massispost.com/archives/8303
    Updated: March 29, 2013

    By Richard Solash

    WASHINGTON, DC (RFE/RL) - A landscape dissolves into reds, yellows,
    and greens. A mountain in New York State is filtered through an
    artist's imagination, rendered on canvas in angular patches.

    These were among the visions of Arthur Pinajian, an unknown
    Armenian-American painter whose death in 1999 prompted little more
    than the rental of a dumpster. The dumpster was to be filled with
    decades'-worth of his writings and pencil sketches and a garage-full
    of paintings that numbered close to 6,000.

    Today, Pinajian's work hangs on the well-lighted walls of a SoHo
    gallery. Leading art historians say that at his best, he ranks among
    America's finest abstract expressionists. His estate has been appraised
    at $30 million. After several kind twists of fates, Pinajian has been
    vaulted out of obscurity and is now gaining improbable posthumous fame.

    "I came into the house to look at it with the purpose of figuring
    out if it was a good house to flip (eds: buy and resell for profit)
    and I walked among all of this art. I was intrigued by it because it
    was so vast. I started looking closely at it and it was clear that
    the signature that was across the works was the same artist. Based on
    dates, it seemed like there were works spanning 5 decades at least. I
    knew what I was looking at was someone's life's work."

    Pinajian house

    Thomas Schultz was living in the sleepy town of Bellport, New York
    in 2005 when he and a friend decided to take advantage of an uptick
    in the real estate market. A modest two-bedroom cottage had been
    listed for sale that, with a bit of renovation, seemed like it could
    turn a profit. Its owner, a woman named Armen Pinajian, had recently
    passed away.

    Schultz says the woman's cousins apologized for the unusual mess left
    inside - thousands of canvases, some bitten by mold and mildew, that
    were stuffed into the attic's rafters and piled up in the garage. A
    dumpster was ready for them out back.

    ??The artist, Arthur Pinajian, had died at 85 ahead of his sister,
    whom he had lived with for most of his life. Accounts by family members
    indicate she was the artist's biggest fan, working as a clerk in a pipe
    company to support her brother's creative aspirations. The few attempts
    by the artist to win recognition during his lifetime were unsuccessful.

    The cousins said Pinajian had left instructions for all of his work to
    be thrown away. They would have already disposed of it, Schultz says,
    had one of them from out of town not arrived at the last minute and
    literally carried paintings back from the curb.

    Schultz's friend put up around $300,000 for the house and $2,500 for
    the entire body of work.

    The enormous collection had not only been spared, but had fallen
    into the right hands. Schultz happened to know a relative of the late
    William Innes Homer, one of the most respected scholars of contemporary
    American art.

    After several months of study, Homer would make an excited call to
    noted American art historian and appraiser Peter Hastings Falk:

    Pinajian house garage

    "If you look at the history of abstraction in America, certainly the
    headlines are given to [Jackson] Pollock and Franz Kline and [Willem]
    de Kooning and all of the stars of that period who are now ensconced
    in the pantheon of American art history. And it's long been thought
    that no one else could ever crack into that elite rank because, of
    course, everyone has been discovered and art historians already know
    everything. The really fun thing about this is here is the dean of
    American art historians who is just simply astonished - and I was,
    too. That's what makes this such an extraordinary story."

    Falk is now the exhibitions director and chief curator of the Pinajian
    estate. (http://www.pinajianart.com/Default.htm)

    While Pinajian tried everything from erotica to realism, Falk says
    he achieved his best in "lyric, rhythmic, abstract landscapes."

    Falk is also the editor of the first monograph on the artist, which
    sheds light on his psychology and formative years.

    Pinajian was born in 1914 in a largely Armenian-American community in
    New Jersey. His parents had fled their home in Diyarbakir, present-day
    Turkey, before the height of World-War-I-era mass killings of ethnic
    Armenians by Ottoman Turks. His Armenian name was Ashod, while his
    friends knew him as "Archie."

    Pinajian's artistic career began in the 1930s as a comic-book
    illustrator. He created "the first cross-dressing super hero" in a
    series titled "Madam Fatal."

    (http://hyperallergic.com/63575/from-the-archives-the-first-cross-dressing-superhero/)

    He earned a Bronze Star for valor for his service in World War II
    before training at the Art Students League in New York. Falk says
    that Pinajian likely came into contact with the well-known American
    abstract expressionists of the day.

    Arthur Pinajian, Overlook Mountain, fragment, Woodstock, New York,
    1955; oil on canvas

    The year 1948, however, was perhaps the most pivotal in Pinajian's
    development. Falk says that Pinajian had "some sort of breakdown,"
    which resulted in his writing a lengthy manifesto on what it means
    to be a great artist. It was then, Falk says, that Pinajian "embarked
    on his quest with single-minded focus."

    By that time, Pinajian and his sister had moved to Woodstock,
    in upstate New York. Falk notes that 1948 was also the year that
    Arshile Gorky, the most famous Armenian-American artist, committed
    suicide. He had been in Woodstock as well, leading some to speculate
    that perhaps the two had met.

    In Woodstock and then in Bellport, Pinajian led a near-hermetic
    existence, with art consuming nearly every waking hour until his death.

    Aram Aramian, one of Pinajian's cousins, told RFE/RL:

    "When we went to the house he was always laughing and joking and
    talking about the old times and about the relatives and he took a
    general interest in my family. He was really pleasant; he had a good
    nature about him. But all he wanted to do was paint - paint, paint,
    paint. Morning, noon, and night. Every day. Three hundred and sixty
    five days out of the year."

    Aramian says Pinajian gave his family several paintings over the
    years to store, as the artist ran out of room.

    In Woodstock, Pinajian found his muse in nearby Overlook Mountain. The
    image of the double-peaked mountain became a recurring theme,
    progressing from a recognizable portrayal to near complete abstraction.

    Falk says he later realized that the mountain may have reminded
    Pinajian of Mount Ararat in present-day Turkey, the site where Noah's
    Ark was said to have come to rest and an important symbol of Armenia.

    Linda Stepanian, the president of Stephanie's Art Gallery in
    California, is one of the leading dealers of Armenian art in the
    United States. In 2010, her gallery was the first to sell Pinajian's
    works commercially.

    Three years later, she says she has sold paintings to
    Armenian-Americans, Russians, and collectors in London and Paris.

    "I am positively sure that he will be acknowledged in his ethnic
    homeland one day," she says. "That will be the next step."

    She says her prices for Pinajian range from about $3,000 to $70,000
    and are only going up.

    Falk puts the total value of Pinajian's work at $30 million, a figure
    that was recently revealed to the public.

    He says significant interest was generated by Pinajian's first New
    York City showing, which he arranged this month. That was the site
    of the highest price paid so far for a Pinajian work, $100,000.

    "I still feel that the elevator is on the ground floor in terms of
    value," Falk says.

    Thomas Schultz, who first stumbled upon the Pinajian cottage,
    has given up his day job to become the full-time registrar of the
    collection. He says "a major Los Angeles-area museum" has recently
    acquired a piece. He also says a producer is pitching the story of
    Pinajian's discovery to the popular U.S. television network HBO.

    But Schultz stresses that his work is about inspiration far more than
    it's about money:

    "I bought the Pinajian cottage from my partner. I'm currently living
    in it. I look at the trees here on the property that he captured in
    some of the beautiful landscapes that we now see. So it's almost
    like I'm on sacred ground. It's been life-changing. [My life is]
    all things Pinajian, basically. I wake up every day and I think of
    Pinajian and what I could do to bring the recognition to him that he
    deserves. I feel like he's finally getting that."

    Arthur Pinajian paintings

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