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Janet Hagopian's Colorful Reflections Compared With Picasso

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  • Janet Hagopian's Colorful Reflections Compared With Picasso

    JANET HAGOPIAN'S COLORFUL REFLECTIONS COMPARED WITH PICASSO

    15:48, 3 April, 2015

    YEREVAN, APRIL 3, ARMENPRESS. There's a reason Pablo Picasso's
    "Guernica" is one of the best known paintings in the world. The
    black-and-white oil from 1937 captures the aftermath of a bombing
    carried out by German and Italian warplanes intervening in the Spanish
    civil war. It captures the horror and violence of war in an image
    that contrasts beauty and suffering.

    One of the more powerful paintings in "A Moment Suspended in Time,"
    Iranian-Armenian artist Janet Hagopian's solo show at Art Lounge,
    evokes Picasso's masterpiece. As reports "Armenpress", Daily Star
    stated this in its recent article.

    Entitled "Ethic of War 1915," the acrylic and charcoal-on-canvas work
    seemingly depicts scenes from the Armenian genocide - which is widely
    held to have started 100 years ago this month.

    A tangle of distorted faces, limbs and body parts in stark
    black-and-white, the painting's palette evokes Picasso's work -
    so different from the rest of Hagopian's vibrant work.

    Patches of deep blood red accent the work, emphasizing the violence,
    while the head of a horse - its mouth seemingly open midscream,
    as if echoing the human faces in the painting - evokes Picasso further.

    As in "Guernica," the humans and animals in "Ethic of War 1915"
    suffer together.

    As noted, "Ethic of War 1915" is an anomaly amid the rest of Hagopian's
    exhibition, which is characterized by rich, bold colors and geometric
    designs. The paintings of the Beirut-based artist are influenced by the
    experience of belonging simultaneously to three different cultures,
    and aim to cast light on the social and religious influences that
    shape the life of women in the Middle East.

    A three-portrait series entitled "Anarchism I, II and III" hang
    alongside each other on one wall of the bar-cum-gallery, glowing in
    the dim thanks to well-positioned spotlights.

    Executed in subtle autumnal hues, the first piece depicts a figure
    facing the viewer, its head made up of what look like puzzle pieces.

    Hagopian has created a clever faux-three-dimensional surface, in
    which the pieces come together to form a single image while somehow
    appearing to connect in impossible ways, like the components of a M.

    C. Escher drawing.

    The second portrait captures a head of the same size and in the same
    position, but comprised of black-and-white elements - birds, shoes,
    hands and abstract geometrical forms - that come together to form
    human features.

    The series final piece is a bright conglomeration of reds, oranges
    and pinks set against a gray backdrop. Accented with touches of
    vivid yellow and royal blue, the painting captures a visage made
    up of irregular shapes. Evocative of architectural features, they
    suggest doors, windows, pillars and balustrades.

    Viewed in succession, these three portraits explore the potential of
    figurative work to excite the viewer's imagination, capturing multiple
    concepts and subjects in a single layered image.

    The majority of the paintings in Hagopian's show employ this sort of
    double perspective, using lots of small elements grouped together to
    create a single larger composition.

    "Intention," for example, again alludes to the work of Picasso,
    thanks to its bright color palette and almost cubist composition.

    A complex collage of independent shapes comes together to resemble
    what might be the outline of a human figure, with one elaborate eye
    fringed with long, colorful lashes.

    Within the overall composition, smaller images are discernable -
    the outline of white-headed, colorfully winged birds, shaded archways
    and what might be letters from some unknown alphabet.

    In her canvas "Malak'allah" (King of God), Hagopian picks out the
    form of the Arabic letters to write out the word against a black
    background. Each letter is comprised of blocks of color, conveying the
    impression that they are segments of a larger composition, concealed
    by the black sections of the painting as a veil hides sections of
    the face.

    http://armenpress.am/eng/news/800355/janet-hagopians-colorful-reflections-compared-with-picasso.html

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