{"id":17871,"date":"2009-07-28T17:00:00","date_gmt":"2009-07-28T14:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/accea.info\/?p=17871"},"modified":"2021-07-28T10:37:47","modified_gmt":"2021-07-28T07:37:47","slug":"%d5%af%d5%a1%d6%80%d5%a5%d5%b6-%d6%85%d5%b0%d5%a1%d5%b6%d5%b5%d5%a1%d5%b6-%d5%a1%d5%b6%d5%b0%d5%a1%d5%bf%d5%a1%d5%af%d5%a1%d5%b6-%d6%81%d5%b8%d6%82%d6%81%d5%a1%d5%b0%d5%a1%d5%b6%d5%a4%d5%a5%d5%bd","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.accea.info\/hy\/%d5%af%d5%a1%d6%80%d5%a5%d5%b6-%d6%85%d5%b0%d5%a1%d5%b6%d5%b5%d5%a1%d5%b6-%d5%a1%d5%b6%d5%b0%d5%a1%d5%bf%d5%a1%d5%af%d5%a1%d5%b6-%d6%81%d5%b8%d6%82%d6%81%d5%a1%d5%b0%d5%a1%d5%b6%d5%a4%d5%a5%d5%bd\/","title":{"rendered":"\u053f\u0561\u0580\u0565\u0576 \u0555\u0570\u0561\u0576\u0575\u0561\u0576 \u0561\u0576\u0570\u0561\u057f\u0561\u056f\u0561\u0576 \u0581\u0578\u0582\u0581\u0561\u0570\u0561\u0576\u0564\u0565\u057d"},"content":{"rendered":"\t\t<div data-elementor-type=\"wp-post\" data-elementor-id=\"17871\" class=\"elementor elementor-17871\" data-elementor-post-type=\"post\">\n\t\t\t\t\t\t<section class=\"elementor-section elementor-top-section elementor-element elementor-element-4cc0bba elementor-section-boxed elementor-section-height-default elementor-section-height-default\" data-id=\"4cc0bba\" data-element_type=\"section\">\n\t\t\t\t\t\t<div class=\"elementor-container elementor-column-gap-extended\">\n\t\t\t\t\t<div class=\"elementor-column elementor-col-33 elementor-top-column elementor-element elementor-element-a1419b2 sc_inner_width_none sc_content_align_inherit sc_layouts_column_icons_position_left\" data-id=\"a1419b2\" data-element_type=\"column\">\n\t\t\t<div class=\"elementor-widget-wrap elementor-element-populated\">\n\t\t\t\t\t\t<div class=\"elementor-element elementor-element-7d03a6d animation_type_block sc_fly_static elementor-widget elementor-widget-text-editor\" data-id=\"7d03a6d\" data-element_type=\"widget\" data-widget_type=\"text-editor.default\">\n\t\t\t\t<div class=\"elementor-widget-container\">\n\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t<p><a href=\"http:\/\/www.karenohanyan.com\/eng\/#\/home\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">http:\/\/www.karenohanyan.com\/eng\/#\/home<\/a><br \/><br \/><br \/>Historical materialism wishes to retain that image of<br \/>the past which unexpectedly appears to man<br \/>singled out by history at a moment of<br \/>danger. The danger affects both the content<br \/>of the tradition and its receivers. The same<br \/>threat hangs over both: that of becoming<br \/>a tool of the ruling classes. In every era<br \/>the attempt must be made anew to wrest<br \/>tradition away from conformism that is<br \/>about to overpower it.<br \/><br \/><br \/>Walter Benjamin<br \/>\u201cTheses on the Philosophy of History\u201d5<br \/><br \/><br \/><br \/>Karen Ohanyan\u2019s \u201cReal Utopias\u201d series, created a few years ago, was ranked among the best paintings of the year 6. I think Ohanyan\u2019s latest series of paintings, \u201cBody Investments,\u201d also deserves such high praise. It is not difficult to find commonalities between these two projects, even if the first is more existential and the second, more political. In \u201cReal Utopias,\u201d the body is viewed both as the last \u201creal thing\u201d and as a utopia &#8211; the last free creative space. In \u201cBody Investments,\u201d the body is viewed differently; it is an actual space, a battlefield of micropowers.<br \/><br \/>In both cases, the insurmountable drive to discover the real can be seen. As a painter, Karen Ohanyan\u2019s standpoint is really quite strong, limited only by his own perception, conscience and sincerity. Ohanyan strives to overcome the confusion, fear and depression that have infected our society. In one of his interviews, Ohanyan said, \u201cTo understand my art, you have to be oppressed, but you have to realize that you are oppressed and that consequently, you need freedom. My art isn&#8217;t for our society, because our society doesn&#8217;t want freedom, but I don\u2019t blame society, because it is dominated by fear.\u201d<br \/><br \/>The real Ohanyan strives for, can no longer be based solely on the naive perception of one\u2019s own eye: the view is supplemented by technological possibilities, by the act of necessary inspection. In Michelangelo Antonioni\u2019s film \u201cBlowup,\u201d a photographer, while inspecting his photographs, discovers a body behind the bushes in one of the photos. This is symbolic for contemporary art, which excels classical art through its ability to inspect\/explore. Striving for the real, Ohanyan uses a camera. Taking pictures, selecting the best and then, with a projector, transferring those onto large canvases, Ohanyan creates images which can be called \u201chyperrealistic.\u201d<br \/><br \/>But what is the role of the photograph? It allows for inspection, to view the image from different perspectives, as if from many angles. Hence the huge canvases and figures in unnaturally large scales: those paintings cannot be embraced through a single perspective, and the eye is forced to take different positions. Through this device Ohanyan\u2019s figures acquire massiveness that stresses their corporeality. The non-verbal comes to the fore, especially the kinesics, the language of gestures, whereas the verbal, the linguistic, becomes secondary. The issue is that during communication we \u201csee\u201d the speech, its content and form, expressiveness and meaning, while hand and eye movements are usually ignored. Gestures can either echo or complete verbal language, but it can also contradict the latter.<br \/><br \/>Gestures, first of all, tell us about a person\u2019s ability to use his or her own body; they are the expression of body technique. But why is corporeality, the body technique, important? If, from a traditional aesthetic perspective, the body can be called beautiful or disproportionate, corporeality is a social phenomenon. Michel Foucault in his interview \u201cPower and Body\u201d of 1975 says that if it has been possible to produce knowledge on the body, than only through the combination of military and educational disciplines. It was on the basis of power over the body that a physiological and organizational knowledge became possible. Foucault\u2019s archeology of humanities should be built on the exploration of the mechanisms of power invested into the body, gestures and norms of behavior7. It is its affiliation with Foucauldian archeological exploration that the name of the series is based on: \u201cBody Investments.\u201d<br \/><br \/>Three of the paintings show police officers supervising a football field, a street or demonstrators. In another painting, police officers are embracing one another. But the fifth piece presents a face of a demonstrator who has been assaulted.<br \/><br \/>Possession begins from possessing one\u2019s own body and the authorities particularly strive to work for the bodies of children and youth, soldiers and police officers &#8211; that is, for those bodies that are quite healthy. Ohanyan, by painting police officers who are controlling public spaces or opposition rallies and by showing us their gestures and behavior, uncovers the micropower\u2019s configuration in present-day Armenia. After March 1, 2008, when police forces carried out a bloody massacre of peaceful demonstrators, the power became a power of violence, and basically it was almost completely given up to the police. Both for governing authorities and the opposition this was a time when they became mutually dangerous. In this sense, not only is Ohanyan\u2019s artwork, in Foucault\u2019s sense, \u201carchaeological,\u201d but it is also \u201chistorical materialist,\u201d as understood by Benjamin.<br \/><br \/>In the last three years, the political scene in Armenia has been transformed: new political subjects have appeared, political activism is growing, and the internet has become an important domain of political activities. All of these are possibilities to make audible the voices of social groups which were invisible until then, deafened by the clamor of political leaders. Another characteristic of this state of affairs is that it becomes an extremely important political issue to move freely in public spaces, especially to have the freedom to carry out artistic or political actions. Accordingly, the police officer, who until lately perhaps was basically a guardian of public order, catching criminals, curbing hooligans, or supervising traffic laws, has now become a guardian of political order. His body not only acquired a kind of invulnerable quality (even though theoretically each human body is invulnerable), but also phantasmal qualities of sacredness and delicacy. This is evidenced by the numerous cases against the demonstrators who resisted the police. Particularly important during those cases are the statements made about the delicacy of the police officer\u2019s body. The fantasies woven around the police officer\u2019s body on both sides of the barricades inevitably turn it into an art object; it becomes a sort of \u201cready-made\u201d like Duchamp\u2019s \u201cFountain.\u201d Indeed, during the last few years, many canvases and video works exploring the police officer and his body have been produced.<br \/><br \/>The origin of some police officers\u2019 gestures are easy to find: they are taken from Hollywood films. This phenomenon can be explained by the fact that Armenia\u2019s governing authorities have politicized mass culture, forcing show business to become its political ally. The origin of the other group of gestures can also be easily recognized by the Armenian viewers: it is the semi-criminal gestures of the \u201cgood guys.\u201d The Armenian government commissions soap operas where the main heroes are \u201cgood guys,\u201d criminals and \u201cauthorities\u201d of criminal world. And since cinema is mainly the art of behaviors and gestures, this can be viewed as the legitimatization of criminal corporeality. In this way, it is possible to come to the formula of micropower\u2019s configuration in Armenia; it is a mixture of the consumer and the criminal, or, in Foucault\u2019s terms, we have a hybrid of the systems of punishment and discipline. That is how it differs from the purely disciplinary-supervisory configuration of micropower in Western societies.<br \/><br \/>It also seems that in Ohanyan\u2019s \u201cBody Investments,\u201d the body of a police officer is contrasted with the demonstrator\u2019s corporeality. The former is an organized body, where the organs have certain functions; in border situations the body becomes an attachment to truncheon, a not-ones-own-body. On the contrary, \u201cmy body\u201d is the body which is in physical contact with itself. The face of the demonstrator is beaten, pain is the most intensive expression of physical contact with oneself, in this sense it is ones-own-body. \u201cBody Investments\u201d shows the collapse of the ruler\u2019s gesture, the end of bondage and the struggle for defeat, since the winner becomes the power that limits freedom.<br \/><br \/>Often images taken by hidden cameras were presented as a way of laying blame on March 1 demonstrators. Though the situation was different when images were presented which testified to police officers\u2019 illegal actions. Perhaps, with Ohanyan\u2019s works it is not possible to prosecute a criminal case, but they are revealing evidences too. In this case by looking at the police characters produced by Ohanyan, the viewer steals a part of their power by the very act of his or her viewing.<br \/><br \/>As it is known, art does not have its own essence, and creative impulses come from other spheres outside of art. Mainly the impulse comes from the political and art is always political, even if this is not recognized. Art\u2019s political context is anchored on the fact that it gets its impulse from body experiences of violence, work and alienation. Armenia\u2019s governing authorities strive to a\u0435stheticize the domination of violence by recruiting show business or soap operas, actors or artists to their campaigns. Karen Ohanyan resists those tendencies by politicizing art.<br \/><br \/>Vardan Jaloyan<br \/><br \/><br \/>Karen Ohanyan<br \/><br \/><br \/>2009 \u201cBody Investments\u201d ACCEA, Yerevan, Armenia<br \/>2009 \u201cUND PLATFORM\u201d, Polly-Gallery, Karlsruhe, Germany<br \/>2008 \u201cResistance\u201d, Mkhitar Sebastaci Educational Complex Yerevan, Armenia<br \/>2008 \u201cPortrait between modernism and innovation\u201d, ACCEA, Yerevan, Armenia<br \/>2007 \u201cArmenian international style \u201dAkanat-gallery\u201d, Yerevan, Armenia<br \/>2007 \u201cAffirmative images\u201d ACCEA, Yerevan, Armenia<br \/>2007 \u201cYerevan Crisis\u201d ACCEA, Yerevan, Armenia<br \/>2007 \u201cNo Standart\u201d Museum After Egishe Charents, Yerevan, Armenia<br \/>2006 \u201cReal Utopias\u201d Solo Exhibition ACCEA, Yerevan,Armenia<br \/>2005 \u201cLiberte-Egalite-Fraternite\u201d ACCEA, Yerevan, Armenia<br \/>2005 \u201cPhoto+\u201d ACCEA, Yerevan, Armenia<br \/>2005 \u201cSociety-Body-Art\u201d Armenian Center for Contemporary Experimental Art (ACCEA), Yerevan, Armenia<br \/>2004 \u201cDream in Dialogue\u201d Armenian Center for Contemporary Experimental Art (ACCEA), Yerevan, Armenia<br \/>2003 \u201cOOPS!!\u201d ACCEA, Yerevan, Armenia<br \/>2003 \u201cAntifreeze\u201d ACCEA, Yerevan, Armenia<br \/>2002 \u201cAffirmative Art\u201d ACCEA, Yerevan, Armenia<br \/>2001 \u201cExhibition Dedicated to Toumanian\u201d Toumania Museum, Yerevan,Armenia<br \/>1999 &#8220;Embryo&#8221;, AOKS, Yerevan, Armenia<br \/>1998 Young Painters Exhibitions, Hamburg, Rostok, Christo, Germany<br \/>1993 All-Armenian exhibition &#8220;Gifted Children&#8221; organized by UN, Yerevan, Armenia<br \/>1992 National Children Museum<br \/><br \/>* since 2007 founding-member of the \u201cART-Laboratory\u201d NGO<br \/><br \/><br \/><br \/><br \/>&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-<br \/>5 Walter Benjamin, Illuminations: Essays and Reflections (New York: Schoken Books, 1968), p. 255.<br \/>6 Vardan Azatyan, \u201cReal Utopias,\u201d Karen Ohanyan: Real Utopias, exh. book. (Yerevan, 2006), p. 3.<br \/>7 Michel Foucault, \u201cPower and Body\u201d, Intellectuals and Power, Vol. 1 (Moscow: Praksis, 2002), pp. 166, 169 (Russian translation).<\/p>\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t<\/div>\n\t\t\t\t<\/div>\n\t\t\t\t\t<\/div>\n\t\t<\/div>\n\t\t\t\t<div class=\"elementor-column elementor-col-33 elementor-top-column elementor-element elementor-element-5959a36 sc_inner_width_none sc_content_align_inherit sc_layouts_column_icons_position_left\" data-id=\"5959a36\" data-element_type=\"column\">\n\t\t\t<div class=\"elementor-widget-wrap elementor-element-populated\">\n\t\t\t\t\t\t<div class=\"elementor-element elementor-element-fe801b4 animation_type_block sc_fly_static elementor-widget elementor-widget-image-gallery\" data-id=\"fe801b4\" data-element_type=\"widget\" data-widget_type=\"image-gallery.default\">\n\t\t\t\t<div class=\"elementor-widget-container\">\n\t\t\t\t\t\t\t<div class=\"elementor-image-gallery\">\n\t\t\t<div id='gallery-1' class='gallery galleryid-17871 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