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    Categories: 2023

“Ara Oshagan: Disrupted, Borders” connects with an appreciative audience at opening reception

Ara Oshagan: Disrupted, Borders, June 7, 2023, Armenian Museum of America (Photo: Vani Hanamirian)

WATERTOWN, Mass.—The Armenian Museum of America held an opening reception last Wednesday, June 7, for its newest exhibit, “Ara Oshagan: Disrupted, Borders.”

Oshagan expressed deep appreciation for the turnout. “It was wonderful to have such a large number of people, which also was a very diverse group and… artists coming from different places is really special,” he told the Weekly in an interview the following day.

As people filled the museum throughout the evening, it was clear that they shared a common understanding of displacement as they gazed at the pieces.

Disrupted, Borders entangles the past, present and future and considers the afterlives of visible and invisible borders across space and time,” Oshagan said in describing the exhibit. He uses photography, film and collage to represent his diasporic process and “the visible and invisible crossing of physical, cultural and linguistic borders.”

Artist Ara Oshagan speaking at the opening of Disrupted, Borders, Armenian Museum of America, June 7, 2023 (Photo: Daniel Ayriyan)

The gallery is divided into six sections: Traces of Identity the Armenian Diaspora in Los Angeles (2000-2010), Displaced (2013-2018), The Beirut Memory Project (2018-2021), Gather (2021), Shushi Portraits (2021) and That You May Return (2023). 

Each section represents a different aspect of Oshagan’s life and his journey to where he is today. “It’s about Los Angeles, Beirut and Armenia itself. It’s also about family, afterlives of dislocation, colonization memory and then the community collective history,” he explained to the crowd at the exhibit opening. “My relationships to various histories in places is complex, having inherited negative legacies of removal, of violence from genocide displaced from the route personally, and perhaps many of you have also been displaced from other places,” he continued.

His words clearly resonated with guests. A woman who became emotional as Oshagan spoke was the daughter of Holocaust survivors, and his work moved her as she thought of her family’s experiences. 

One of Oshagan’s missions through his work is to connect with others on their own terms through the artwork. “If somebody spends time and then really looks closely, they can see there’s this web of connectivity between different places, different works or different geographies, different times,” he told the Weekly. “It speaks to you, but it also speaks to everyone that comes in in a different way.” 

Guests, who spanned ages and generations, lingered around different images, staring at the complexity and relating through their own lives.

One man pointed out that he recognized a storefront in an image in The Beirut Memory Project. It was one he had remembered from his time in Beirut, and seeing it at the gallery brought him joy. 

In his remarks, museum executive director Jason Sohigian pointed out the thorough and thoughtful detail that went into the exhibit and gallery space. Oshagan worked on every aspect of designing this exhibit, including the layout of the art and the colors on the wall. For example, he chose to paint one wall in the museum a deep red, the red of the Armenian cochineal, (Porphyrophora hamelii), an insect indigenous to Armenia that was used to produce a dye used in Armenian rug-making. He decided to display the color on a wall of his exhibit because it “comes from that insect that’s indigenous to Armenia and very much part of the history of the space. What’s sad is that it is now endangered in Armenia.”

Ara Oshagan: Disrupted, Borders, June 7, 2023 (Photo: Vani Hanamirian)

Oshagan spoke to the crowd about two specific sections of the gallery: The Shushi Portraits and The Beirut Memory Project. 

Oshagan undertook The Shushi Portraits in 2021 after being invited with several other artists to work on projects in Shushi, currently occupied by Azerbaijan following the 2020 Artsakh War. People had been displaced and there was a concern about repopulation. As he walked in the city, Oshagan noticed an empty building that had been abandoned for more than 20 years. He then decided what his project in Shushi would be.

Ara Oshagan: Disrupted, Borders, June 7, 2023 (Photo: Daniel Ayriyan)

“I installed these images into the windows and doors of that building. I repopulated it with these portraits, but without the background, so they’re important without the manuscript,” he explained. “I took pictures of residents, and I populated that building with the residents of Shushi speaking about why this building was still abandoned.”

His goal with these pieces was to “imagine a future where the deracinated person, indigenous Armenian displaced from their indigenous lands, can come back together with that history to imagine a future like that.”

For the exhibit, Oshagan placed the images of the residents over ancient Armenian manuscripts from across Armenia. They hang in the gallery as large prints that cover the windows. Oshagan specifically designed these pieces for the gallery after he saw the windows and decided to optimize the space in the museum. 

Many people lingered by these large portraits, and questions arose about the manuscripts and the people in the images. Oshagan told the Weekly that he has kept in contact with some of his subjects. Some had fled Shushi, and others had lost family in the war. 

Ara Oshagan: Disrupted, Borders, June 7, 2023 (Photo: Vani Hanamirian)

Oshagan then spoke about The Beirut Memory Project. He was born in Beirut and fled the country in 1975 with his family as they sped away from gunfire. The Lebanese Civil War displaced Oshagan and his family. He returned 40 years later to photograph his childhood city. The Beirut Memory Project is a collection of photographs he took on his recent trip to Beirut, collaged and overlaid with pre-war family photos. 

“I made a trip to Beirut because I decided I would go back to that space where I was born, where I fled injustice, issues of displacement and multi-generational trauma, and issues there, including recent wars and economic collapse and loss,” Oshagan recounted. “Then, I also bring my own history of displacement back to that space.” 

Members of the audience nodded as he spoke about this, including non-Armenians who could relate to the message of loss and displacement. 

Ara Oshagan: Disrupted, Borders, June 7, 2023 (Photo: Vani Hanamirian)

Oshagan intentionally placed a three-minute, three-channel film that can be viewed at the entryway of the gallery. As guests enter the gallery, they first see this video that shows Armenians in Beirut speaking Western Armenian. Almost all of the guests stopped by this video before entering the gallery. 

Oshagan created the video because “the sound of Western Armenian, which I grew up with, really resonated with me when I was there, because they speak a very specific type of really beautiful Western Armenian.” 

The theme continued into the gallery as there was an overlapping sound of Armenian being spoken amongst the guests. The connections between gallery attendees could be heard from outside the room, as familiar and unfamiliar faces gathered to celebrate the exhibit opening. 

Artist Ara Oshagan (center) pictured with Museum president Michele Kolligian, vice president Bob Khederian, executive director Jason Sohigian and finance director Berj Chekijian, June 7, 2023 (Photo: Daniel Ayriyan)

As the evening concluded, guests slowly made their way out of the gallery, but not before taking photos with Oshagan and the artwork. People were seen asking others to take their photo in front of various works, including the ‘That You May Return’ series.

“It was wonderful, and it was nice to see many people from the general public walking in, to see the work and talk to me. It was really, really special,” Oshagan told the Weekly about the exhibit opening. 

“Ara Oshagan: Disrupted, Borders” will be on display at the Armenian Museum of America until October 29, 2023.




Emil Lazarian: “I should like to see any power of the world destroy this race, this small tribe of unimportant people, whose wars have all been fought and lost, whose structures have crumbled, literature is unread, music is unheard, and prayers are no more answered. Go ahead, destroy Armenia . See if you can do it. Send them into the desert without bread or water. Burn their homes and churches. Then see if they will not laugh, sing and pray again. For when two of them meet anywhere in the world, see if they will not create a New Armenia.” - WS