Turkish Prime Minister Warns USA And Armenia Of Danger Of Adopting R

TURKISH PRIME MINISTER WARNS USA AND ARMENIA OF DANGER OF ADOPTING RESOLUTION OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

ArmInfo
2010-03-01 17:14:00

ArmInfo. Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has made a warning
to the USA and Armenia in connection with the Panel Vote on H.Res. on
Armenian Genocide on March 4.

Haber7.com website reported that Erdogan said in a press conference
on Feb 28 that the issue was discussed during his visit to the USA in
Dec 2009 and a Turkish delegation is currently in the USA. Turkey’s
stance is well known, he said. The process launched in Switzerland
is continued. The minister said he believes that the result will be
achieved if the parties display good will. If a wrong step is made on
March 4 or April 24, this process will be failed, Erdogan said. The
prime minister said he hopes that the Congress will take into account
that nuance.

Peggy Hinaekian’s poetry in color

Peggy Hinaekian’s poetry in color

rticle/2010-02-23-peggy-hinaekian-s-poetry-in-colo r&pg=2
Published: Tuesday February 23, 2010

Peggy Hinaekian is a graduate of the Italian Academy of Art "Leonardo
da Vinci" and has also studied History of Art at McGill University in
Montreal. Her work consists of oil and acrylic on canvas and etchings.
She began a formal career as a fashion designer for Jackie Kennedy’s
wedding gown designer in New York.

Her award-winning art has been exhibited internationally and can be
found in numerous corporate and private collections as well as in
Museums all over the world. Her etchings are distributed by Christie’s
Contemporary Art of London and Editions Francony of France. She works
in Switzerland and in the United States.

Editor’s Note: The interview by Nancy Bockoven first appeared in
Arts+Culture, La Jolla, an e-magazine found at
, and is re-printed here with
permission.

How would you describe your work?

I would describe my work as lyrical. It is predominantly abstract and
I have been told that it exudes an atmosphere of calm and joy. I try
to guide the viewer towards a focal point, inviting him or her to
wander within the paintings and be part of the emotions they provoke.
I think some of my work has a nebula like quality suggesting infinite
distances in atmospheric fields of color, whether small and whimsical
or large and bathed in vast expanses of one color.

When did you first consider becoming an artist?

I have always considered myself an artist as of the age of 3. My
father encouraged me in my childish drawings from as far as I can
remember. However, as I did not make a living with my art, I held
other jobs, secretarial, administrative, fashion designing, etc.

Do you have a formal art education or are you self-taught?

I did have a formal education in an Italian academy in Cairo, Egypt,
where I was born, but it was not satisfactory to me. It was too
academic. After that, when living in Montreal, I took some courses in
history of art at McGill University. I have not been taught technique
or anything else. I just learned as I went along. I am always looking
for new techniques. I just took a course at the Atheneum in La Jolla
in monoprints and I produced 60 monoprints in four days, most of which
I exhibited in Germany and in Switzerland this fall.

You’ve exhibited consistently since the early 1970s – what was it like
in the beginning, was it hard to get your work shown, what was your
process for getting into galleries?

In the beginning it was very hard to get my work shown. I had another
style, a cubist/surrealistic couples theme and I had a lot of
rejections. I had my first exhibition in Montreal, then went to New
York and worked as a fashion designer for Jackie Kennedy’s wedding
dress creator, all the time painting on the side. Then I went to
Switzerland where I really started my career as an artist while
working part time in one of the United Nations agencies. I also took
up some courses in etching. Being able to work with print editors
helped my career in getting known all over the world. When I visit a
city I go to the galleries and look to see which one would be suitable
to show my work. Then I try to talk to the manager and show that
person my catalog. In Europe it is done differently than in the U.S.
In the U.S, I first call to find out if they are taking on new
artists, then find out about their submissions procedure. I then
submit my work and hope for the best. An artist has to persevere and
never give up hope. It has to be a continuous process. Women often
give up their careers while raising children. Luckily I was an artist
and could paint with the children running around my studio.

Along that same note, do you think artists today have to put an equal
effort into the business/ marketing side of their artistic profession?
How do you handle this aspect of your work?

I think that artists today have to put more time into the
business/marketing side of their profession. Painting is easy – it
requires two to three hours a day – but marketing is very time
consuming. Sometimes I spend days on the computer or on the telephone
trying to get gallery representation or arranging for exhibitions. It
is very frustrating.

I know that you’ve traveled extensively, how have different places
inspired you? Do you paint while you’re traveling or do you use the
trips as a break and then return to painting when you’re back home?

Egypt has inspired me with its exotic atmosphere and its climate.
Montreal did not inspire me at all. In fact in Montreal, I painted in
warm colors in a room overlooking mounds of snow. In Italy I was
inspired by the vegetation and the sea and in New Mexico by the
vibrant colors of the desert landscape. I never paint while
travelling. I don’t even take a sketchbook with me. I sometimes make
notes of color themes and shapes as I see them. I like painting in my
own studio space, although once I painted in the main hall of a major
Swiss bank. They had set up a podium for me and I went there everyday
for a month.

In your artist’s statement you mention you are foremost a colorist and
often work with a color key – can you tell us more about this? What
other elements or materials find their way into your work?

When I decide to do a painting, I decide on the color first. I have an
idea of where that color should go and what texture it should have.
Then I dissect this color field with another color. I use the word
dissect because often I have a line going through my painting or I
have a small patch of another color floating in the atmosphere. This
other color is very important. The two colors should complement each
other. I often use sand or collages. The color, shape and placement of
the collage are also very important. I spend quite a bit of time on
deciding that.

What is your studio or work space like?

I had three studios: The major one was in Switzerland and it was a
real studio with a gallery front (my own gallery). However, I closed
that one up as I cannot possibly have more than two workplaces. I
spend more time in the U.S. I don’t call them studios now. My work
space in Fort Lauderdale is a separated part of the very large living
room and it is a corner space with very good light. My work place in
La Jolla is on the patio in the open air and part of it extends into
my bedroom. I am not a neat artist. I have pieces of interesting paper
lying around in bins and different objects I gather from the beach. I
also clip, clip clip from magazines. My husband says I am a dumpster
diver. I gather things and clippings because they give me ideas.
You’ve recently participated in the Albuquerque Art Museum Miniatures
show, and you have two upcoming exhibits in Germany and Switzerland –
it sounds as if you’ve been quite busy. Do you have any goals for the
upcoming year?

I am always very busy. People tell me to relax and retire. How can I
retire? If I retire I might as well die. Painting is my passion. One
does not retire from one’s passion. I will have an exhibition in a
small lakeshore town in Switzerland in November and I am looking to
get into a gallery in California. However, galleries are not doing
well in California and they are not taking on new artists. The last
thing people think of buying is art. Luckily I did very well in Europe
this year.

At this time you divide your time between La Jolla and Europe, what
made you take up residence in La Jolla?

Since my younger son went to college in San Diego I have visited La
Jolla several times and my husband and I fell in love with the town
and the climate. It is just the size of town we like. There is
everything one needs in one town and it has a magnificent coastline. I
also like the people and their friendliness especially after having
lived in aggressive New York.

Has La Jolla inspired any artwork yet?

Yes, the patio I paint in is surrounded by trees, plants and flowers.
Although I do not paint vegetation I am energized by being surrounded
by them and also by being so close to the coast and all that blue.

, email: [email protected]

http://www.reporter.am/index.cfm?furl=/go/a
http://www.artculturelajolla.com
www.peggyhinaekian.artspan.com

FM receives newly appointed Ambassador of Poland to Armenia

17:40 26/02/2010 » Politics
Foreign Minister receives newly appointed Ambassador of Poland to Armenia

The newly appointed Ambassador of Poland to Armenia Zdislav Rachinski
presented the copies of his credentials to Armenian Foreign Minister
Edward Nalbandian.

Congratulating the Ambassador on appointment, Edward Nalbandian said:
`The amity between Armenia and Poland comes from the depth of
centuries and we must take efforts to further reinforce and deepen
it.’

Minister Nalbandian voiced hope that the new Ambassador of Poland
would contribute to the expansion of cooperation between the two
countries, MFA reported.

In his turn, Ambassador Rachinski thanked Minister Nalbandian for kind
wishes and assured that he would do his best to enhance the
cooperation in different spheres.

The interlocutors touched upon the preparation of the forthcoming
visit of the Polish Prime Minister, Robert Tusk, to Armenia.

During the meeting the parties discussed the relations between Armenia
and Poland, as well as a wide framework of issues related to
Armenia-EU cooperation. They exchanged views on a number of regional
and international questions of reciprocal interest.

Source: Panorama.am

BAKU; Russia not to weaken efforts for peace settlement of NK confl.

news.az, Azerbaijan
Feb 27 2010

Russia not to weaken efforts for peace settlement of Karabakh conflict
Sat 27 February 2010 | 08:54 GMT Text size:

Vladimir Dorokhin Russia is interested in the resolution of the
Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict over Nagorno Karabakh on the basis of
norms of international law.

"Russia is sincerely interested in the settlement of this conflict on
the basis of commonly accepted norms of international law. The
difficulties in the negotiation process will not weaken our efforts in
this direction as of mediators", Russian ambassador in Baku Vladimir
Dorokhin told in his interview with Azerbaijan’s Echo.

He noted that Russia is proud of its `crucial participation’ in the
attainment of the ceasefire agreement between Armenia and Azerbaijan
signed in 1994.

"I would not belittle the negotiations and signing any documents. A
complex negotiation process on the conflict is underway and it can be
attributed to the category of the most complicated ones in the world",
the ambassador said.

Asked about the preference to be possibly given to any party in case
hostilities between Armenia and Azerbaijan are launched, Dorokhin
voiced hope that "Russia will never face the need to choose, which is
proposed in this hypothesis".

As for the relations between Russia and Azerbaijan, Dorokhin said that
people in Russia do not know much about Azerbaijan.

"One moment had an unpleasant affect on me in period of preparation.
It turned out that Russia has the only scientific book about
Azerbaijan throughout almost 20 years of its existence as an
independent state. However, upon arrival in Baku, I felt that we know
too little about your country. This is bad and I always repeat this.
Russia should know its partners and assess them adequately, especially
such close ones as Azerbaijan", the ambassador said.

Interfax-Azerbaijan

Mbola Abandons Armenia

MBOLA ABANDONS ARMENIA
By Sydney Mungala

postzambia.com
post-read_article.php?articleId=6373
Feb 26 2010
Zambia

ARMEMIA-based national team defender Emmanuel Mbola has said that he
is not going back to his club as he is not happy with his contract
with the club.

In an interview after a brief trial spell at English club Tottenham
Hotspurs, Mbola said that he will stick around until his contract
problems were resolved.

"I am not going back there (Pyunik Yerevan) because I have issues
with my contract. I could not sign for Totenham because I have to
finalise things with my club," he said.

Mbola said he had left his issue in the hands of his manager and
the Football Association of Zambia (FAZ)." The former Mining Rangers
player, said that the Tottenham trip was a great experience.

"It was fantastic because I trained with the first and second team.

They were happy with me and I should be going back maybe next week
depending on how fast the issues are sorted out here," Mbola said.

And his local manager Elijah Chileshe said that he had written to FAZ
over the contract Mbola signed as a 15 year old with Pyunik Yerevan.

"I have written to FAZ to deal with the matter because they made him
sign a contract as 15 year old which is against the rules; he was a
minor," Chileshe said.

He said that the player would be around until FAZ dealt with the
matter.

Mbola signed a contract which binds him to the Armenian club until
2011.

The 16-year-old player is currently training with the under 17
national team.

http://www.postzambia.com/

Karabakh Represented At Milan Tourism Exhibition

KARABAKH REPRESENTED AT MILAN TOURISM EXHIBITION
Anahit Danielyan

2010/02/26 | 15:06

Nagorno Karabakh Society

The NKR government allocated 9 million AMD to organize an exhibit
at the Milan International Tourism Exhibition now underway in the
northern Italian city.

Sergey Shahverdyan, who heads the NKR Tourist Board, mentioned at a
press conference held today, that there have been no problems at the
NKR booth despite attempts by Azerbaijan to protest the presence of
Karabakh as an independent country.

"Nobody pays attention any more to all that hysteria. We don’t and
neither do the exhibition organizers," Mr. Shahverdyan said. He added
that since the RoA wasn’t represented at the exhibition the Karabakh
staff had to campaign for Armenia as well.

http://hetq.am/en/society/cucahandes-5/

Raffi Hovhannisyan To Take Part In The Forum

RAFFI HOVHANNISYAN TO TAKE PART IN THE FORUM

16982.html
15:06:27 – 26/02/2010

The Leader of the Heritage party and the secretary of the party
Larisa Alaverdyan on February 28 will participate in the Policy
Forum Armenia (PFA, ) to be held in the
U.S. capital Washington. The second annual forum is dedicated to the
Armenia-Diaspora relations.

At the invitation of PFA, on March 1, the founder of the Heritage
Party, the Armenian first foreign minister Raffi Hovhannisyan will
hold a speech in Georgetown University. As well as the secretary of
the party will hold a speech.

NGOs, research centers, universities, intellectuals, diplomats and
international scientific authorities from Armenia, U.S. and Europe
will take part in the forum.

On the first day of the forum, PFA is going to present its report
entitled "Armenia-Diaspora relations: 20 years after the independence".

http://www.lragir.am/engsrc/politics-lrahos
http://www.pf-armenia.org

UCLA Conference On Armenian Communities Of Asia Minor To Have Strong

UCLA CONFERENCE ON ARMENIAN COMMUNITIES OF ASIA MINOR TO HAVE STRONG VISUAL COMPONENT

Asbarez
rmenian-communities-of-asia-minor-to-have-strong-v isual-component/
Feb 26th, 2010

WESTWOOD, CA-The Armenian Communities of Asia Minor from Adabazar,
Bursa, and Banderma to Kutahia and Konia will be featured at UCLA
on Saturday, March 20. This is the 18th and final conference in the
international series, "Historic Armenian Cities and Provinces,"
sponsored by the Armenian Educational Foundation Chair in Modern
Armenian History and organized by Professor Richard G. Hovannisian.

The program will be held on the UCLA campus in 1200 Rolfe Hall from
9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.

Among the presenters is Mr. Osman Koker of Istanbul, editor and
publisher of Orlando C. Calumeno’s extensive postal card collection
depicting the Armenian communities of the Ottoman Empire a hundred year
ago and before. His illustrated talk on Saturday morning is titled
"From Banderma and Erminikoy to Armash: Armenians of the Marmara
Region." This presentation will be complemented in the afternoon
sessions with that of Ruth Thomasian of the Project SAVE Armenian
Photograph Archives, "Armenian Communities of Asia Minor as Seen
through the Photograph."

Others on the program include Prof. Richard Hovannisian, with an
overview of the Armenian communities of Asia Minor; Prof. Peter
Cowe of UCLA on the Konia community during the Seljuk period;
Ms. Dawn MacKeen of Los Angeles on Adabazar; Ara Melkonian of
London on Bardizag; Dr. Barbara Merguerian of Boston on Laura
Farnham and schools for Armenian girls in Adabazar and Bardizag;
Dr. Hasmik Khalapyan of Yerevan State University on the role of the
theater among the Armenians of Asia Minor; Dr. Arpi Vardumyan of the
Matenadaran in Yerevan on the Armenian musical culture of Kutahia;
and Prof. Simon Payaslian of Boston University on the demise of the
Armenian communities in Asia Minor.

The conference is supported by the UCLA Center for Near Eastern
Studies, Center for European and Eurasian Studies, Bob and Nora Movel
Fund, and the Organization of Istanbul Armenians. It is open to the
public at no charge. Parking is available in lot 5, entrance from
Sunset Blvd at Royce Drive (between Westwood Blvd. and Hilgard Ave,
with a fee). Limited free street parking is available on Hilgard Ave.

and on Westholme Ave. between Hilgard and Warner. For UCLA parking
maps, see:

For additional conference information: [email protected]

http://www.asbarez.com/77896/ucla-conference-on-a
www.transportation.ucla.edu/maps/index.htm

Vural Urges Erdogan To Recall Armenia-Turkey Protocols

VURAL URGES ERDOGAN TO RECALL ARMENIA-TURKEY PROTOCOLS

Panorama.am
15:54 22/02/2010

Politics

>From the very beginning Turkey’s party-in-power "Justice and
Development" has adopted a wrong political policy in trying to
normalize relations with Armenia, Turkey’s national movement party
member Oktai Vural told 1News.az.

"I urge "Justice and Development" party to call back Armenia-Turkey
protocols from the parliament. They do not recognize Kars agreement.

We will do all the possible to put an end to this mascarade-policy.

The ruling party will pay for its actions during the elections.

Nothing will save "Justice and Development" and PM Erdogan," he said.

"Shame on the government, having reached an agreement with the
Armenians. Let’s say "no" to the shameful protocols!" Vural said.

Rumors On RA Prime Minister Tigran Sargsian’s Being Relieved Of His

RUMORS ON RA PRIME MINISTER TIGRAN SARGSIAN’S BEING RELIEVED OF HIS POST NOT TRUE

Noyan Tapan
Feb 22, 2010

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 22, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. The rumors on
RA Prime Minister Tigran Sargsian’s being relieved of his post do not
correspond to reality. As Noyan Tapan was informed by Prime Minister’s
Assistant Aram Ananian, "such gossips are not connected with reality
and are absolutely false."

It should be mentioned that because of health problems the Prime
Minister did not take part in the Kamurj (Bridge) international
economic forum, which became a basis for spreading rumors that the
Prime Minister allegedly did not attend the forum because of not
health problems but because of being relieved of his post.