V. Khachatryan: "No Motivations Found"

V. KHACHATRYAN: "NO MOTIVATIONS FOUND"

Aysor
Nov 10 2009
Armenia

The Armenian authorities present a non existing budget, today said
the ANC representative former Mayor of Yerevan Vahagn Khachatryan,
on the press conference.

"You can call it whatever you want but not a budget", – the speaker
said adding that many important motivations are absent from the
budget project.

"For example there are no explanations how they are going to make
Armenia tourism center, Dilijan financial center, and Gyumri a
techno-park", – mentioned he.

According to the speaker there is a basis only for the two projects
the future of which he finds unrealistic too. It is Armenia – Iran
railway and the North – South highway.

"Unfortunately the Armenian – Iranian railway project can not come true
because of the political and economic reasons. I have doubts concerning
the North – South highway as I think it will also not come true,
as the geographical conditions will not allow making contributions
in the project to make it come true", – mentioned Vahagn Khachatryan
mentioned and added that the economy of Armenia can find the solution
being in the middle of these two programs.

Equipment Delivery To Hrazdan-5 To Finish By Year End

EQUIPMENT DELIVERY TO HRAZDAN-5 TO FINISH BY YEAR END

PanARMENIAN.Net
10.11.2009 17:34 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ In the frameworks of Hrazdan-5 project, energy bloc
under reconstruction is being supplied with technological equipment,
including GT13E2 Alstom equipment set (total weight: about 1350 tons)
for gas turbine and 4 equipment settings for main power transformers,
ArmRosgazprom CJSC’s press service reports.

Equipment delivery is to finish early in December. Delivery of 400
Mwt power transformer (260 tons) and 5.3 Mwt gas turbine transformer
is expected between November 25 and 29, 2009, and the second stage
of delivery of gas turbine supplies is to finish by December 10.

Shipping is carried out by SCR CJSC and its specialized subcontractor
Rail Gas Service on competitive bases. Supplies are delivered to Batumi
port (Georgia) by special sea vessels and then moved to Hrazdan-5
construction site by railway transportation means and automobiles.

Work on creation of a School of Restoration to start in 2010

Work on creation of a School of Restoration in Armenia to start in 2010

2009-11-07 16:14:00

ArmInfo. The work on creation of a School of Restoration in Armenia
will start in 2010.

Armenian Culture Minister Hasmik Poghosyan said at today’s
press-conference that Italy has already officially confirmed its
willingness to provide its support in this matter. France is expected
to join this project in 2010.

Poghosyan said that today it is necessary to pay much attention to
training of a new generation of specialists who will not yield to
their foreign colleagues in this respect. The best pupils of the
School will receive an opportunity to be retrained in Italy. The
project on creation of the School of Restoration will be implemented
within 2 years.

Incident In Noubarashen School To Be Reflected In Council Of Europe

INCIDENT IN NOUBARASHEN SCHOOL TO BE REFLECTED IN COUNCIL OF EUROPE REPORT

PanARMENIAN.Net
06.11.2009 21:39 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ "The group of volunteers will today address to
General Prosecutor a letter indicating the illegitimacy and partiality
of inquest body’s operations against Green Movement activist Mariam
Sukhudyan," activist’s lawyer Nona Galstyan told a news conference
in Yerevan.

On November 13, 2008 Armenian Public Television prepared a broadcast
in which a female inmate from Noubarashen boarding school No. 11
complained about being sexually harassed by one of pedagogues. Authors
of broadcast used video materials submitted by S.O.S. Teghut activists
who also engage themselves in the protection of vulnerable groups’
rights. As a result of subsequent inquest operations launched by
Erebuni Police Investigative Department, Mariam Sukhudyan was found
criminally liable under Section 1, Article 135 of RA Criminal Code
(libel). Case against her was filed on February 11, 2009.

2010 Budget In Agricultural Sphere To Comprise Over AMD 9 Billion

2010 BUDGET IN AGRICULTURAL SPHERE TO COMPRISE OVER AMD 9 BILLION

PanARMENIAN.Net
06.11.2009 15:26 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenia’s 2010 Budget in agricultural sphere will
comprise AMD 9 billion 3 million and 956 thousand which is an AMD 4
billion 810 million decrease compared to 2009, Agriculture Minister
Gerasim Alaverdyan said.

To ensure stable anti-epidemic situation in the country, it is planned
to launch a cattle vaccination program which will cost AMD 1 billion.

It is also planned to launch an AMD 1 billion and 100 million land
subsidy program for 315 thousand 425 communities of highland regions.

The 2010 cattle development program (which costs AMD 344 million)
will be implemented in conjunction with Japanese Government.

In Case Of Election Failure, Armenia’s First Marxist Intends To Leav

IN CASE OF ELECTION FAILURE, ARMENIA’S FIRST MARXIST INTENDS TO LEAVE COUNTRY

PanARMENIAN.Net
06.11.2009 17:19 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ "At the next elections into RA NA, I’m without a
rival among N10 Yerevan’s electoral station candidates," Armenia’s
Marxist Party Leader David Hakobyan stated.

David Hakobyan intends to fight till the final victory. "This will be
my last struggle for parliamentary mandate, and I have no intention
to give up," Armenia’s first Marxist emphasized, adding that he’ll
leave RA in case of election failure.

He expressed confidence of his future victory as, in his opinion,
he’s supported by Armenian people. "As a parliamentarian, I intend to
introduce ideological reforms both in society and political elite,"
David Hakobyan concluded.

Orange Armenia Starts Operating In Armenia

ORANGE ARMENIA STARTS OPERATING IN ARMENIA

Noyan Tapan
Nov 5, 2009

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 5, NOYAN TAPAN. France Telecom company (the Orange
brand) started operating in Armenia on November 5. In our country,
France Telecom will be represented by Orange Armenia company. As
President of France Telecom Didier Lombard stated at a press conference
held on the same day, Orange is the third European operator intending
to become a leader in Armenia.

"We consider the opening of a new office in each country as a birth,
and I am excited," D. Lombard said, adding that Armenia had been
chosen because of special relations between France and Armenia: the
Armenian community in France is large, which has played a great role
in Orange’s establishment in Armenia. "Armenia is the 31st country to
be provided Orange services. The company is among the world’s top 10
operators and boasts 189 million customers. We will live a long and
splendid life in this country," D. Lombard declared.

Presenting the advantages of Orange, its Vice President Olaf Swantee
stressed that the company will be notable for its innovations. Orange
has 18 laboratories worldwide, whose new technologies regularly become
accessible to subscribers. "We promise to transform the communication
market of Armenia and to become a favorite company," he stated.

Director General of Orange Armenian Bruno Dutois announced that the
company has already made investments of 90 million USD. It currenly
has 300 employees, but 15 thousand people have submitted applications.

In his words, they will offer services based on innovative solutions,
high speed Internet, and quite flexible and competitive prices. France
Telecom has the largest 3G+ network in Armenia. Starting from this
week, 13 service centers of the company will function.

B. Dutois said at this moment they promise accessible Internet
and mobile phone communication for 83% of Armenia’s territory –
500 villages and cities. He announced that as of November 4, 70,000
subscribers were already registered.

Marketing Director of Orange Aram Mkrtchian said the prepayment
tariffs of mobile communication will be divided into 4 tariff plans,
each having a specific direction depending on the preferences and
age of subscribers. In particular, there will be tariff plans for
certain hours of the day or certain days of the week in order to
provide lower tariffs. Depending on a tariff plan, the per-minute
tariff will be 5-40 drams, the sms tariff – 5-15 drams.

Until December 31, the first minute of the first call made each day
will be free of charge. Orange Armenia will give some surprises:
in particular, new subscribers of the company will receive as a gift
the opportunity to speak 300 minutes free within the network.

By subscribing for "Every Month" tariff plan, subscribers will be able
to purchase phones at quite low prices. The company will offer "Orange
World" service, starting from December – also Internet television
services. From November, Orange Armenia will provide roaming services,
for which no prepayment is required.

No Meeting Between Armenian And Azeri Communist Parties’ Representat

NO MEETING BETWEEN ARMENIAN AND AZERI COMMUNIST PARTIES’ REPRESENTATIVES WAS HELD IN MOSCOW

PanARMENIAN.Net
04.11.2009 15:42 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenian Communist Party Leader Ruben Tovmasyan said
Azeri Communist Party Leader Rauf Gurbanov’s statement on separate
meeting between Armenian and Azeri Communist parties’ representatives
is untrue.

"Gurbanov said Karabakh conflict was discussed at the meeting,
stressing that Karabakh belongs to Azerbaijan territory. I must note
that these statements are nothing but a figment of morbid imagination,"
Ruben Tovmasyan told a news conference in Yerevan.

As RA Communist Party leader reported, recently Moscow hosted XXXIV
Communist Parties Union convention, attended by CIS communist parties’
representatives. Karabakh conflict issue was not on convention agenda
and no meetings with Azeri communists took place.

Earlier, Azeri Communist Party Leader Rauf Gurbanov’s stated that
within 34th Communist Parties Union convention framework a meeting
took place between Armenian and Azeri communists, covering Karabakh
conflict settlement issues.

"We have no differences with Armenian communists as to the fact of
Karabakh is a part of Azeri territory. Armenian communists openly
state that," Azeri Communist Party Leader stressed.

Twentieth-Century Man; An Arshile Gorky Retrospective

TWENTIETH-CENTURY MAN; AN ARSHILE GORKY RETROSPECTIVE.
Peter Schjeldahl

The New Yorker
November 2, 2009

The safest and loneliest place in the world, for a devotee of
modern art, is within arm’s length of any first-rate painting by
Arshile Gorky, the subject of a galvanically moving retrospective
at the Philadelphia Museum of Art. In that zone, where the artist’s
decisions register kinesthetically, awakening your sense of touch as
well as enchanting your eye, it is hard to doubt the value of the
modernist adventure: a bet on the adequacy of sheer form, in the
right hands, to compensate for a lost faith in established orders
of civilization. No other artist has invested more ardor in naked
technique: how to activate an edge, how to rhyme a color. Gorky was an
academic painter in a modern academy of one. Take "Scent of Apricots
on the Fields" (1944). A pileup of loosely outlined, thinly painted
fragmentary shapes, like plant or body parts, embedded in passages of
golden yellow, hovers above a green suggestion of a table and below
a skylike expanse of brushy rose red.

Dabs of raw turpentine cause runny dissolutions, as if some forms
were melting into their white ground. The downward drips yield a
paradoxical sensation of buoyancy. The picture’s visceral shapes
seem to ascend like putti in a Renaissance firmament. The dynamics
are at once obvious and inspired, stroke by stroke and hue by hue,
and deliriously affecting-when viewed near at hand.

>From a distance, the work flummoxes evaluation. Its style fits only
too comfortably into a period vogue of surrealistic abstraction-that
of minor figures like André Masson and Roberto Matta, backed by
the giants Picasso, Kandinsky, and Miró. Its content-romanticizing
supposed memories of a boyhood that Gorky regularly lied about-is
"poetic" in ways that turn treacly and banal when you try to appreciate
them. Art history and biography are blind alleys in Gorky’s case. His
art feels contemporary, because no discursive account of the past
can contain it. That also makes it a lonely enthusiasm, difficult
to espouse. Still, he is the twentieth-century painter dearest to
my heart.

Of what use is biography in assessing someone who made himself up?

Gorky told people, including his wife, that he was Russian, a cousin
of the writer Maxim Gorky (evidently unaware that "Maxim Gorky"
was a pen name), born in the Caucasus in 1905 and educated in France.

Actually, he was an Ottoman Armenian, Vosdanig Adoian, born circa
1902, in a village near Van. He couldn’t speak Russian and never saw
France. His father emigrated to America in 1908. His mother died
in Yerevan, perhaps of starvation, in 1919, four years after the
remaining family had fled the Turkish massacres of Armenians. In 1920,
Adoian and a sister joined relatives in Watertown, Massachusetts. The
first evidence of his new identity appears as the signature "Gorky,
Arshele," on "Park Street Church, Boston," a skillful pastiche of
Neo-Impressionism that he painted in 1924, while teaching at an art
school in Boston. He admired the work of John Singer Sargent before
latching onto Cézanne, as a god of art second only, later, to Picasso.

Early imitations of Cézanne, in the show, are astonishingly acute.

Cézanne is the foremost of painters who unfold their majesty to
close-up inspection. (Gorky stumbled in his tyro emulations of Matisse
and De Chirico, artists more reliant on over-all design.) With Gorky,
influence is no incidental issue. I think he never ceased to regard
his own creations vicariously, through the conjured eyes of heroes-he
cited Uccello, Grunewald, Ingres, Seurat. He spoke with scorn of
"originality" as a criterion of artistic value. His friend and
self-declared disciple Willem de Kooning reported Gorky’s remarking
to him, "Aha, so you have ideas of your own." De Kooning recalled,
"Somehow, that didn’t seem so good."

The tall, preposterously handsome Gorky, who moved to New York in
1924 and took a studio on Union Square in 1930, was revered for his
gifts, enjoyed for his clowning, and resented for his bossiness in
the poverty-ravaged downtown art scene. Many women adored him. I
incline to a partly cynical view of his famous images of himself as
a painfully shy lad with his haunted-looking mother, based on a 1912
photograph. Gorky’s suffering was surely real, but the pathos of the
pictures strikes me as calculated to seduce. He wanted mothering. In
politics, he was a loose cannon among radicals, an admirer of Stalin
who pronounced social realism "poor art for poor people." In 1936,
he produced W.P.A. murals, later mostly destroyed, for Newark Airport.

(Photographs show him explaining the work to a visibly unimpressed
Fiorello La Guardia.) Remnants of the murals, in the Philadelphia
show, deploy a dashing, generic modern-artiness like that of his
friend Stuart Davis. But Gorky’s ambition centered on an intimate and
desperate grappling with Picasso, whom he didn’t so much emulate as
channel, in a spirit nicely characterized by the critic Robert Storr
in the show’s catalogue: that of "a gifted pianist who habitually
forgets in the middle of performing a canonical sonata that he has
not composed it himself."

Gorky’s Picassoesque works of the thirties are commonly scanted in
favor of the pictures with which, from about 1940 until his suicide,
in 1948, he anticipated the triumphs of Abstract Expressionism. (His
end was terrible, in a madness brought on by a studio fire that
destroyed much of his recent work, an operation for rectal cancer,
his beloved wife’s affair with his best friend, and a crippling
car crash.) But the drama of, say, "Enigmatic Combat" (1936-37),
a sprightly patchwork of amoeboid and spiky shapes, rivets me. Its
thickly layered surface bespeaks long, onerous toil for a kind of
effect that Picasso brought off with ease. The task seems absurd.

Gorky’s self-abnegating success with it has the equivocal glory of
a saint’s welcomed martyrdom.

The Philadelphia show, curated by Michael R. Taylor, is probably
overcrowded and definitely underlit (a consequence of interspersing
paintings with drawings, which, in standard museum practice, require
dim illumination). And it’s wacky, in the big section representing
the early forties, when Gorky abandoned his downtown friends for
the relatively glittering society of refugees-including Léger and
Duchamp-who embraced him. Walls painted with a wraparound, jagged band
of gray, evoking exhibition styles that were a la mode at that time,
emphasize a revisionist thesis that Taylor spells out in a catalogue
essay-assigning Gorky’s breakthrough works to European Surrealism
rather than American abstraction. I’m sorry, but that’s wrong. Gorky
is ours. The exiles inspired him; André Breton celebrated him as
"the only painter in America"; Matta taught him a crucial trick of
divorcing crisp line from atmospheric washes of color. But the younger
Surrealists, like Matta, were mediocrities on the down slope of a
movement. De Kooning, Pollock, Rothko, and other locals grasped and
developed the revolutionary implications of what Gorky did, which was,
roughly, to scale every inch of a painting to the impact of the whole.

American eyes saw through the lingering Surrealist clichés in his
work-often sketchily abstracted sex organs-to a new, expansive,
burstingly songful type of pictorial unity.

Textures of intensely sensitive touch, making forms quiver and squirm,
are the most eloquent element in late Gorky. Color comes second, yet
it, too, is extraordinary, evoking bodily wounds and inflammations
and ungraspable subtleties of nature. Drawing, though busily abundant,
feels incidental, like fleeting thoughts of a mind in the grip of an
extreme emotion. I am convinced that, had Gorky lived, he would have
suppressed line, perhaps in a way that, absent him, fell to Rothko. He
would also undoubtedly have undertaken bigger canvases, in the budding
New York School manner. "Untitled" (1943-48), a medium-sized and not
quite resolved painting, of scrappy shapes jittering in a surface of
hot orange scumbled over a muted yellow, feels pregnant with promises
of engulfing wonderment. The closing chords of Gorky’s unfinished
symphony remain incipient.

Armenia’s Premier League Winners Known

ARMENIA’S PREMIER LEAGUE WINNERS KNOWN

PanARMENIAN.Net
02.11.2009 18:23 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ 27th round of Supreme League championship of Armenia
was held November 1 and Armenia’s Premier League winners are already
known:

"Shirak" – "Pyunik" – 1:3 Goals: Albert Tadevosyan (43, 52, 65),
Vahagn Minasyan (47, own goal)

"Banants" – "Ulysses" – 2:3 Goals: Artyom Adamyan (16), Armen Tigranyan
(25), Norayr Gyozalyan (48), Aleksandr Petrosyan (81), Samvel Melkonyan
(pen, 90 +3)

"Mika" – "Ararat" – 2:3 Goals: Arsen Avetisyan (16, 37), Roman Arkusha
(62), Ara Hovhannisyan (64,67)

"Mika" – "Cilicia" – 2:1 Goals: Boti Demel (9), Artur Minasyan (53),
Edney de Oliveira (90 +3).

Football Club Pyunik will become champion the ninth time with 62
points.