Magazzino del Sale 3, Dorsoduro 264
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For the 60th Venice Biennale, the Republic of Armenia presents Echo, a multi-dimensional multi-media installation project by Paris-based Armenian artist Nina Khemchyan (b. 1964).
The pavilion encapsulates concepts drawn from Medieval Armenian cultural heritage and diverse spiritual universal principles, reconsidered in the realm of nowness.
The Armenian Pavilion invites a dialogue with the title of the Venice Biennale 2024, Foreigners Everywhere, featuring Nina Khemchyan, an Armenian female artist living in France. Although based in Europe, her oeuvre is deeply rooted in Armenian medieval heritage, endangered today, transcending geographical and temporal boundaries to address universal themes of identity, memory, and belonging.
Eternal Echoes: A Journey Through Sin and Spirit
The project Echo features two major installations—two profound components related to and fulfilling one another: Echo and Seven Deadly Sins. Moreover, the idea and concept of the pavilion are completed with a delicate endpoint striving towards human perfection, which, however, can become a new starting point…
Echo
This central component of the National Pavilion comprises eleven blue ceramic spheres: sculptures in clay. Each of these spheres is adorned with golden incrustations, representing a specific selection of Armenian sharakans, eleven chants of repentance, written by Mesrop Mashtots (4–5th century AD): the inventor of the Armenian alphabet, philosopher, theologian, priest, and poet. Although Nina had been immersed in Mashtots’ work, a unique encounter renewed the artist’s vision: the enigmatic voice of the singer Hasmik Baghdasaryan-Dolukhanyan who had been performing Mashtots’ sharakans, written in the 5th century. This physical installation is supplemented by an a capella performance of the hymns by Hasmik Baghdasaryan-Dolukhanyan: an artistic fusion of physical sculpture and music, blending the tangible and auditory to represent Armenian sacred music in a new and evocative way.
Seven Deadly Sins
The Armenian National Pavilion is fulfilled with the project Seven Deadly Sins by Nina Khemchyan: a 50-meter single-piece paper roll artwork. It is divided into seven distinct parts, each representing one of the sins. The choice of black ink on white paper not only provides a stark, graphic quality but also symbolizes the polarity of morality and immorality inherent in the concept of sins. Each episode is rich in symbolism and detailed imagery, crafted with graphic, grotesque visuals that are both captivating and thought-provoking. The seven unique scenes compose a story, animated by a particular rhythm and built around singular naked characters, as we stand naked in front of our sins, says the artist.
These two projects, Echo and Seven Deadly Sins, enhance and intensify each other, intertwining the themes of human sinfulness with the quest for spiritual redemption, which is essential and vital nowadays. In one case, sins are depicted as visual texts filled with imagery, whereas in the other, literal texts (the sharakans) are transformed into visual codes on the spheres. The whole exhibition turns into intersemiotic concept, where images are translated into texts and vice versa.
However, the exhibition doesn’t leave the viewer with the idea of sins and redemption only. One should pave a way through this serpentine of sins to enter the space of meditative self-reflection and forgiveness. This path mirrors a deep spiritual trilogy, uniting self, universe, and essence, guiding toward profound insight. The golden sphere rises as a symbol of purification, light and eternity: perfection.
Location
Magazzino del Sale 3, a historical salt warehouse building dating back to the 14th century. Today it is an important art space supervised by the Accademia di Belle Arti di Venezia. It is an integral institutional collaboration between the Cafesjian Center for the Arts and Accademia di Belle Arti di Venezia, organized in partnership with Anton Levahin and A&A Worldwide.
Limited vinyl record
The Cafesjian Center for the Arts has produced a limited vinyl record featuring a selection of 11 Armenian sharakans, performed a cappella by Hasmik Baghdasaryan Dolukhanyan, a celebrated performer of Armenian spiritual and folk music.
The artist
Nina Khemchyan (b. 1964, Yerevan) is a Paris-based Armenian artist. A graduate from the department of Industrial Design at the Yerevan State Institute of Theatre and Fine Arts, Nina has actively been working and presenting her works at varied galleries in Armenia since the early 1990s. Moving to France, she continued her education at the National School of Applied Arts and Crafts in Paris in 1996-1998. For more than 30 years Nina has worked as a sculptor and graphic artist.
Commissioner: The Ministry of Education, Science, Culture and Sports of the Republic of Armenia, Svetlana Sahakyan, the Head of the Department for Modern Art
Co-organizer and Patron: The Cafesjian Center for the Arts (CCA)
Curator: Armen Yesayants, Director of Exhibitions, CCA
Producer in Venice: Anton Levahin, A&A Worldwide
Graphic Designer: Edik Boghosian
Limited Vinyl Production: GZ Media, Czech Republic
Partners: Honorary Consulate of Armenia in Venice, Accademia di Belle Arti di Venezia, ARARAT Armenian Brandy, snkh studio, DZZZ studio
Digital invitations to the Armenian Pavilion’s inauguration are available upon request via email: armen.yes [at] gmail.com or info [at] cmf.am.