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Melik Ohanian: Atlanta College of Art Gallery. (Atlanta).


It all starred promisingly enough. While surfing the Web, Armenian-French artist Melik Ohanian discovered someone with the same name as his living on Long Island. This reminded him of a family story, typical of the Armenian diaspora: After the Turkish genocide of 1915, family members of his grandparents' generation traveled in three different directions: to the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. , to France, and to Argentina. Unable to find evidence of a Melik Ohanian in Buenos Aires Buenos Aires (bwā`nəs ī`rēz, âr`ēz, Span. bwā`nōs ī`rās), city and federal district (1991 pop. , Ohanian imagined collaborating with his American namesake on an art project for which the two of them could work together to fabricate an Argentine Melik Ohanian, thus filling in the third, missing branch of the family. The show that would result, to be called "You're mY DestinY," would involve elaborate sculptural and video installations tracing this quasi-genealogical process and its results.

But the show on view was not that show. The primary component of the exhibition was a text, Ohanian's diary for March 2003, displayed on eleven light boxes. Reading this, the visitor learned why the show the artist originally conceived did not come to fruition. Though he did experience a series of setbacks--including a tragicomic failure to establish contact with his Long Island namesake--it was the US war on Iraq that led him to abandon the project altogether. As global tensions mounted, Ohanian found it increasingly difficult to continue his work and experienced a crisis of political conscience. "I can't write anymore," he declares in an entry from March 19. "The project is on standby.... How can I insert/integrate/ inject into the project what is happening over there right now?... What is my responsibility?" Ultimately, Ohanian decides that he cannot travel to Atlanta to work on, install, or speak about his show, and arranges to "direct the exhibition hands-off from Paris."

Ohanian wants his physical absence to express his opposition to the war. It is, he contends, "a political stance--[it] is not a boycott but something that derives from the project itself." Ohanian's decision to offer his explanatory text as the installation is the result of his conclusion that it was his responsibility as an artist to allow his negative feelings about the developing geopolitical ge·o·pol·i·tics  
n. (used with a sing. verb)
1. The study of the relationship among politics and geography, demography, and economics, especially with respect to the foreign policy of a nation.

2.
a.
 situation to shape his work, to let the work reflect his experience and position in a direct and spontaneous way. He goes on to say that "the western artistic and intellectual sphere ... needs to distrust a certain conceptual sophistication so·phis·ti·cate  
v. so·phis·ti·cat·ed, so·phis·ti·cat·ing, so·phis·ti·cates

v.tr.
1. To cause to become less natural, especially to make less naive and more worldly.

2.
."

Ohanian's revised installation did include video shot for the earlier version: Three video monitors showed footage from New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
, Paris, and Buenos Aires (Ohanian intended to use this to evoke the imagined lives of diasporic Armenians). What we heard, however, was media coverage, in English, Spanish, and French, of the Iraq war Iraq War: see under Persian Gulf Wars.
Iraq War
 or Second Persian Gulf War

Brief conflict in 2003 between Iraq and a combined force of troops largely from the U.S. and Great Britain; and a subsequent U.S.
: the very news that brought Ohanian's project to a halt.

I cannot fault Ohanian for allowing global conflict to cause him to doubt the relevance of the project he had conceived or for making the question of the artist's political responsibility his subject, but I am troubled by some of his tactics. For one thing, his professed pro·fess  
v. pro·fessed, pro·fess·ing, pro·fess·es

v.tr.
1. To affirm openly; declare or claim: "a physics major
 rejection of a "certain conceptual sophistication" seems disingenuous dis·in·gen·u·ous  
adj.
1. Not straightforward or candid; insincere or calculating: "an ambitious, disingenuous, philistine, and hypocritical operator, who ... exemplified ...
. He wants his audience to accept that he had the right to make a spontaneous and radical change of plan and that doing so is an artistic statement in itself. Yet this depends more on a "conceptually sophisticated" audience than if he had simply declared his opposition to the war on Iraq and refused to exhibit altogether. Similarly, Ohanian's decision to absent himself and "direct the exhibition hands-off" from afar reads to me as a refusal to engage in dialogue. The darkened dark·en  
v. dark·ened, dark·en·ing, dark·ens

v.tr.
1.
a. To make dark or darker.

b. To give a darker hue to.

2. To fill with sadness; make gloomy.

3.
 gallery space invited us to immerse im·merse  
tr.v. im·mersed, im·mers·ing, im·mers·es
1. To cover completely in a liquid; submerge.

2. To baptize by submerging in water.

3.
 ourselves in his narrative, displayed on the glowing light boxes. But there was no indication that the artist was interested in any story other than his own. In light of Ohanian's meditation on "how completely exploded the whole collective idea now is," such solipsism sol·ip·sism  
n. Philosophy
1. The theory that the self is the only thing that can be known and verified.

2. The theory or view that the self is the only reality.
 is truly unfortunate.
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Author:Auslander, Philip
Publication:Artforum International
Date:May 1, 2003
Words:653
Previous Article:Adam Fuss: Museum of Fine Arts. (Boston).(Fuss is a Pictorialist whose works evoke an earlier era of photography)
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