|  Lecture ANGELA HARUTYUNYAN:
 Importing "Curator": Politics of Representation and Recognition in
 Contemporary Armenian Art
 SCCA Project Room, Metelkova 6, Ljubljana, SloveniaTuesday, January 23, 2007, at 7. p.m.
 World of Art, School of Contemporary Arts was  introduced in 1997 as the annual  educational program now including Course for curators, Seminar for writing,  Series of public lectures, and Anthology. In November 2006 (as a part of regular program) the school  has launched a platform for discussions on different educational models in the  field of contemporary arts. The lecture of Angela Harutyunyan is the second  event within this platform.  Importing "Curator": Politics of  Representation and Recognition in Contemporary Armenian Art Angela Harutyunyan: "In the first part of my talk  I will introduce the word 'curator' (and its constructed Armenian equivalent -  'hamadrogh') as an imported concept in the context of contemporary Armenian art  which participates in the ongoing signification of other imported terms. I will  trace its origins and implications by contextualizing it within several  artistic and curatorial practices in Armenia.  I will then  proceed to critically outline the history of curating since the mid 90's in the  context of the endemic politics of representation and recognition. I will do  this by discussing two prevailing modes of curatorial engagement - the artist  as curator and the curator as artist. As opposed to these dominant trends, I  will argue that the critical role of the curator today is not to pursue  (self-)representation but to offer a critique of such a position. I hold that  it is precisely when the curator manages to facilitate dialog between the  artists, the artist and the audience, as well as the artist/audience and herself,  curating takes on the role of a cultural hermeneutic and intermediation beyond  self-representation. This resists the hierarchical relation of artistic  representation over and above the act of curatorial reflection. Such an  approach I argue, complicates the curator's role as someone who combines the  intermediation of relations with the function of evaluation and reflection. In the  second part of my discussion, I will address the tasks, aims as well as the  relevance of the curators' summer school that I am involved in organizing with  art critic and curator Nazareth Karoyan. Finally, with the hope of engaging the  audience into a critical debate and discussion, I will address methodological,  conceptual and practical problems and difficulties we have been facing since  the beginning of this initiative." The lecture will be given in English.  Kindly  invited! 
 Angela Harutyunyan PHd candidate in Art History and Visual Studies at  University of Machester, UK. Member of the National Association of Art Critics  in Armenia. She received her first graduate degree in Art History from Yerevan  State University in Armenia. As a curator in the Armenian Center for  Contemporary Experimental Art from 2002-2004, she has organized several solo  exhibitions of contemporary Armenian artists as well as curated an  international festival of media art called "Public_Media_Space" in  Yerevan, Armenia. In 2006 she was a coordinator of the First International  Summer School for Art Curators, Yerevan, Armenia.
 
 The National Association of Art Critics from Armenia (www.naac.am) among its activities organizes the two-week summer  school, which offers an opportunity to attend seminars, lectures and a workshop  instructed by experienced and well-known curators as well as highly qualified  professors of art history and theory from different academic institutions.  After successfully completing and summarizing the results of  the First International Summer School For Art Curators organized in July 2006  in Yerevan, Armenia, the National Association of Art Critics now intends to  further develop the program focusing on partnership and networking with  regional actors in the field of art criticism and curatorship: Soros Centre for Contemporary Art  (Almaty, Kazakhstan), Beral Madra Centre for  Contemporary Art (Istanbul, Turkey) and SCCA, Center for Contemporary Arts -  Ljubljana (Slovenia). SCCA-Ljubljana  is a member of Asociacija, the association of non-government organisations and  independent creators in the field of culture and art in Slovenia.               |