Sarkissian attended the School of Fine Arts there in 1977, followed by the Yerevan State Pedagogical University (Drawing) in 1989.[2] He lives and works in Yerevan, Armenia.[3]
Art
Sarkissian works in abstract art as a statement of post-soviet freedom of expression. He said in 2005, "my approach to painting developed from the desire to free myself from Socialist Realism."[4]
His canvases combine painting and silkscreen printing, incorporating text, photographs, signs, architectural images and extracts from other paintings, fusing oil paint with found ephemera.[5]
Such a polyglot, polysemic art is not unique to Sarkissian. We see his style anticipated by Robert Rauschenberg, and before him Kurt Schwitters. We even see its textures and practices, as well as philosophical positions, reflected in the work of such disparate predecessors as Warhol, Cornell, Miro, Malevich, and, of course, Picasso. Among other things, Sarkissian demonstrates that the “collage aesthetic” – the simultaneously disjunctive and conjunctive qualities that uniquely define modern composition – remains one of 20th century art’s most significant and enduring legacies. Indeed, this collage aesthetic provides the perceptual crucible in which the dialectic described above is forged, and it defines the particular visual world in which Sarkissian finds his expression.[1][6]
His installation artwork includes the work Closed Session,[7] comprising a row of seven chairs of varying sizes, each standing on four lit lightbulbs; described by Sonia Balassanian, curator of the Armenian Center for Contemporary Experimental Art (ACCEA), as a "satirical reference to self-aggrandizing decision-makers."[7]
His work is displayed in the Museum of Modern Art in Yerevan.[2]
Works
Sarkissian's works include:
Closed Session (2007), mixed media installation
Mind Games (2003), oil on canvas, 400x400cm
Game in the Museum (2005), mixed media on canvas, 195x145 inches[8]
Evening in the museum (2005), mixed media on canvas, 95x175cm[3]
20 Pages (2006), oil on canvas, 138x118cm
Three colour stains (2006), mixed media on canvas, 100x80cm[3]
Closed Session (2007), mixed media installation[7]
Nervus Probandi (2009), oil on canvas, 120x195cm
Image Stripes (2011), oil on canvas, 110x140cm, It was sold at the Christie's Auction in London,[9]
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