Cartoons Worth a Thousand Words By Jirair Tutunjian for Keghart.com
The centennial of the Armenian Genocide last year brought forth a welcome avalanche of political activism, books, scholarly and journalistic reports, conferences, community projects, music, theatrical performances, visual arts presentations, and civic and religious commemorations.
One such event was the multi-exhibition series “Kiss the
Ground” (Yergurbakootyoon), which featured Perspectives
from Exile—22
political cartoons by author, journalist, activist, and cartoonist Lucine
Kasbarian of New Jersey and Massachusetts.
Fourteen other Armenian-American creative people
participated in the “Kiss the Ground” exhibition, which explored memory, loss and culture,
and was held at the
Cambridge School of Weston, Massachusetts.
An offshoot of the exhibition is Kasbarian's Perspectives from Exile—a 110-page illustrated volume that includes a foreword by Curator Todd Bartel, a visual arts teacher and the director of the Cambridge School’s Thompson Gallery.
An offshoot of the exhibition is Kasbarian's Perspectives from Exile—a 110-page illustrated volume that includes a foreword by Curator Todd Bartel, a visual arts teacher and the director of the Cambridge School’s Thompson Gallery.
The volume’s incisive political cartoons explore topics
such as Armenian Genocide denial, reparations, Turkish and Azeri
belligerence and NATO indifference to the Armenian Cause.
Just
one of Kasbarian’s cartoons produced during the Genocide centennial year,
titled “Threaten the Pope,” spotlighted Turkish President Erdogan dreaming
about the fate of Pope Francis after Erdogan threatened the latter for
acknowledging the Armenian Genocide. The cartoon depicts Erdogan recalling
yesteryear’s attempt on the life of Pope John Paul II by Turkish citizen Mehmet
Ali Agca.
Also included in Perspectives
from Exile are an interview
with Kasbarian conducted by Bartel, photos of the exhibition, highly
informative articles by Kasbarian about the history and consequences of the
Genocide and its denial, and the artist's statement.
Kasbarian's cartoons have appeared in more
than twenty-five Armenian and non-Armenian publications and websites,
including Foreign Policy
Journal, Zartonk, Women's International Perspective, Massis Weekly, Veterans
Today and Keghart.com.
Kasbarian’s political cartoons reaffirm the validity of
the opinion of many critics of “modern” Turkey that the rulers’
mindset has not changed from that of the Ottomans and the Young Turks.
In a year which saw Turkey's continued oppression of its indigenous minorities and journalists; its shooting down of a Russian military jet; Ankara's continued denial of the Armenian Genocide; its president's support of ISIS and aggression into Syria and Iraq, not to mention his numerous inane pronouncements, Kasbarian's Perspectives from Exile provides some much-needed relief from the oppressive insanity and criminality pouring out of Ankara.
In a year which saw Turkey's continued oppression of its indigenous minorities and journalists; its shooting down of a Russian military jet; Ankara's continued denial of the Armenian Genocide; its president's support of ISIS and aggression into Syria and Iraq, not to mention his numerous inane pronouncements, Kasbarian's Perspectives from Exile provides some much-needed relief from the oppressive insanity and criminality pouring out of Ankara.
This publication deserves wide distribution as it is
undoubtedly a significant contribution to the published observances of the
Centennial of the Armenian Genocide.
To order Perspectives from Exile ($24 USD), visit: http://www.lulu.com/shop/todd-bartel-and-lucine-kasbarian/lucine-kasbarianperspectives-from-exile/paperback/product-22477813.html or place an order with Armenian booksellers.
To order Perspectives from Exile ($24 USD), visit: http://www.lulu.com/shop/todd-bartel-and-lucine-kasbarian/lucine-kasbarianperspectives-from-exile/paperback/product-22477813.html or place an order with Armenian booksellers.
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