Farrah Karapetian
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- Comment: Notability is no longer at issue; Artforum, Los Angeles Times, and The Georgia Review are sufficient to demonstrate notability. External links (links that take the reader away from Wikipedia) should not appear in the text. For example, Otis College of Art and Design is not allowed. If the link proves the statement (that Karapetian taught there) then convert it into a reference. Otherwise remove the link, leaving only the text. If Wikipedia has an article on the subject that would enhance a reader's understanding of Karapetian, then use an internal link, as in Otis College of Art and Design.Lists on Wikipedia, like the biography as a whole, should be chronological. Reverse chronological order is an art-world CV style. For "selected" lists, be explicit about the selection criteria.Be much more selective in the non-artwork lists, such as where she has taught/spoken/written, and awards. Somewhere she taught for a year or more is worth mentioning, but an encyclopedia summarizes, it doesn't list every gig a person has ever had. Mention a visiting lectureship only if there's more to say about it, like "where she met X. They later collaborated on ..." Awards that have a Wikipedia article about them are worth mentioning, but "City of Los Angeles Certificate of Appreciation"? Don't list every scholarship or grant.As much as possible, turn the lists into prose and weave them into the chronological biography, or if more appropriate, the analysis of her body of work.Be sure that it's clear to the reader where all of the information in the draft came from, especially religion, ethnicity, and education. Worldbruce (talk) 16:46, 21 September 2017 (UTC)
Farrah Karapetian (born 1978) is an American visual artist. She works primarily in cameraless photography,[1] incorporating multiple mediums in her process including sculpture, theatre, drawing, creative nonfiction, and social practice.[2] She is especially known for her work that "marries two traditions in photography — that of the staged picture and of the image made without a camera."[3] Recurrent concerns include the agency of the individual versus that of authority and the role of the body in determining that agency.
Biography
Farrah Karapetian was born in Marin, California to Hamidatun and Aswan Karapetian, and grew up in Highland Park in northeast Los Angeles. Her father is a graphic designer and drummer, and her mother has degrees in culinary anthropology and bicultural education; together her parents founded WizdomInc, a publishing company dedicated to providing equal access to topical subjects in education and professions to English-language learners. Her parents are active members of SUBUD[4]
Karapetian earned a Bachelor of Arts from Yale University in 2000. She majored in fine art with a concentration in photography. She earned a Master of Fine Arts from the University of California at Los Angeles in 2008[5]; her thesis committee consisted of James Welling, Charles Ray, Lari Pittman, and Mary Kelly, reflecting her interest in experimental photography, space and scale, the politics of imagery, and the phenomenology of visual experience, respectively.
Karapetian has taught visual arts at multiple universities, including courses at Otis College of Art and Design that underscored her interest in the history of the photography of unrest and in the history and practice of the house in and as contemporary art. She is a frequent speaker and panelist, including especially on topics such as Philosophy and Photography at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art [6] and on various topics relating to the politics of visual space in a recurring relationship with the Wende Museum.
Karapetian's writing on the politics of visual culture has been published by the Los Angeles Review of Books, [7] and in English and Norwegian on Seismopolite. [8] Her research and writing on the house in and as contemporary art was funded by a Creative Capital Andy Warhol Foundation Artwriters grant in 2013.[9] Her writing on photography has been published by The Brooklyn Rail[10], Whitehot Magazine[11], Artslant [12], and Nonsite [13]
Work
Karapetian's cameraless photography is understood as experimental in the lineage of Henry Holmes Smith and Robert Heinecken, but discussed alongside artists such as Matthew Brandt and Chris McCaw as being part of a generation of artists "rematerializing photography."[2] The consequence of this work is to unpack the changing mental and physical landscape of a digital era.[14] "More like a metaphor than a record,[15] Karapetian's work in photography "generates for viewers enough interference to disrupt and call attention to our era's deeply entrenched response of permitting the constant newsfeed of documentary to slide by us as political ephemera."[16]
Karapetian's cameraless photographic explorations of her own family's trajectory of migration were funded by the Pollock-Krasner Foundation in 2017. Her research on Vsevolod Meyerhold through the Fulbright Program in St. Petersburg, Russia in 2018 emphasizes the body as the arbiter of authenticity in revolutionary creative practice. This project continues her work with populations playing active parts in their own representation: in 2014, she she was the lead artist on a project with the Angels Gate Cultural Center in San Pedro, California called “Service and Other Stories,” in which veterans of the U.S. Armed Forces culled from their own memories.[17] In 2012, she worked with students at East Los Angeles College to mine their and their families' experiences of protest in Southern California, leading a program called “Directed Studies: Los Angeles Times.”[18] Also in 2012, she worked with residents of Flint, Michigan to represent their own and their city's growth as part of the Flint Public Art Project.[19] In her studio work, her writing and speaking, and her public projects, "Karapetian explicitly recodes photography, turning an act of reproduction into one of production"[20]
Selected collections
Karapetian's artwork is held in permanent collections that include, J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, CA; Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, CA;[21] San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco, CA;[22] and the Wende Museum of the Cold War, Culver City, CA.[23]
References
- ^ Pagel, David. "A head-spinning journey to the edges of Farrah Karapetian's photographic world" Los Angeles Times, 21 January 2016. Retrieved on 28 August 2017.
- ^ a b Ollman, Leah. “Rematerializing Photography”, Art in America, New York, 1 June 2017. Retrieved on 28 August 2017.
- ^ Ollman, Leah. "Beautiful Conceptually Ticklish Photograms by Farrah Karapetian" Los Angeles Times, 13 February 2015. Retrieved on 28 August 2017.
- ^ "Subud Projects: WizdomInc".
- ^ "Department of Art Alumni Highlights".
- ^ “Photography and Philsophy Symposium at LACMA” Art and Education, 13 February 2015. Retrieved on 21 September 2017.
- ^ "the Los Angeles Review of Books" Retrieved on 21 September 2017.
- ^ “Art and Civil Disobedience” Seismopolite, 30 September 2012. Retrieved on 21 September 2017.
- ^ "Creative Capital Andy Warhol Foundation, Arts Writers Grant Program: Grantees - Farrah Karapetian"
- ^ “the Brooklyn Rail”
- ^ “Whitehot Magazine”
- ^ “Artslant”
- ^ “Nonsite”
- ^ "A Matter of Memory: Photography as Object in the Digital Age", Eastman Museum, Rochester, 22 October 2016. Retrieved on 28 August 2017.
- ^ Ollman, Leah. "Farrah Karapetian at Sandroni Rey", Los Angeles Times, 9 October 2009. Retrieved on 28 August 2017.
- ^ Gropp, Jenny. “Muscle Memory” The Georgia Review, 11 September 2016. Retrieved on 28 August 2017.
- ^ http://angelsgateart.org/gallery/service-and-other-stories-a-living-history-project/
- ^ Chou, Elizabeth Hsing-Huei. “ELAC Space Shows Art That's Here Today” Eastern Group Publications Los Angeles, 24 May 2012. Retrieved on 28 August 2017.
- ^ "All Artists - Flint Public Art Project". flintpublicartproject.com.
- ^ Harren, Natilee. "Farrah Karapetian, LEADAPRON" Artforum New York, March 2012. Retrieved on 28 August 2017.
- ^ "LENS: Photography Council 2016 Acquisitions". 25 July 2016 – via LACMA.
- ^ "SFMOMA Collections Artist Page" – via SFMOMA.
- ^ "Wende Museum Collections Artist Page" – via Wende Museum.
External links
Category:American photographers Category:American artists Category:UCLA alumni Category:Yale University alumni Category:1978 births Category:living people Category:women artists