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Tamara Krikorian

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Tamara Krikorian (1944–2009) was a British video artist and a public art curator.

Biography

Born in Dorset from an Armenian family, she was educated in London where she studied music. In 1966 she moved to Edinburgh, Scotland where she met her partner Ivor Davies.

She was a pioneer of video art.[1] She started using video in 1973 in Scotland. She taught at Maidstone College of Art [2] and in Newcastle. In 1976 she was among the founders of London Video Arts. In 1981 she moved to Wales, where she became director of the Welsh Sculpture Trust in 1984 (which in 1990 became Cywaith Cymru/Artworks Wales). She ran the agency until her retirement. She died in 2009.[3]

Works

Her works include: In the Minds Eye, Unassembled Information, Vanitas, Eyebath (1977); Vanitas/Still Life (1978); Heart of the Illusion: Landscape, Still Life an Self Portrait (1981). In 1983 she made Sabra and Shatila massacres in Beirut that was included in the Expanded Cinema exhibition at Tate in 2009.[4]

References

  1. ^ http://artinwales.250x.com/TamaraKrikorian.htm
  2. ^ http://www.rewind.ac.uk/documents/Tamara%20Krikorian/TKR014.pdf
  3. ^ https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2009/aug/06/tamara-krikorian-obituary
  4. ^ Expanded Cinema:. "Activating the Space of Reception". http://www.studycollection.co.uk/. {{cite web}}: External link in |website= (help)CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link)