~ Arbe ~ |
Uncertain Night |
"Once I was dreaming of what I can do, now I can do it." Growing up in Soviet Armenia, Arbe received recognition for his talent very early in life. The son of a well-known artist, and Professor of Art & Design, Ara Berberyan had his first Exhibition at the age of twelve. His paintings were sent by the U.S.S.R. on an International Tour, called "The World by Childrens' Eyes." This exhibition visited France, Italy, Canada, and the United States. In The Private Collection Of the 63 paintings Arbe showed between 1970 and 1972 only four returned to Armenia, the rest were sold or placed on permanent exhibition in State Buildings throughout the Soviet Union. "Wrapped In Gold" In the Soviet Union one was fortunate to have regular work of any kind. Young Arbe was always busy. After graduating from the University he was employed in an Architectural Office, "Gostproect", where he was asked to design facades for public buildings and office complexes. Here again, the ornamental gold designs, and marbleized patterns of Gustav Klimt heavily influenced Arbe's creations. "Blue Noctume" "Private clients expressed their appreciation for my work", he recalls, "and this was much more encouraging and satisfying than painting for any Institution." Although his fellow artists were enamored by the surrealists, Arbe preferred to express the beauty he saw everywhere in life. Violins and guitars are often his subjects, but he rarely paints men. Arbe says that women represent beauty and kindness to him, and so he began to focus on the female figure as the primary subject and object in his paintings. Here he met and married his wife Nazik, also from Armenia. They have two children. Arbe's originals are primarily oil on canvas, but he also incorporates a variety of other media into his work, creating a metallic texture in the abstract backgrounds of many of his paintings. He applies gold leaf, and sometimes silver leaf, and then works it with his tools and his hands into intricate patterns and textures that give his art a third dimension. His palette is full of earth tones, with an occasional flourish of vibrant reds, blues, purple or lavender. But always, grabbing your attention, is the gold -- rich and luxuriously applied by hand and worked into delicate patterns representing the intricacies of life.
Dreamscape The effect he achieves is a mixture of classical and modern. Klimt is still clearly visible in the backgrounds of paintings like "Sweet Whispers", "Proud Sister", or "In Thought". Others, reach back into his Armenian history and are influenced by biblical themes, legends and iconography. Taken together, Arbe's greatly varied body of work is filled with romance and drama, music and love. It is soothing and compelling, exciting and peaceful all at the same time. |
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