
Dance with Apple 
Victory 
King 
Chanchill 
Cup of Life
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Emil Kazaz
airiandomeoffineart.com
Armenian born artist Emil Kazaz creates mythologically grounded figures
within a realm of half-light. His themes are a blend of sensual mysticism
and provocative introspection beauty, love and valor prevail. Kazaz's
characters are original, acutely observed, and marvelously refreshing
especially considering how well worn this territory is. Although
often obscured by the appearance of conformity to western classical figurative
tradition, his sophisticated and culturally diverse aesthetic psychology
produces a living rather than mummified iconography, not from frozen in
time but archetype dancing to our collective internal rhythms. Once you
recognize his anti-formal dances, the classicism becomes transparent.
Kazaz straddles the creative philosophies of two world cultures, East
and West, bodies in constant flux. He twists conventions together. Iridescent
Arabic manuscript illuminations romp with Western compositional restraints
emotion and color confronting line and form. These myth shrouded
figures push us around, disturb our choices and decisions, without slick
faddism. They attach themselves to something deep within each of us, and,
like cartographers, provide maps for our humanity
Early on, Kazaz abandoned the stiff realist paradise of his academic
Soviet-styled Art School training, as well as the West's formalized
penchant for abstraction and conceptualism. He sees both systems as
obsolete and not helpful to the human catharsis within society. He also
disclaims any connections to the self-centered political appropriateness
advocated by much of today's criticism.
To paraphrase the poet John Dryden, Art is the "image of nature".
All theories of Art have made some allowance for both terms: image,
a thing in itself, a construct; and nature, what the Art addresses or
imitates. Kazaz imitates nothing and creates everything, leaving nothing
to chance. In his work, nature is more ontological than semantic. He
moves people from the center of the contemporary universe and reconnects
them to metaphysics of our collective past. Pushing the viewer into
a thoroughly personal macrocosm, Kazaz does not subordinate his mythic
and "supernatural" beings to anything. Not the fuming of a
malevolent Old Testament God or the godhaunted demiurge of Greek thought.
His characters and situations exist in their present, always trying
to meddle with their destiny, and like the adventurers of Homer, moving
through unreal worlds of appearances where nothing is what it seems.
Kazaz's approach to Art brings us to the fringe of human nature. Masked
by rich color, pattern and texture, attached to brilliant forms, Kazaz's
attention to detail is never for its own sake. They are links that connect
us to his reconstruced nature, philosophical fragments burning with
supernatural potency, that set boundaries and make rules. Kazaz's powers
of imitation and aesthetic judgment fool us into thinking we know his
terrain. However, upon closer inspection, we find ourselves questioning
our very nature while tightly holding on to what we believe, and accepting
flux as stability.
There are countless gods, heroes, and demons in our world. You can
find them everywhere. They are in Art, literature, and religion. Kazaz's
vigilance catches these ethereal beings overseeing the normal routine
of everyday people.
Emil Kazaz has been living in Los Angeles, California, since the 80's,
where he has been developing very successful international career.
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