07/03/2015

Music in Blue


People have different ideas of what they estimate is great music. But what is sure is that we wouldn't be human without it... I believe at least. I think great music is the one that moves you the most, that talks to you directly and brings meaning in a world full of nonsense and blurred values.

Friends have asked me why I listen to such melancholic music while reporting and travelling, as I already work on such gloomy topics (genocides, civil war, haunting ghosts of unspoken pasts...).

My favourite musician explained it perfectly in a interview:

"Everyone says we're dark, but I think our music's a safer place to be than pop music. Pop's fucking cold, mechanical and scary – that really terrifies me. I find most sad music warmer, because it's an outlet, isn't it? Emotional music is cathartic. Sad music is the true spirit of the people, melancholic music, whereas pop is just a transient thing to keep your mind off the shit"...


(In Rock's Backpages, 3rd February 2003: 3D talks to Stephen Dalton about war, melancholia and the duo's new 100th Window)


I could choose many songs to illustrate this feeling, yet today is one for this one, because it's "blue" (my favourite colour), you know?




"Bullet Boy" soundtrack, 2003

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More on the film:

Bullet Boy is a 2004 British drama film directed by Saul Dibb, written by Saul Dibb and Catherine Johnson, and stars Ashley Walters. The film’s original music was composed and performed by Robert Del Naja of Massive Attack, who released it as an album. The film is about a family in crime ridden east London, the eldest son’s involvement in gun crime, and the effects of this on his younger brother. Filming took place in the summer of 2003.


Music: Armenian band from Istanbul Vomank on stage at Araf


 Great evening yesterday at Araf, sponsored by DurDe, an organisation fighting against racism in Turkey.

Playing was Armenian band from Istanbul Vomank on stage at the Araf concert venue, Balo Sk, near Istiklal, Beyoglu :



Photos by Benjamin Bechet


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More on Durde:

Page of Say Stop to Racism and Nationalism (DurDe), which is an antiracist platform combating racism, nationalism, hate crimes and antisemitism:
https://www.facebook.com/durde.international/info?tab=page_info

Website:
http://www.durde.org/english/



06/03/2015

Istanbul - Day 5 at Samatya


Beautiful weather today in Istanbul. It was the perfect day to have a walk in Samatya, old neighbourhood near the sea..



Samatya
 — Stop at Seyran Cafe & Restaurant and visit of the Saint George Church and its school :


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More soon.



Istanbul - Day 5: And tonight, some music!


Going to Araf club to listen to a young local band and more!
A great place for music according to the Guardian:



10 of the best clubs in Istanbul

Araf

Araf
 Photograph: ampersandyslexia on Flickrsome rights reserved. Photograph: Picasa 3.0
With its live in-house Gypsy band, cheap beer on tap, and location – just off the perpetually buzzing Nevizade Sokak – it's little wonder that Araf is a student favourite. It's perched at the top of a dilapidated Beyoğlu building (it takes numerous flights of stairs to reach the bar) and its large windows look out over the run-down mansion houses of Tarlabaşi. Expect throngs of local and international students dancing to authentic Gypsy sounds, while the DJs play reggae, funk, soul and rock'n'roll. Thursday night has dependable music; celebrated Roma clarinettist Selim Sesler plays on Tuesdays. Avoid the madness of the weekend, when the DJ plays more generic tracks and the club swells to two floors.
 Hüseyinağa Mahallesi, Balo Sokak 32, Beyoğlu, +90 212 244 8301, araf.com.tr
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On Araf's website: 


Getting its name from the imaginary land between Heaven and Hell, on real a land between East and West, Araf has been one of the most popular clubs of Istanbul for five years. The cosy atmosphere, live performances, the music choices that appreciate the fortune of alternative world music might be the reason for creating a bunch of regular costumers who ask for the 'regular' each night. People comes from all around the world meet at Araf. Because neither Heaven nor Hell, we are all in Araf!.

Kirkor Sahakoğlu -"Eksik" ("Absent") exhibition in Istanbul Gallery DEPO



Kirkor Sahakoğlu - Absent

A glimpse into tonight's opening at Depo Gallery in Istanbul:









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"Eksik" (Absent) is an homage to those missing in every Armenian home... where "you feel an absence even at the happiest table": 




My favourite painting:






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Left, the artist:




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Lovely evening. Thank you everyone!


05/03/2015

Tonight in Istanbul: Kirkor Sahakoğlu - "Absent" Exhibition opening at Depo




Upcoming Exhibition: Kirkor Sahakoğlu - Absent
  • Opening: Thursday 5 March, 18:30
  • Dates: 5 March 2015 - 29 March 2015


Absent

Kirkor Sahakoğlu

6 - 29 March 2015
Opening: Thursday 5 March, 18:30

Depo hosts Kirkor Sahakoğlu's exhibition titled "Absent" comprised of 39 paintings and one video. Sahakoğlu's works are manifestations of a surprising rush of emotions, a profound anguish of the soul... Paintings of "Absent", created through improvisation with intense and free brushstrokes, bear the tokens of a soot-black reticence and a bleeding void. Coalescing with these paintings the video presents a disquieting reality, a harsh insurgence that questions life and death.
Sahakoğlu notes that in "Absent" he expresses a state of being left wanting, a loss not duly lamented, a sorrow passed on from one generation to the next: "These paintings are a bond that I established with the ones I have lost. This is why they do not each have a separate name. If they did, they would probably be called Artin, Agop, Sarkis, Yeranuş, Hripsime, Boğos. But for me the name of all of these paintings is Absent. Yes, this century is the story of an absence, of being left wanting. And even the stirrings of those who persist to exist despite these."

Born in İstanbul, Kirkor Sahakoğlu attended Getronagan High School, after which he graduated from the School of National Applied Fine Arts Advertising Graphics Department. Later he received his master's degree at Istituto Europeo Di Design in Milan. He also studied at Domus Academy and participated in workshops. As of 1985 Sahakoğlu worked as art director and creative director in prominent advertising agencies of Turkey, and later founded his own agency. He assisted numerous institutions and products in their branding processes. Recipient of innumerable Crystal Apple awards of the Association of Advertising Agencies, since 2010 Sahakoğlu has been working freelance, as well as teaching undergraduate and graduate students at Marmara University Faculty of Fine Arts. Sahakoğlu also organizes seminars and workshops in various universities.

Address: DEPO / Tütün Deposu Lüleci Hendek Caddesi No.12 
Tophane 34425 İstanbul 


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Past exhibition:


Exhibition: Helen Sheehan - Armenian Family Stories and Lost Landscapes
This is Irish photographer Helen Sheehan's second exhibition in Turkey. In May 2014 she showed her projected photographic sound pieces inside the restored Armenian church of St. Giragos in Diyarbakır with the organization of Diyarbakır Sanat Merkezi and as part of the Second Photography Days held by DIFAK. Sheehan's interest in Armenia and its diaspora was triggered by working as a teacher in the Mechitarist Seminary school on the Armenian Island of St. Lazzaro in Venice in the 1990s. However this interest was re-awakened again in 2009 when she decided to narrate stories of Armenians in diaspora, both in Paris and London, where she was able to forge relationships with descendants of the exiles. By sheer co-incidence most of the families could trace their ancestors back to the Eastern Anatolian city of Diyarbakır, known to them as Digranagerd. Others have connections to Marash, Zeytun and Van region. Sheehan tries to connect with their lost landscape and also attempts to engage with the people now living in these places and how they have transformed them into their own spaces.

Sheehan's background is a fusion of photojournalist and fine art sensibilities which were forged in the context of attending Art college in the Republic of Ireland in the 1980s. For two decades she has returned again and again to diaspora narratives and in particular to the experience of being forcibly displaced. In the 1990s she photographed the break up of three formally multi-ethnic towns and cities in the Former Yugoslavia - Sarajevo, Vukovar and Mostar. This forged her commitment to human rights issues and she has exhibited with Amnesty International in Slovenia, Dublin and London. Other work includes commissions from Elle Magazine, The Independent, London and radio work for the BBC World Service.   








03/03/2015

Istanbul in pictures


First day in Istanbul: Beyoglu and a lot of sunshine









I arrived straight from Bristol, so a little reminder on my way was not forgotten...



Lights of Istanbul



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I'm in town to report on minorities and especially the Armenian community.

Here's a insight into the Armenian neighbourhood in Beyoglu:



Church of Three Alters:












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Taksim!



Istiqlal

Small fish in a big pond...



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More soon!


02/03/2015

Thinking of ... Blood Meridian



“The truth about the world, he said, is that anything is possible. Had you not seen it all from birth and thereby bled it of its strangeness it would appear to you for what it is, a hat trick in a medicine show, a fevered dream, a trance bepopulate with chimeras having neither analogue nor precedent, an itinerant carnival, a migratory tentshow whose ultimate destination after many a pitch in many a mudded field is unspeakable and calamitous beyond reckoning. 

The universe is no narrow thing and the order within it is not constrained by any latitude in its conception to repeat what exists in one part in any other part. Even in this world more things exist without our knowledge than with it and the order in creation which you see is that which you have put there, like a string in a maze, so that you shall not lose your way. For existence has its own order and that no man's mind can compass, that mind itself being but a fact among others.” 


― Cormac McCarthyBlood Meridian, or the Evening Redness in the West