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Diana Markosian – Frontline Club http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com Championing Independent Journalism Mon, 02 Nov 2015 17:01:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 1915: The Last Survivors of the Armenian Genocide http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/1915-the-last-survivors-of-the-armenian-genocide/ http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/1915-the-last-survivors-of-the-armenian-genocide/#respond Mon, 02 Nov 2015 16:59:47 +0000 http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/?p=54080 By Anna Speyart

‘[Photography] isn’t necessarily about creating images; it’s about experiencing life and experiencing stories. Images are just a side effect.’

On Tuesday 27 October, American-Armenian photographer Diana Markosian joined an audience at the Frontline Club to discuss her work with Fiona Rogers, the founder of Firecracker – a platform for the promotion of European women photographers – and the global business manager at Magnum Photos International. 1915 is Markosian’s latest project, for which she travelled to Armenia to meet the last living survivors of the Armenian genocide that took place at the beginning of the 20th Century.

Diana Markosian @ Frontline Club

Fiona Rogers and Diana Markosian at the Frontline Club

1915 was preceded by a series called ‘Inventing my Father’ (2013-14). Markosian was taken to the United States by her mother when she was seven. “For fifteen years I didn’t know anything about my father. A few years ago I decided to travel back to Armenia to find him… And all these years later I found my father, standing just how I left him: in the doorway, neither fully in or out of my life.”

“Through photography, we found a way to connect and to create new memories… My father opened this distant past for me.”

At the same time, reconnecting to her father proved difficult: “So much of it hurt and there is no guidebook in finding a father.”

In the same period, Markosian was asked to make a series of photographs of survivors of the Armenian genocide. One of her aims “was to reconnect Turkey and Armenia, because there’s so much tension between the two countries and as a photographer you want to move the conversation forward.”

Markosian found three individuals who remembered the genocide. “I asked them about their last memories in Turkey. I went to Turkey, photographed that memory and brought it back to them a century later.”

Yepraksia, now aged 110 years old, remembered crossing a river with her family that was coloured “red, full of blood. I went back and photographed that river,” said Markosian.

Another survivor of the Armenian genocide, Movses, remembered the church in his village and asked Markosian to place his image on the stones of the church, which is now a ruin.

She said: “When I was travelling to his village and exploring it I found everything that he had described to me: the oranges that he remembered eating, the sheep and the sea.”

Markosian continued: “Upon seeing this image, Movses’ reaction was indescribable. He began to dance and sing. His whole goal was to hold this board as close as he could as a way of going back in time.”

Markosian gave her photographs to the families, who all placed them in their bedrooms.

“Movses said: ’Now I get to wake up in my village’.”

Movses looking at his village

Mariam was just a baby when the genocide started. “She was taken in by a Kurdish family… Mariam asked me to bring back dirt for her, so she could be buried in Turkish soil.”

While working on the project, Markosian often felt she lacked the authority to do a story about the Armenian genocide. “Being Armenian is not enough,” she said.

But while interviewing the survivors, she understood that “this wasn’t so much about the genocide as much as the memory that they held. Because they were children when they escaped… it started resonating with me and my past, of being removed from my country.” Markosian’s own loss made it possible for her to relate to the three survivors.

“It was really difficult for me to identify myself as being Armenian” said Markosian. “These three individuals opened something inside of me and they allowed me to connect with this culture and this history.”

Rogers asked Markosian how she managed to handle the enormity of the subject.

“These individuals… guided me back to their past,” Markosian replied. “They are the ones who built this narrative.”

She continued: “This idea of collaborating with your subjects really appeals to me in my work now, because I think it strengthens the work and it makes the work more honest.”

A century after the genocide, the poignancy and topicality of the event was proven by passionate and emotional remarks from members of the audience.

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In the Picture with Diana Markosian: 1915 – My Armenia http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/in-the-picture-with-diana-markosian-1915-my-armenia/ http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/in-the-picture-with-diana-markosian-1915-my-armenia/#respond Tue, 21 Jul 2015 15:07:08 +0000 http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/?p=51902 Diana Markosian travelled to Armenia to meet survivors and to ask them about their last memories of their early home. She will be joining us in conversation with Fiona Rogers, global business development manager at Magnum Photos International & founder of Firecracker, to show her work and share the stories of the survivors she met who, 100 years on, still remember their home.]]> The waters of the Araks River trace the border between present-day Turkey and Armenia. In 1915, the bodies of massacred Armenians floated down this stretch of water in a steady stream.

Holding a cane in his right hand, Movses Haneshyan, 105, slowly approaches a life-size landscape.

He pauses, looks at the image, and begins to sing: “My home… My Armenia.”

It’s the first time Movses is seeing his home in 98 years.

A century ago, on the eve of World War I, there were two million Armenians living in the Ottoman Empire. By the early 1920s, when the massacres and deportations finally ended, one and a half million of them were dead, with many more forcibly removed from the country.

The picture Movses is looking at is taken by Armenian-American photographer Diana Markosian. She travelled to Armenia to meet Movses and other survivors, to ask them about their last memories of their early home. She then retraced their steps in Turkey to retrieve a piece of their lost homeland.

She will be joining us in conversation with Fiona Rogers, global business development manager at Magnum Photos International & founder of Firecracker, to show her work and share the stories of the survivors she met who, 100 years on, still remember their home.

Diana Markosian is an Armenian-American photographer whose work explores the relationship between memory and place. She received her master’s degree from Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism at 20. Her work has since taken her to some of the most remote corners of the world, where she has worked on both personal and editorial work. Her images can be found in publications including The New York Times, The New Yorker and Time Magazine. Her work is represented by Reportage by Getty Images.

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