Ohanessian, Antoinette


XX
Nationality: Armenian/French
Place of Activity: France

Antoinette Ohanessian is an artist deeply engaged with the materials and tools that create the communication field. Words and language semantics are her primary object of interest and point of questioning. After studying art at the Paris School of Fine Arts in the 1980s and then Philosophy in the 1990s, Ohanessian has managed to produce a small, but significant body of work that impresses with its formal consistency and analytical depth.

Pushing from the conceptual and word art practices of American pioneers such as Ed Ruscha and John Baldessari, Ohanessian composed a series of books and conceptual pieces that investigate the phenomenological aspect of language and its power to suggest associations that go beyond the retinal perception of reality.

In recent years, Ohanessian has increasingly moved to video and occassionaly, photography in an attempt to give speach a ‘body’ and a sense of materiality which makes the audience really ‘see’ what is being ‘said’. The frisson between visual and linguistic representation in her work, wryly exposes the thinnes of communicative ice that covers a sea of absurdity. In her latest videos, political, social aspects have become more prominent as the artist widens the geo-political scope of her work, from France to Sarajevo and Armenia.

Ohanessian has exhibited widely in Europe and is currently preparing a major retrospective of her oeuvre.