AMSTERDAM.- Foam presents Father, an exhibition by artist Diana Markosian (Moscow, 1989). The exhibition captures Markosians journey of reconnection with her estranged father, expressed through a mixture of documentary photographs, family snapshots, archival material, along with Markosians diaristic writing. Father is an intimate portrayal of estrangement, reconnection, and the power of photography to capture complex emotions.
Embark on a journey of reconnection: Order Diana Markosian's 'Father' today! This intimate and moving book combines documentary photographs, family snapshots, and personal text to explore estrangement and reconciliation.
Diana Markosian was born in post-Soviet Moscow, where she spent the early years of her childhood. At seven years old, her mother left the country and moved to California with Markosian and her older brother. They never said goodbye to their father. This move across the world would solidify, and seemingly finalize, a fracturing of her family that had already taken place. Once in California her mother sought to remove even the image of her father by cutting his picture out of their family photographs. His absence created a profound sense of mystery and confusion in Markosian as she looked for him, both literally and emotionally, in different men.
Fifteen years after she last saw him, Markosian returned to search for her father, whom she found living at their grandfathers home in Armenia. It was as she remembered: the furniture and her grandfathers paintings on the walls remained as they were when they left. For the next decade, Markosian travelled to Armenia frequently, often living with her father as she began to document their relationship. Each visit revealed complexities about an absent parent and how this absence had shaped the person Markosian had become.
Markosians work explores the complicated connection between family and migration, through centring memory and place. Above all, it has been a way for her to come to terms with her past and get closer to her father. The exhibition layout can be roughly divided into four segments, starting in the first room where the visitor learns about the artists father. Room two captures the search of Dianas father for his two missing children. Room three and four bring the visitor back to the present and focus on the developing relationship between Diana and her father. In the final room, visitors are invited to share their own personal stories of estrangement or belonging, by leaving their written notes to the artist in a small former-Soviet mailbox on the wall.
Diana Markosians work is layered and interdisciplinary, including the use of found images, drawings, video, and personal keepsakes. This will be the first full-scale presentation of Father, which is based on her photobook of the same name.
Diana Markosian (Moscow, 1989) is an artist based in New York. By exploring different styles and mediums, Markosian has created a unique approach to image-making. Her first monograph, Santa Barbara, was published by Aperture in 2020 and selected as the top publication of the year by the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) and Time Magazine. She is a regular contributor to Vanity Fair, Vogue and The New Yorker. Markosians second monograph, Father, debuted at Paris Photo 2024. It was selected as a top photobook of the year by Le Monde in France. Markosian holds a master's degree from Columbia University.
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