Support This Art Festival Battling Cultural And Economic Isolation Through The "Ghost Theater of Stepanakert"

In an abandoned theatre in the internationally unrecognized territory Nagorno Karabakh, the ARTsakh Fest troupe is busy organizing a contemporary art festival from October 4th till 6th: from the local community, to curators from the Armenian capital Yerevan, to international artists. They’re working hard to rebuild the cultural community, support the local economy, and contribute to world culture.

And they can’t do it without your support.

A little context: Nagorno-Karabakh is a region in the South Caucasus. During the Soviet Union it was part of Azerbaijan, but after the fall of the communist empire, a war broke loose between Azerbaijan and neighboring Armenia over the territory. Ever since, Karabakh has been in limbo: internationally still recognized as part of Azerbaijan, but de facto governed by its own administration with the support of Armenia.

And it’s this “limbo” that the organizers of ARTsakh recognized as a hurdle to culturally and economically prosper. That is why, last year, art curator @iriedawta took it on herself to “decentralize art and culture from Yerevan, and help Stepanakert — the region’s capital — evolve into a thriving international cultural center.”

Anna, who hails from Yerevan, Armenia, lived in Nagorno Karabakh for about a year: “I realized that the lack of community space and community-based artistic interventions is the only solution to overcoming the isolation of the region and healing the people who experienced war for three generations in a row,” she says about her drive to organize the festival.

https://vimeo.com/348584418

Last year, the festival took place in Stepanakert’s Drama Theater: established in 1932, the abandoned building is located on a charming and historical central street in the capital, and a favorite spot of local youth to hang out. The building is often called “the Beauty of Stepanakert” by people living in Karabakh.

“I just felt a responsibility to revive this building as it was the community space for decades and the only building of historical and cultural importance that survived the war,” says Anna.

Over 40 local and invited artists from the US, Iran, Israel, Switzerland, Poland, Germany and Turkey participated in the 3 day-event hoping to revive the past glory of the theater building and build the local arts community.

Check out these projects to understand what happened last year:

“Learning How to Fly” Project by Laura Arena

“Take Your Seat” Project by Susanna Arakelyan and Marcel Mayer


This year, ARTsakh Fest will take place on October 4-6. Unfortunately, the Karabakh administration did not have funds to support the festival as they did last year, they needed budget to host the alternative world football championship of unrecognized countries last June.

That is why @iriedawta and her team need your support to make this year’s ARTsakh fest happen. The funds will be used for production materials, travel of artists from Yerevan and accommodation in Stepanakert.

You can support the festival here.

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That’s… very brave of Anna aka @iriedawta. I just chipped in with a bit of money, join me folks! Fingers crossed :slight_smile:

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Beautiful @iriedawta, congratulations for not only making something in a community, but also for the consistency - it takes years to do real community development and achieve impact, and you are well on your way. I’m humbled.

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Getting a positive feedback and support from someone I look up to, woah! I’m stoked and humbled @alberto , I couldn’t have put it better: it’s indeed brave of me to venture into no man’s land with this “naive” initiative for a second time, and anxiety keeps me awake at nights but yeah, gotta do what I got to do.

Many thanks for believing in it, I will keep you posted on the developments and send you the documentation in the coming weeks.

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Thank you so much @noemi, your words mean a lot to me!

The main challenge here is creating and sustaining a team of dedicated people on a volunteer basis, pure enthusiasm does not last long…it’s the same challenge in all grassroots initiatives I guess, right?

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The festival is officially an annual event now, yay! Here’s a review by Hyperallergic.

This article tracks back my activism from summer 2015 when I returned to Armenia to do a research on grassroots initiatives in the country in the midst of Electric Yerevan protests all the way to Artsakh Fest’s second edition that took place in Fall 2019…

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