Karine Arabian
Merzhe Arabian (center, holding candle), Karine's paternal grandfather, at a bishop’s funeral in the courtyard of the Sivrihisar Armenian church in the early 20th century |
“They rarely spoke about the Genocide,” he says. Karine echoes her father: “It would seem that the Genocide survivors gradually erased all the traces of the past from their memory in order to go on living.”
Marie, Karine’s paternal grandmother, surrounded by her parents |
“To leave the country, to leave everything behind, to be barefooted in the literal sense of the word is like cutting off all the ties to your homeland,” she says.
Merzhe’s Armenian passport issued in Athens in 1922 |
A shoe from Karine’s “Minerals” collection |
A bracelet from Karine’s “Minerals” collection |
A poster for Karine Arabian’s exhibition at the Marseille Fashion Museum |
In 2007 the Marseille Fashion Museum approached Karine, asking her to curate an exhibition in honor of the “Year of Armenia” in France. The retrospective, titled “Karine Arabian and Armenian heritage in fashion, 1600s-2000s” opened in May of that year. As she prepared for the event, Karine closely studied the family’s archives and came to terms with her Armenian heritage in the process. After fully accepting Armenian culture as her own, Karine shed the heavy burden of omission that kept weighing her down.
Karine with her father Serge |
Eventually Karine sensed that she was becoming a hostage to her own work, and after lengthy deliberation she sold her brand. She now hopes to go to Turkey with her father in order to trace her ancestors’ footsteps.