Seta Manoukian
The Arcades (Study for Painting.)
1986 -
Pencil on paper
20 x 34 cm.
This drawing is a study of “Les Arcades”, a painting in the Saradar Collection.
“Les Arcades” depicts Maarad Street, in the deserted city center of Beirut that was the front line during the civil war. There is a sense of weightlessness in the painting as if the objects were floating. The man standing on the left appears to be Walid Jumblatt, Druze leader of the Progressive Socialist Party.
Reference SM-WP-1986-A
About the artist
Born in Beirut, Lebanon 1945
Works and Lives in Los Angeles, U.S.A
Born into an Armenian family artist Seta Manoukian grew up in Beirut, Lebanon.
Taught by Paul Guiragossian, she began to draw at an early age. She won the first prize in an art competition organized by the Italian Embassy at the age of seventeen and was sent to Perugia, Italy, for three months to study art. When Seta finished her studies, her father enrolled her into the Academy of Belle Arte in Rome. She returned to Beirut in the seventies, after four years in Rome.
During this period, Manoukian surrounded by artists, writers and journalists, started becoming aware of the grave political problems that her country was facing.
When the war began in 1975, Manoukian was teaching at the Lebanese University. She began volunteering in poor neighborhoods to teach children how to draw and paint. The children’s paintings and drawings were made into two books “War Through the Eyes of Lebanese Children” Published in 1977, and “Taches Rouge Et Blue.”
After 10 years in Lebanon, with the fear of being kidnapped, Manoukian travelled to LA and joined the Sherry Frumkin Gallery in Santa Monica. Still shaken by the war, Manoukian’s work revolved around themes of displacement and the madness of war. She later transitioned into more organic shapes inspired by her increasing spirituality.
In 2000, she traveled to Sri-Lanka to study Buddhist philosophy and meditation and decided to stay and further delve into Dharma, the teachings of Buddha.
Manoukian has since become a Buddhist nun known as Ani Pema Drolma and resides Ari Bhod in Tehachapi, a retreat in California.