This edition explores the realities facing the monuments, churches, and landmarks currently threatened by the realities in post-war Artsakh, while considering the complexities that are often overlooked.
Azerbaijan continues to erase Armenian history in favor of a discredited theory that the region’s Christian sites were made by a now-extinct group called Caucasian Albanians.
A late 12th- or early 13th-century khachkar in the province of Karvajar is part of a larger history of nursing images in Christian imagery, but is it threatened?
The government of Azerbaijan has supporting various initiatives that ethnically cleanse the art of Armenians in Artsakh and Azerbaijan and the ancient art of carpet weaving is one of the frontlines in their war.
Scout Tufankjian spent a month in post-war Artsakh to witness the controversial ceasefire that would involve the removal of lands from the sovereignty of the Republic of Artsakh.
As arts communities around the world experience a time of challenge and change, accessible, independent reporting on these developments is more important than ever.
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