
Gevorg Yeghiazaryan
The work of GEVORG YEGHIAZARYAN draws from ancient wells, much like the city of Gyumri, Armenia, where he was born. His style is instantly recognizable through overly stylized portraiture, iconographic poses, and rich symbolic distortion. A true Fantasist, YEGHIAZARYAN bends form and structure—his hyperbolized, distorted figures arc in ways that defy human anatomy, signaling an intentional otherness and otherworldliness. His art straddles the line between Classical Figuration and Modernism.
These are deeply personal, contemplative pieces—complex, moody, and timeless. Each canvas radiates mysticism, using contorted allegory to illuminate mankind’s earthly dilemmas, spiritual imbalances, and paths toward introspective resolution. Echoes of Cubism reverberate through his work, which also evokes the spirit of Marc Chagall—an artist who prioritized emotional and poetic association over pictorial realism.
YEGHIAZARYAN’s art resonates on a universal scale, finding powerful emotional connection with diverse cultures around the world—especially those steeped in ancient and storied identities, such as in Beirut, Lebanon, and Jerusalem, Israel.