
postDIY
postDIY is directed at the circumstances of the bombing of DIY and worldwide ignorance that is often expressed through homophobia. It aims to produce both visual and verbal language that constructs and narrates life after the tragic event that took place on May 8, 2012. If the attack on DIY can be read as an act to silence and establish exclusionary societal norms by eradicating what is perceived as transgressive, then this video documents the fact that life goes on no matter what. It questions the desire to establish uniformity and totalitarianism in the post-independent phase of the Armenian Republic and seeks out the beauty in a dissident relationship between two women.
One of the goals of postDIY is to introduce the viewers to the bomb attack in a non-narrative and non-journalistic style, in a manner that is both intimate and subjective. The film estranges viewers from the banal act of terrorism and compels them to experience the boredom caused by the familiar (typical Soviet panel block apartment buildings) and the shock caused by the strange (act of intimacy). Another goal of the film is to return humanness to women’s bodies that are often defiled and commodified by the consumerist culture. The viewer is exposed to an inappropriate “excess” of immobility (of the buildings) and movement (of the bodies) that exceeds the norms of the conventional consumerist gaze.

Amongst other places, she has done residencies and participated in shows in Georgia, France, Sweden, Germany, and Austria. Her work – in video art such Pieces, photograph series such as Be Careful…Before Entering, soautor and visual design for books such as Queered: What’s to be Done with Centric Art? - explores themes such as history and memory, visibility and invisibility, and the cracks ad fissures between the social and the personal.
