Ruben Kochar

Ruben Kochar Armenian: Ռուբեն Երվանդի Քոչար (Born March 26, 1953 in Yerevan, Armenian SSR) is an Armenian film director, writer, producer and painter. He is an Honored Artist of the Republic of Armenia.

Ruben Kochar
Born(1953-03-26)March 26, 1953
Yerevan, Armenian SSR
OccupationFilm director, theatre director, writer, artist, producer
Years active1975–present
Spouse(s)Narine Kochar (m. 2010)
Children2
Parent(s)Yervand Kochar
Manik Mkrtchyan-Kochar

Early life

His father was artist and sculptor Yervand Kochar. Kochar became a free thinker during and after Soviet times, producing more than two dozen films: shorts, musicals, film ballets and features.

Kochar graduated from Armenian State Pedagogical University, department of film directing in 1974 and advanced courses of Film and Television majoring in musical film directing in Moscow in 1980.

Career

Kochar started his career as a film director in the late 1970s at Armenfilm film studios. Later he moved to Yerevan Film Studios where he worked until 1995, creating 21 films, two of which became the studio's best films. In 1983, Kochar began to serve as a member of the Union of Filmmakers of Armenia. From the early 2000s his films have been co-produced by American film production companies Blue Lion Entertainment, Global Films Production, RK Films Production, Armenfilm, and National Cinema Center of Armenia.

In 1993, Kochar founded AITN (Armenian International Television Network) in US, ARPI daily cultural TV program airing in Los Angeles since 1992 and ARPI Video and Film Production in 1998.[1]

In 2003 he founded Kochar Cultural Foundation, which aims to promote Armenian culture around the world, producing documentaries, organizing art exhibitions, screenings and various cultural events. In 2009 Kochar staged Son of Faith, a theatrical drama (by Western Armenian dramaturge Manuel Atamian), which premiered at Sundukyan State Academic Theatre in Yerevan, Armenia and later performed in Stepanakert, Artsakh, London, UK and other diaspora communities. In 2015 he was invited to Yerevan Opera Theatre as a stage director by the artistic director of the theatre at that period, world-famous tenor Gegham Grigoryan.

Kochar is also involved in writing and painting. He is the author of novels and screenplays.

Fine art

Kochar started painting in his early 30s, under the influence of his father, Maestro Yervand Kochar. He has exhibited in US, UK, Russia, Armenia. His work can be found in private collections around the world. In 2016 he sculptured the statue of Motherhood based on the sketch Yervand Kochar created in 1928 in his Parisian period. The monument was opened in September 2016, and is situated in front of Fertility Medical Center in Yerevan, Armenia, as a symbol of fertility and maternity.

Recognition

In 1985 he was awarded the Laureate of the Lenin Komsomol Prize for innovation style of film ballet series: Lilith, Memoirs, Hello Out There. His further awards include:

  • Best Director Award at Arpa International Film Festival (Los Angeles, 2013) for My Name Is Viola (2013),[2]
  • President's Award at Ajijik International Film Festival (Mexico, 2001) for Herostratus (2001),
  • Medal of Arsenal International Film Festival (Latvia, 1988) for the film ballet Lilith (1986), and
  • Grand Prix of Minsk Film Festival (Belarus, 1985) for Quartet (1985).

Personal life

Kochar lives and works in Armenia and the US. He married producer and actress Narine Kochar, who debuted with Ruben Kochar in Arahet in 2003. Their daughter Lily Mano Kochar was born in 2013.

Filmography

Film
Year Title Genre Notes
2018 Auto-portrait Film
2018 Opera-85 Documentary Dedicated to 85th anniversary of Yerevan Opera Theatre
2016 The Bard Documentary Dedicated to Armenian musician Tovmas Poghosyan
2015 House of Avet Terterian Documentary Dedicated to composer Avet Terterian
2015 Friends of Armenians Documentary Dedicated to Armenian Genocide Centennial
2013 My Name Is Viola Film [3][4]
2011 Kochar's Painting in Space Documentary Dedicated to his father Yervand Kochar and the Painting in Space art movement
2010 Key Film
2008 Metamos Film
2005 Arahet Film
2001 Herostratus Film [5]
1995 Hamlet Ballet Film
1992 Yervand Kochar Documentary
1988 Avetik Film
1987 Fairy About A Bird Documentary Dedicated to sculptor, Benik Petrosyan
1986 Lilith Ballet Film [6]
1985 Quartet
1985 Give Me Wings Musical
1984 Call Documentary Dedicated to writer Mushegh Galshoyan
1984 Memoirs Ballet Film
1983 Hello Out There Ballet Film
1983 Sounds of the Duduk Documentary Dedicated to musician Jivan Gasparyan
1982 Jazz Trio Musical
1981 Elvira Uzunyan's Singing Documentary
1980 Metal Game Documentary Dedicated to weightlifter Yuri Vardanyan
1979 Fountains Documentary

Television series

  • 2009 - Chain
  • 2010 - The Key
gollark: That couldn't really have been done before `set shell.allow_disk_startup false` existed, but now it actually *is* fairly safe to do that!
gollark: > [pr] allow custom os selection through bios, only ship craftos by defaultThat could actually work if it boots a different `bios.lua` if that's on the disk.
gollark: I did contribute some docs to the wiki a while ago, but they might have been lost in the accident.
gollark: That should be a great distraction for my PR to add potatOS to CraftOS.
gollark: Well, I don't actually know Java, and we probably would have *more* debates about how to do things.

References

  1. "Ruben Kochar". Golden Apricot International Film Festival (GAIFF). Retrieved 2018-10-30.
  2. "16th Arpa International Film Festival 2013 - Arpa International Film Festival". Arpa International Film Festival. Retrieved 2018-10-30.
  3. "First controversial Armenian film's premiere to be held soon (VIDEO)". Armenian News-NEWS.am. 2013-05-02. Retrieved 2018-10-30.
  4. "Arpa International Film Festival". ImYerevan.com. Retrieved 2018-10-30.
  5. Insight Guides Turkey. Apa Publications (UK) Limited. 2015-01-01. ISBN 9781780058474.
  6. "Armenian union of film professionals. movies>". UniKino.AM. Retrieved 2018-10-30.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.