Marfa’ in Beirut hosts Seta Manoukian’s exhibition
In “Dew Drops” Seta Manoukian displays works made in the last two decades which have never been exhibited in Lebanon.
ArtDayME: Seta Manoukian’s solo show is on view throughout the summer months at Marfa’, Beirut.
In “Dew Drops” Seta Manoukian displays works made in the last two decades which have never been exhibited in Lebanon. The exhibition includes a wide range of works from various series which are linked by threads of themes of work that have been present from the start of her career as an artist.
Seta Manoukian - Ani Pema Drolma (b.1945) is a Lebanese painter of Armenian descent. She was a prominent figure in the burgeoning Beirut art scene of the late 60s.
In 1975 the civil war breaks out in Lebanon just as Seta begins teaching at the Lebanese University in Beirut. In 1985 she moves to Los Angeles, where she continues her work as an artist.
In 2000, she joins a Buddhist Theravada Temple in Los Angeles, and in 2005 is ordained as a Buddhist nun in Sri Lanka. After a 10 year hiatus and a full devotion to her Buddhist practice, Seta Manoukian as Ani Pema Drolma returns to painting in 2016.
The exhibition continues untill September 10, 2024.
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