A.
Wall Paintings/Frescoes
The excavations of the Urartian fortress of Arin Berd-Erebuni [1],
the first settlement of Erevan and the site from which the capital
of Armenia got its name, uncovered extensive fragments of wall painting.
On the site, various reconstructed chambers have been repainted following
the designs and colors of authentic vestiges. Thus, we have an idea
of the figural and decorative art practiced in Armenia in the eighth
and seventh centuries B.C. In the history of monumental painting in
Armenia, there follows a hiatus of more than a thousand years. In
the late sixth and early seventh centuries of the Christian era, some
churches were decorated with frescoes in their apses. This tradition
continued sporadically into modern times. The most important among
the surviving wall paintings are in the churches of Lmbat (late sixth
or early seventh century), Talin [19]
(seventh century), Aght'amar [26, 130,
131, 161]
(915-921), Tatev [39, 162]
(tenth century), Haghbat [40, 41,
132] (thirteenth century), Tigran Honents'
[36, 163]
at Ani (1215), and K'obayr (twelfth-thirteenth century) in Lori. Of
these the most extensive and the best preserved are in the palatine
church on the island of Aght'amar [161]
in Lake Van, The entire interior of this church from floor to dome
was painted with an extensive New Testament cycle [161]
as a complement to the Old Testament one [130,
131] carved on the exterior façade
of the church. In the dome there was once an Adam cycle. Unfortunately,
the church has been totally neglected since 1915 and the little that
survives is slowly disappearing. The paintings of the church of Tatev
[162] appear to have been executed by
artists from western Europe. Those of Haghbat are stylistically Armenian;
the extensive cycle, including a series on the life of St. Gregory
the Illuminator, which covers the entire interior of the church of
Tigran Honents' [36, 163]
at Ani is of a mixed Armeno-Georgian tradition, as are those in the
church at K'obayr to the north. Many other traces of wall painting
have survived, but unlike the Byzantine, or even the neighboring Georgian
practice, the walls of most Armenian churches were left undecorated.
B.
Mosaics
Excavations conducted during the renovation of the cathedral at
Etchmiadzin [3, 4]
in the late 1950s uncovered tesserae, the individual pieces of colored
stone or glass used in the making of mosaics, under the dome of
the church's reconstruction in 485 A.D. Unfortunately, we have no
idea of the size of the mosaic nor its subject. One pre-Christian
mosaic has survived on the floor of the Roman-styled bath [164],
probably of the third century A.D., excavated in the precinct of
the temple of Garni [2, 164].
The small mosaic, about two meters square, depicts a water scene
with the goddess Thetis [164] and other
mythological figures. Inscriptions on the mosaic are Greek, but
the figural types are oriental. Though artistically the mosaic is
of inferior quality, historically it is important. The only other
mosaics that can be regarded as Armenian is a group of some half
dozen pavements of former Armenian churches and chapels in Jerusalem
[165]. Like the Garni mosaic, these
were uncovered during the past century and remain in situ. Unlike
the Garni mosaic, they bear Armenian inscriptions [165]
and can be stylistically dated to the Christian era -- the late
fifth or sixth centuries. The inscriptions are of immense historical
value because they represent the oldest examples of Armenian writing
to have survived. Artistically they are of a very high quality and
represent varieties of Garden of Paradise scenes with cornucopia
and geometric section-patterns framing various birds and fish [165].
Stylistically, they are similar to the mosaics of the period found
in non-Armenian churches and synagogues in Jerusalem and its environs.
Even though there was a large Armenian colony in the Holy Land at
the time, it is not certain that the artists were all Armenian.
Rather, many must have been executed by the same craftsmen responsible
for mosaic production in a Jerusalem controlled by the East Roman
and later Byzantine empires. Perhaps this explains why the tradition
was not imported into Armenia proper. Motifs from these highly symbolic
Christian mosaics have an echo in later Armenian manuscript decoration,
probably because both the mosaics and the decorations used as a
common source the artistic conventions of the paleo-Christian period.
C.
Ceramics
Pottery may appear not to belong under painting; indeed, one could
place it in a separate category. Nonetheless, most pottery, especially
Armenian pottery in the Christian centuries, is decorated with painting.
High quality burnished red ware was manufactured in Armenia already
in the second millennium B.C.; some believe this type, known throughout
the Near East, may have originated there. Excavations uncovered
bowls and pots of various shapes. In the Urartian period, the quality
and diversity of ceramics is notable [166,
167]. Skilled potters cleverly imitated
metal vessels such as the famous shoe-shaped rhyton or drinking
cup [166] from Erebuni [1].
Archaeology has failed to turn up any convincing examples of locally
produced pottery for a period extending from the fall of the Urartian
kingdom in the sixth century B.C. to the Middle Ages. The excavations
at Dvin and Ani [32, 33,
34, 35,
36], Armenian capitals for long periods
from the fifth to the eleventh centuries and inhabited even later,
brought to light much very interesting pottery [168,
169, 170], some of which followed fashions
prevalent in the region. For example, the yellow and green splash
ware [169] or the turquoise blue faience [170]
was produced in great quantity in neighboring Islamic countries
as well as eastern Iran. Ceramics with figures of birds painted
in light green on a white or light yellow ground copy a common Byzantine
type found throughout the Middle East. Many pots have, however,
painted human, animal and hybrid [170]
motifs typically Armenian in style, and some even bear Armenian
inscriptions. There is no doubt that from the eleventh to the thirteenth
century the ceramics industry in Armenia, especially at Ani [32,
33, 34,
35, 36],
was important and of high quality.
1. Kütahya Ceramics
In the post-medieval period the Armenian ceramics industry flourished
at one major center: Kütahya, a city in western Asia Minor
125 miles southeast of Constantinople. An Armenian colony is already
noted there in the thirteenth century and in the fourteenth and
fifteenth centuries there was an active scriptorium too. Armenian
manufactured ceramics [172, 173,
174, 175,
176, 177,
178, 179]
came to dominate the craft industry of the city. Certainly by the
fifteenth century, Armenians were deeply engaged in ceramics. The
earliest dated pieces, inscribed on the bottom in Armenian, are
from the early sixteenth century. They are decorated in the characteristic
blue and white of early Kütahya ware [175,
176]. By the seventeenth century a
highly polychrome [173, 174,
177, 178,
179] faience was fabricated with yellow,
green and the famous Armenian tomato red. The potters produced vessels
in a large variety of shapes for diverse use.
The town became renowned as an Armenian ceramic center in the Ottoman
Empire, and was the major competitor of Iznik, the famous source
of most "Islamic" tiles and vessels of the Ottomans. The
Kütahya potters also produced square tiles for wall decorations
[172]. These were used in a number
of mosques, mostly in Constantinople, as well as in churches. The
most spectacular display of Kütahya tiles is in Armenian Cathedral
of St. James in Jerusalem [172]. Among
the thousands decorating various parts of the monastic complex there
is a special series of pictorial tiles with polychrome scenes of
the Old and New Testament accompanied by an inscriptional band in
Armenian [172]. These were specially
commissioned in the early eighteenth century for the renovation
and decoration of the Church of the Holy Sepulcher, but due to a
dispute between the various religion authorities that enjoyed custody
over this holy shrine, the work was never carried out. Thus, these
Kütahya tiles were used to embellish the Armenian Patriarchate.
One of the most popular forms originating from the kilns at Kütahya
was the egg-shaped ornaments [178]
hung on the chains from which oil lamps were suspended in churches
and mosques. They may have had more than just an ornamental use;
some experts considered them as barriers against mice who, attracted
by the animal fat used in these lamps, would slide off the slick
surface of the egg as they made their way down the chain to the
vessel bearing the oil.
Kütahya eggs are variously decorated, but the most common type
displays seraphim, the famous six-winged guardian angels. Other
popular shapes of these ceramics are the demi-tasse cups without
handles, saucers, monogrammed plates [176],
rose-water flasks [175], and lemon
squeezers. Armenian inscriptions abound on Kütahya vessels
[173, 174,
175, 176],
whether eggs or water jugs, flasks or incense burners. The Armenian
ceramic industry in Kütahya flourished until the Armenians
were forced to leave the city during the persecutions of World War
I. Several families settled in Jerusalem, where they continue to
produce the polychrome Kütahya style ceramics as souvenirs
of the Holy Land.
New Julfa [57, 171],
the Armenian suburb of Isfahan, founded in the first years of the
seventeenth century, also was a center of Armenian tile production.
Large pictorial panels made of square tiles painted in yellow and
blue are found in situ in various Armenian churches of the city.
The scene of the Presentation Magi in the Church of St. Gevorg dated
by an Armenian inscription to 1719 is a fine example [171].
Functional pottery continued to be made in Greater Armenian right
up into the twentieth century. The ceramic craft is still practiced
in Armenia with much skill [180]. During
these modern centuries, many shapes known from the excavated pottery
of Dvin and Ani continued to be fashioned in villages throughout
the land, confirming the consistent tradition ceramic fabrication
has always had.
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161.
Interior frescoe, The Second Coming 915-921, church of the Holy Cross,
Aght'amar. Photo: Club Unesco des Arméniens, Lyon

162. Interior frescoe, Saints Peter and Paul, 930, Tatev Monastery.
Photo: Patrick Donabedian

163. Interior frescoes, St. Gregory and King Trdat, 1215, Tigran Honents',
Ani. Photo: Ara Güler

164. Mosaic with Greek inscription, water scene with Goddess Thetis,
IIIrd-IVth century, the bath at Garni. Photo: Dickran Kouymjian

165. Mosaic with Armenian inscription, birds within a vine scroll,
VIth century, funerary chapel of St. Polyeuctos, Musara Quarter, Damascus
Gate, Jerusalem. Photo: Dickran Kouymjian

166. Shoe shaped drinking vessel, VIIth century B.C., Urartu, Karmir-Blur
(Teishebaini), Erevan, State Historical Museum. Photo: Ara Güler

167. Jar with ornamental frieze, VIIth century B.C., Urartu, Erevan,
State Historical Museum. Photo: Gulbenkian Foundation Archive

168. Jar with ornamental frieze, VIIth century A.D., Dvin, Erevan,
State Historical Museum. Photo: Ara Güler

169. Polychrome, splashware bowls, XIth-XIIth centuries, Dvin and
Ani, Erevan, State Historical Museum. Photo: Gulbenkian Foundation
Archive

170. Bowls, XIth-XIIIth centuries, Dvin and Ani, Erevan, State Historical
Museum. Photo: Gulbenkian Foundation Archive

171. Pictorial tile, Adoration of the Magi, 1719, St. Gevorg, New
Julfa, Isfahan. Photo: Gulbenkian Foundation Archive

172. Pictorial tiles, Last Supper and Holy Women at the Empty Tomb
(Resurrection), 1721, manufacture in Kütahya, Etchmiadzin chapel,
St. James Cathedrale, Armenian Patriarchate, Jerusalem. Photo: Garo,
Jerusalem

173. Ceramic incense burner, ca. 1726-7, Kütahya, Cincinnati
Art Museum, Ohio. Photo: Cincinnati Art Museum

174. Ceramic Flask, inscribed 1723, Kütahya, Venice, San Lazzaro,
Museum of the Mekhitarist Fathers. Photo: Dickran Kouymjian

175. Vase, 1789, Kütahya, Venice, San Lazzaro, Museum of the
Mekhitarist Fathers. Photo: Gulbenkian Foundation Archive

176. Plate with monogram "Nazaret'", XVIIIth century, New Julfa-Isfahan, San Lazzaro, Museum of the Mekhitarist Fathers. Photo: Dickran Kouymjian

177. Flask with naively painted figure, XVIIIth century, Kütahya,
formerly Haroutune Hazarian Collection, New York. Photo: Dickran Kouymjian

178. Kütahya "eggs," ornaments hung on oil lamp chains
in churches, XVIIIth century, Kütahya, Erevan, State Historical
Museum. Photo: Gulbenkian Foundation Archive

179. Vase, XIXth century, Kütahya, Erevan, State Historical Museum.
Photo: Ara Güler

180. Terra-cotta salt cellar with anthropomorphic shape, XIXth century,
folk art, Erevan, State Historical Museum. Photo: Ara Güler
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