More than a decade ago Vahram Mavian of the Department
of Armenian Affairs of the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation spoke
to me about producing a guide on Armenian art to be used in schools
and colleges. A detailed text divided into the various divisions
of Armenian art was to be accompanied by a large number of color
slides of the highest quality suitable for classroom projection.
The Foundation had engaged Ara Güler, the famous Armenian photographer
from Istanbul, to record the most important monuments of Armenian
architecture, painting, sculpture as well as the minor arts. The
Foundation invited me to undertake the organization of the project
and to write a text explaining the history of the various areas
of Armenian art. I gladly accepted for at the time there was no
general work on Armenian art amply illustrated in color for students
or scholars.
The untimely death of Vahram Mavian in 1983 and my own preoccupation
with the completion of the festschrift Armenian Studies/Etudes Arméniennes:
In Memoriam Haïg Berbérian published by the Gulbenkian
Foundation in 1986 delayed the project. In the meantime many of
the monuments presented in this introduction to Armenian art have
been badly damaged by the earthquake of December 1988; many others
in sensitive regions have also deteriorated from neglect. The collapse
of the Soviet Union and the establishment of the independent Republic
of Armenia in 1991 present a particularly timely moment to record
and describe this vast legacy of ancient and medieval art, a common
heritage of all humanity.
The project has been greatly aided by institutions and scholars
in the Armenian Republic. The Matenadaran in Erevan, that unique
museum, research center, and repository of ancient Armenian manuscripts,
cooperated in the photographing of its treasures. Slides have also
been provided by the following institutions of objects from their
collections: The State Historical Museum, the Museum of Folk Art,
the State Library, and the Treasury at the Catholicossate of Etchmiadzin.
The following scholars have helped in the selection of slides: Mania
Ghazarian for the minor arts, Emma Khorkmazian for miniatures, Ninel
Voskanian for early printed books, Varazdat Harutiunian for architecture,
Khatchig Musheghian for numismatics, and Robert Atayan for music.
A number of scholars from Armenia -- Ninel Voskanian on early printing,
Khachig Musheghian on coins, and Robert Atayan on musical notations
and instruments -- have prepared short descriptive texts in addition
to my own. The arrangement of sections, however, and the material
within each is entirely mine.
This work, The Arts of Armenia, is intended as an in-depth introduction
to the artistic culture of one of the oldest nations of the Near
East. In it the various artistic media are defined and the technical
terms of art history are explained in plain language. I have assumed
that the user, whether teacher or student, has little or no previous
knowledge of art or art history. On the other hand, I have presumed
that users of the book have a basic familiarity with Armenian history.
The discussion in each of the parts has been arranged chronologically.
In each section I have tried to mention the current state of the
arts in the medium concerned.
Though the project will be used mostly by individuals who are Western
Armenian speakers, I have maintained the classical system of transliteration,
which has become the standard in art history. I have, however, kept
some commonly accepted spellings: Etchmiadzin, Gregory for Grigor,
Luke for Ghukas, etc., and "ian" for the endings of Armenian
names.
For those, whether teachers or students, who wish to have more information
on Armenian art, I have included a bibliography, arranged by medium,
with major studies in various languages on each.
Most of the slides were specially prepared for this project by Ara
Güler, the Armenian institutions cited above, and myself. I
would like to thank a few individuals who have helped with additional
visual material: Patrick Donabedian, Michel Basmadjian, Mihran Amtablian,
and Claude Mutafian for architecture, Photo Garo for manuscripts,
and Lemyel Amirian and Arthur Gregorian for rugs. References to
the visual material are given by slide number in brackets [] throughout
the text.
The project would have been impossible without the constant aid
and liaison of Zaven Yegavian, Director of the Department of Armenian
Affairs of the Gulbenkian Foundation, and the late Gorun Keshishian,
former Director I thank them and the Foundation for their confidence
in this work.
May the project serve as a tribute to the memory of Vahram Mavian
who devoted his entire life to the furthering of Armenian culture
and the arts.