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Participants in the Armenian Painting course
By Matthew Maroot
Staff Writer
For three consecutive weekends
beginning Friday, February 26, 1999, 35 Fresno State students undertook
an intensive study of one of the most cherished aspects of the Armenian
culture, Armenian miniature painting.
In this three-unit-course
titled, Armenian Studies 121: Armenian Miniature Painting, taught by Dr.
Dickran Kouymjian, Haig and Isabel Berberian Professor of Armenian Studies,
students had the opportunity to gain an in-depth knowledge of Armenian
painting through the presentation of hundreds of color slide illustrations
of miniature paintings, also known as illuminated manuscripts.
Many students took advantage
of this weekend course to gain a greater appreciation of Armenian art.
In fact, enrollment far surpassed that of previous offerings of this specialized
upper-division course. "I was pleased but also surprised. Why
all of the sudden 35 students in an upper-division specialized three-credit
course in medieval Armenian miniature painting?" asked Dr. Kouymjian.
While the answer to that
question may not have been obvious, student appreciation for the study
of Armenian painting certainly was. Through quick, yet thorough explanation,
Dr. Kouymjian covered the development of Armenian miniature painting from
its beginnings in the sixth century up through its Golden Age and beyond
the eighteenth century. In addition, he also made numerous comparisons
to other contemporary works along the way including examples in Byzantine,
Syrian, Islamic and Western art.
Dr. Kouymjian's ability
to explain the topic of Armenian art to students with relatively little
background in art history was remarkable. By the end of the three-week
session, students not only gained a greater understanding of Armenian art,
but a working knowledge of the study of art history as well.
In addition to studying
the iconographical elements of various illuminated manuscripts, students
also learned how a manuscript is copied and bound and how its contents
are arranged. Dr. Kouymjian also spoke extensively about the major
repositories of Armenian manuscripts throughout the world including the
Matenadaran in Erevan, and other centers such as the Patriarchate of Jerusalem
and the Mekhitarist Brotherhood in Venice. "This information will
prove valuable when they [students] visit the great museums of the world
and come before medieval Italian and Renaissance paintings, whose subject
matter is predominantly Christian," Dr. Kouymjian said.
With Armenian Studies 20:
The Arts of Armenia, the prerequisite course to Armenian Studies 121, becoming
part of the Fresno State revised General Education Program, interest in
Armenian art will undoubtedly grow. It may also influence what Dr.
Kouymjian describes as a growing interest in this area of study.
"No one taught Armenian
art in this country when I began doing it upon my arrival from Paris in
1977. Now we have an endowed chair in Armenian art at Tufts University
headed by Professor Lucy Der Manuelian, and for more than a decade Professor
Thomas Mathews has been teaching Armenian iconography at the Art Institute
of New York University and has seen some brilliant younger scholars through
their Ph.D. in art history with an emphasis on Armenian art," Dr. Kouymjian
said.
When I started it was much
neglected, now there is a greater interest in it and publications have
been flowing from scholars in Europe and the United States as well as from
Erevan. The important thing is to bring an awareness of an incredible
cultural legacy to students who simply did not know of its very existence"
Dr. Kouymjian said.
Dr. Kouymjian recognizes
the complexities in teaching a subject about which most students have very
little prior knowledge. However, he takes that challenge in stride.
"Though they could probably recognize an eleventh century Armenian primitive
or a painting by T'oros Roslin [a famous thirteenth century Armenian painter]
pretty easily, the irony is that most students have never had another art
history course and probably couldn't tell a Duccio from a Rubens.
Yet, they can identify the subjects these latter painters used in their
works," Dr. Kouymjian said.
While students who do not
pursue any further study in the area of Armenian art may not remember all
of the manuscripts they viewed over this three-weekend course, Dr. Kouymjian
is confident that they will remember many other valuable lessons.
"In short, through Armenian miniature painting, students have learned
the language and content of all Christian painting," Dr. Kouymjian said.
"What is certain is that they will know forever that Armenians had a rich
and complex tradition of manuscript painting, that such information is
available through monographic studies and exhibition catalogues and that
Armenian art is extremely important to the early history of Christian art."