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Arts: 'Larger Picture' Of Armenian, Byzantium Cultures Analyzed

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  • Arts: 'Larger Picture' Of Armenian, Byzantium Cultures Analyzed

    'LARGER PICTURE' OF ARMENIAN, BYZANTIUM CULTURES ANALYZED

    Belmont Citizen-Herald
    http://www.wickedlocal.com/belmont/ fun/entertainment/arts/x1751719105/-Larger-picture -of-Armenian-Byzantium-cultures-analyzed
    Nov 18 2008
    MA

    Belmont, Mass. - Dr. Helen Evans, Mary and Michael Jaharis Curator
    for Byzantine Art at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City,
    presented an illustrated lecture entitled "Armenia and Byzantium:
    The Larger Picture" on Oct. 30, at the NAASR Center. The lecture was
    co-sponsored by the Ararat Lodge of the Knights of Vartan and NAASR.

    NAASR Director of Academic Affairs Marc A. Mamigonian introduced
    Dr. Evans and expressed NAASR's gratitude for the participation of
    the Knights of Vartan and in particular the assistance of Nigoghos
    Atinizian in making the evening possible.

    Evans' lecture was organized around the magnificent medieval khachkar
    (stone) cross from the Lori region of Armenia that is on long-term
    loan to the Metropolitan Museum of Art from the Republic of Armenia.

    Evans stated at the outset that she was "going to consider [the
    khachkar's] role as a gospel in stone, and through that ask how
    its images open windows into the character of Armenian art" and the
    "larger world picture that often relates Armenia to Byzantium." Noting
    that khachkars are a distinctive Armenian art form "that we consider
    without parallels in Byzantium," she proceeded to explain why she
    relates it to a gospel book -- and that it is "the gospels rather
    than icons which are generally venerated in Armenia."

    At the base of the khachkar are visual representations of the four
    gospels: the symbols of the evangelists Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John:
    that is, an angel's head for Matthew, a lion's head for Mark, an ox for
    Luke, and an eagle for John. Evans then compared these representations
    to other depictions in Armenian illuminated manuscripts as well as
    in sculptures adorning churches of roughly the same period. It is
    significant, as Evans observed, that the cross at the center of the
    khachkar "rises directly from the crown of the angel, making explicit
    the gospels' role in the revelation of salvation."

    Above the cross on the khachkar is "a large arch and to its sides
    on the upper edges ... are small pairs of birds facing what must be
    fountains." The birds are strongly reminiscent of similarly placed
    birds in the elaborately decorated canon tables of Armenian and
    Byzantine illuminated manuscripts. The bird imagery is by no means
    unique to Armenian tradition, but Evans then posed the question,
    "What, if anything, do birds mean in an Armenian religious context?"

    By way of an answer, she showed and discussed a famous and important
    example: a mosaic floor of an Armenian funerary chapel in Jerusalem
    from the 5th or 6th century A.D. that preserves not only one of the
    earliest preserved examples of Armenian writing but also an elaborate
    decorative program of grapevines and birds. The writing dedicates
    the chapel "to the memory and salvation of all Armenians whose name
    the Lord knows." Evans explained that in "early Armenian texts, birds
    are clearly identified as symbols of the resurrected, those who were
    good in life," a concept inherited from Armenia's Zoroastrian past.

    Evans then discussed some of the political interconnections between
    Armenia and Byzantium that accompanied the artistic ones. For example,
    around the same time the mosaic was made, on Golgotha in Jerusalem
    stood a jeweled cross containing part of the True Cross. In the
    early 7th century, Jerusalem was sacked by the Persians and the cross
    was taken away. In the 620s it was rescued by the Byzantine emperor
    Heraclios, whose father was Armenian.

    She also examined in detail "the only image of a Byzantine general
    in military dress that survives" from the medieval period, in the
    Adrianople Gospels, produced in Armenian by the scribe Krikor in
    1007. Evans explained that the general who owned the gospel and who is
    depicted "must have taken an oath of loyalty to the Orthodox Church of
    the empire" or else he could not have achieved such a high rank. Thus,
    "the work is an expression of a duality that needs further study. The
    general, whose gospel book is written in Armenian, served an emperor
    who was a descendant of the half Armenian Byzantine emperor Basil
    I and a duke whose family is also thought to have been of Armenian
    origin." The gospel book, therefore, "should be understood...as
    representing a bridge between two cultures -- that of the Armenian
    world from which the emperor and the general emerged and that of the
    empire which they served."

    In the course of her lecture, Evans provided numerous additional
    striking examples of the intersection of the two cultures. She summed
    up, saying that "In studying Armenian and Byzantine art, we should
    understand the importance of identifying what is unique to those
    cultures, but we should also seek to understand the interweaving
    between peoples that reach across the world." Too often the emphasis
    has been on viewing the one to the exclusion of the other -- a practice
    that, fortunately, has fallen out of favor. Evans' lecture and her work
    as a curator at the Metropolitan Museum stand as a strong statement
    in favor of the integrative approach.

    Evans is a specialist in Byzantine and Armenian art who has been a
    member of the Department of Medieval Art at the Metropolitan Museum
    of Art since 1991. She curated the exhibition "Treasures in Heaven:
    Armenian Illuminated Manuscripts" at the Morgan Library in 1994
    and at the Metropolitan Museum her major exhibitions have been the
    acclaimed "The Glory of Byzantium (843-1261)" in 1997 and "Byzantium:
    Faith and Power (1261-1557)" in 2004. She installed the museum's Mary
    and Michael Jaharis Galleries of Byzantine Art in 2000 and recently
    completed its expansion and reinstallation this year.

    More information about the lecture is available by calling
    617-489-1610, faxing 617-484-1759, e-mailing [email protected], or writing
    to NAASR, 395 Concord Ave., Belmont, MA 02478.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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