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Der Manuelian To Present Armenian Slide Lecture Sunday

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  • Der Manuelian To Present Armenian Slide Lecture Sunday

    DER MANUELIAN TO PRESENT ARMENIAN SLIDE LECTURE SUNDAY

    Belmont Citizen-Herald
    Feb 20 2009
    MA

    Watertown, Mass. - On Sunday, Feb. 22, Dr. Lucy Der Manuelian,
    Arthur H. Dadian and Ara Oztemel Professor Emerita of Armenian Art
    and Architectural History in the Department of Art and Art History
    at Tufts University, will present a slide lecture at the Armenian
    Library and Museum of America (ALMA) in connection with the Museum's
    current exhibit "Who Are the Armenians?" The slide lecture, titled
    "Armenia: Mountains, Monuments, Manuscripts and Miracles," will take
    place from 2 to 3 p.m.. The event is free and open to the public.

    Der Manuelian will show slides that she shot during her many
    expeditions to Armenia doing fieldwork and research for months at
    a time during the Cold War and afterwards. Some were shot from the
    helicopter she managed to obtain from the Soviets for filming her
    television documentary on Armenian history and art, which has been
    broadcast on 58 PBS television stations in major cities throughout
    the United States.

    Der Manuelian will discuss Armenian fortresses and churches perched
    at the tops of mountains, carved images of kings, princes and saints,
    and brilliantly colored illuminated manuscripts created in Armenia
    during the Middle Ages. Some are among the most impressive monuments
    in the history of art, and an important source of information for
    Early Christian, Romanesque and Gothic Art in the West.

    Armenia's history is an international tale and Der Manuelian played a
    significant role in the power politics of the Middle Ages, including
    the Holy Roman Empire, the Byzantine Empire (of which 30 emperors were
    of Armenian descent), Western Europe, the Silk Road and especially the
    Crusades. As the first country in the world to declare Christianity
    its official religion, Armenia battled to survive and to maintain
    its own identity, faith and culture. These are expressed through
    the unique church architecture in Armenia, the kinds of sculptural
    compositions carved on its walls, and the unusual details added to
    traditional religious manuscript paintings.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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