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The Director's Office Of David Sarkisyan

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  • The Director's Office Of David Sarkisyan

    THE DIRECTOR'S OFFICE OF DAVID SARKISYAN
    by Yuri Avvakumov

    Oye! Times
    http://www.oyetimes.com/news/europe/5780-the-directors-office-of-david-sarkisyan
    Sept 10 2010

    David Sarkisyan was Moscow's beloved cultural guardian; his friends
    in the city's vibrant artistic community are fighting to preserve
    his eccentric and baroquely overfilled office as a testament to his
    inclusive, nurturing spirit.

    David Sarkisyan left his office last December, before Christmas,
    and never returned to his workplace again. On January 7, 2010, he
    died suddenly of lymphoma.

    During the decade he spent in his office as director, the Museum of
    Architecture staged hundreds of exhibitions and became the center not
    just of Moscow's architectural life but also its artistic life. David
    was neither a builder nor an architect - a biologist by training, it
    was as if he found himself in the life of architecture museum director.

    He was like a squatter who had taken up residence in an abandoned
    building and invited his friends in.

    Since no one was protecting Moscow architecture from destruction
    and fake substitutes, the public movement Archnadzor organized its
    exhibitions in the museum. The Moscow Architecture Preservation
    Society, or MAPS had its birthplace in the museum, petitions to the
    Moscow authorities were signed here, and journalists hurried here to
    hear the first reaction of cultured people to the latest initiative
    by unintelligent developers.

    Meanwhile the museum's yard filled up with sculptures that were brought
    here from the Donskoy Monastery, where at one time the museum had a
    depository and restoration workshops - there was nowhere else to take
    them. The museum also took in paintings removed from the Hotel Moskva,
    which was being demolished; elderly architects brought David their
    precious archives, and the formerly dull management office began to
    gradually fill up with brightly covered books, photos of country
    estates outside Moscow, travel souvenirs, multi-coloured stones,
    table-top sculptures, Chinese umbrellas and a metronome, becoming
    increasingly reminiscent of Wells' Magic Shop. For the last few years
    there was only enough free space left in the office for three chairs -
    two for visitors and one for the director. David was a human omnivore,
    accepting young and old, respecting fame and loving those just starting
    in art, not dividing into high and low but trusting his own taste
    for talents, wherever they might come from.

    The Office: Living Art or Sarcophagus

    Thousands of friends and acquaintances came to say farewell to
    David Sarkisyan, which is highly unusual for the funeral of a museum
    director, and obituaries were published not just by Moscow newspapers
    and magazines but also by Western publications. While the Ministry
    of Culture was looking for a new director to fill the vacancy,
    David's close friends thought about how to preserve the memory of
    the legendary director - and as it happened they didn't have to go
    far to find their tribute. David's office, wonderfully made into an
    artistic installation, is a memorial in itself. This obvious idea
    unexpectedly encountered opposition from the newly appointed director,
    an architect by profession, who thought he would free up the office
    by moving all David's things into a glass sarcophagus in a suite in
    the main block of the museum.

    A letter to protect the office, addressed to the Minister of Culture,
    was signed by dozens of distinguished Moscow museum curators, art
    historians and architects. The ministry supported the request that the
    office be preserved as a memorial. Archive experts are now at work
    in it, compiling a so-called collection inventory so that all the
    exhibits can be handed over to the museum for permanent preservation.

    The installation in memory of the last director of the architecture
    museum in Moscow is currently being shown in Venice, in the ancient
    Palazzo Zenobio, which was decorated by Tiepolo. Since the second
    half of the nineteenth century it has been the home of the Armenian
    College, and in recent times artistic exhibitions have often been
    staged here. David loved this palazzo, with its luxurious garden,
    a rarity in Venice. In 2002 he was curator of the Russian pavilion
    in the Giardini for the Architecture Biennale.

    Venice, with its unique aura-bewildering to any supporter of orthodox
    city-plans-is a lot like his office. Everyone knows the story about
    the first deputy mayor of Moscow, head of the capital's construction
    complex, who, when he found himself in Venice for the first time,
    looked round the ramshackle little houses and declared that the
    city needed urgent repairs. One has to assume he meant Moscow-style,
    with demolition and consequent "restoration" in reinforced concrete.

    An exhibition entitled "The Director's Office" opened to the public
    together with the latest Architecture Biennale, the theme of which
    this year is "People meet each other in architecture". Many of David's
    friends from various cities around the world gathered at the opening
    in late August in the cool and spacious courtyard of the palazzo. The
    installation occupied two dark halls in the left wing of the building:
    in one there was a memorial film full of interviews with those who
    knew David well when he was alive.

    Back in Moscow, his office has become a kind of lesson, or
    homework, left by Sarkisyan to Moscow's architects and to the city's
    authorities. It is something organic in the museum that belongs to
    living people, not to workshops, guilds, trade unions or ministries.

    The first duty of the architect is to preserve the "natural" beauty
    of the city, which often grows without his involvement, and only
    then to add his professional skill to what exists. David believed
    passionately that architects should be more like gardeners, otherwise
    our city will turn from a garden into a morgue.




    From: A. Papazian
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