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In Armenia, Art in the Shadow of Ararat

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  • In Armenia, Art in the Shadow of Ararat

    New York Times
    Oct 5 2012


    In Armenia, Art in the Shadow of Ararat


    By RACHEL B. DOYLE
    Published: October 5, 2012

    THE show was about to begin at a Soviet-era playhouse with olive-green
    seats, antique Caucasian rugs and a tiled ceiling, in Yerevan, the
    Armenian capital. I was with a man almost 50 years my senior who,
    while giving me a tour of an experimental art center in a former disco
    that morning, had asked if I would join him at the State Theater of
    the Young Spectator that night.

    Invitations like this are not uncommon in this country of 3.3 million,
    where tourists are still treated as guests to be invited home for
    coffee and sweets, or, as in this case, to be taken out to an
    avant-garde pantomime performance.

    As the play began, it quickly became clear that this was nothing like
    the pantomimes put on for children in the West. This was a thrilling
    interpretive dance performance about a third-century martyr, St.
    Ardalion, his death suggested by the ribbon looped around his wrists
    and ankles. Ardalion had been hired to perform in a play that mocked
    Christianity, but he was inspired to convert onstage, and died for it
    instead.

    The play aptly summed up Armenia, which is considered to be the first
    nation to adopt Christianity as its state religion, in A.D. 301, and
    which has persevered through the centuries despite being conquered by
    the Romans, the Persians, the Arabs, the Mongols, the Turks and, of
    course, the Soviets. It is a country that has not forgotten the
    Armenian genocide of the early 20th century, and whose national
    symbol, Mount Ararat, where many Christians believe Noah's Ark landed,
    is now on the other side of the closed Turkish border.

    Yet the play was also very much a product of contemporary Yerevan,
    where ancient traditions are juxtaposed with a vibrant arts scene and
    where a newly renovated airport is not far from several stunning
    cathedrals that date back more than a thousand years.

    The creative energy is palpable: The city is filled with colorful
    stencils of famous writers spray-painted on buildings. A souvenir shop
    I wandered into had an abstract-painting gallery, Dalan Gallery,
    hidden away on the second floor, as well as five yellow and green
    parrots.

    The Armenian Center for Contemporary Experimental Art took over a
    cavernous Soviet-era dance club after the country gained independence
    from the Soviet Union in 1991, and it now hosts about a dozen
    multimedia art exhibitions and festivals every year.

    The first thing I noticed about Yerevan, speeding from the airport in
    a taxi at dawn, was that it was by no means a grayish post-Communist
    city. Buildings combine classic Soviet architecture with the striking
    pink and orange volcanic tuff rock native to the country. `Russians
    call it the pink city,' said Mane Tonoyan, a tour guide.

    No personal connections had drawn me to this mountainous country.
    Brushes with the Armenian communities in Beirut and Istanbul had
    piqued my curiosity, but it was an urge to go somewhere that still
    felt like a secret, to explore a place most travelers knew little or
    nothing about, that led to my visit.

    Indeed, despite offering a multitude of impressive historic sites,
    including a much older version of Stonehenge, called Karahunj, Armenia
    is barely on the radar of tourists, who visit neighboring Turkey in
    droves. That means that the services and accommodations set up for
    visitors can be rudimentary, though sometimes that just adds to its
    charm. On one tour I went on, the van driver suddenly stopped to chat
    and buy fresh eggs from a woman on the side of the road. After another
    excursion, a family of four invited me in to their apartment and plied
    me with strong coffee and traditional grape and walnut candy.

    Armenia's old monasteries and churches are perhaps its greatest
    cultural treasures and account for a number of Unesco World Heritage
    sites. One of the most intriguing monasteries is Geghard, a complex of
    churches and tombs carved into rocky cliffs 25 miles east of Yerevan,
    long known for housing the spear said to have pierced Christ on the
    cross. (The spear is now in a cathedral museum at Echmiadzin, west of
    Yerevan.)

    I visited Geghard on my second day in the country. As I wound my way
    under the arches of the 800-year-old church's candlelit stone
    chambers, I heard chanting growing louder and louder. Soon, I came
    upon a crowd gathered in an inner sanctum, and saw a monk in a black
    hood and a golden cape singing in a rich baritone, his voice echoing
    off the rock walls.

    I must have looked a bit puzzled because just then a teenager in a
    lavender dress held her smartphone out to me. Using an
    Armenian-to-English dictionary, she had typed in the word for
    `baptism.' As a young boy clad in white stepped forward, I edged out
    of the red-curtained room so as not to intrude.

    Outside in the square three musicians were playing the duduk, a
    traditional woodwind instrument made from the wood of an apricot tree;
    children were wandering about wearing crowns of flowers; sellers
    hawked white doves, to be set free after visitors made their wishes.
    On a platform off to the side, men in boots gutted a hanging lamb, its
    bright red blood spilling onto a stone; a woman in a head scarf told
    me they would give the meat to poor villagers. Save for the
    black-robed student monks texting on mobile phones nearby, the whole
    scene could have been a tableau from a thousand years ago.

    That evening I watched a Franco-Russian violinist named Fédor Roudine,
    the grand prix winner of the Aram Khachaturian International
    Competition, performing concertos in an elegant 1930s concert hall. My
    ticket cost just 2,000 dram (or $5 at 400 dram to the dollar). When
    Mr. Roudine finished, two cannons on either side of the stage shot out
    bursts of glitter in red, blue and orange, the colors of the Armenian
    flag.

    Like Mr. Khachaturian, the composer who was once denounced as
    `antipopular' and sent back to Armenia for `re-education,' the
    country's artists often had to deal with government repression. The
    Soviets banned Sergei Parajanov, the legendary Armenian director, from
    making movies for 15 years after his critically acclaimed film, `The
    Color of Pomegranates,' was released in 1968.

    To fill the void, Mr. Parajanov began to make collage art. Hundreds of
    his unique assemblages are collected in the Museum of Sergei
    Parajanov, an oddball standout of Yerevan's rich house museum scene.
    One room is devoted to works Mr. Parajanov created during his nearly
    five years in prison, like bottle-cap carvings that look like old
    coins.

    Despite the danger, Armenian intellectuals continued to test
    boundaries. During an era when `unofficial art' - anything besides
    Socialist Realism - was anathema to the Kremlin, and exhibitions of it
    were being bulldozed in Moscow, the authorities somehow allowed a
    modern art museum to open in Yerevan in 1972. `Even some artists
    didn't believe it would open,' said Nune Avetisian, director of the
    Modern Art Museum of Yerevan.

    The city's Modern Art Museum was the first state institution of its
    kind in the Soviet Union. It is still hard to fathom how it was
    permitted to display works like Hakob Hakobyan's `In a City,' a 1979
    painting that shows a crowd of headless men raising handless arms in a
    Soviet-style square.

    Perhaps the freedom the authorities allowed the museum was simply the
    result of the city's geography: `It was so small and very far from the
    center in Moscow,' Ms. Avetisian said.

    On my last day in town I traveled south to the Khor Virap monastery,
    passing deep gorges and endlessly rolling hills that seemed to touch
    the clouds, red-roofed houses and purple wildflowers sprouting from
    cracks in jagged volcanic rock walls. The snow-capped peak of Mount
    Ararat was always in the distance.

    As I entered Khor Virap, where the main draw is a deep dungeon where
    Gregory the Illuminator, Armenia's patron saint, was imprisoned in the
    third century, a young man brandished a large rooster at me, smiling
    mischievously. I had been keen to go to a country that still felt
    undiscovered, and while the rooster-seller might have guessed that the
    redheaded woman with a camera was not really in the market for a blood
    sacrifice, I appreciated the gesture.

    WHERE TO GO


    State Theater of the Young Spectator (3 Moskovyan Street; 374-10-563-040)

    Dalan Gallery (12 Abovyan Street, second floor; 374-553-307; dalangallery.com)

    Armenian Center for Contemporary Experimental Art (1/3 Buzand Street;
    374-10-568-225; accea.info)

    Aram Khachaturian Concert Hall (46 Mashtots Avenue; 374-10-560-645; apo.am)

    Museum of Sergei Parajanov (15/16 Dzoragyugh Street, off Proshyan
    Street; 374-10-538-473; parajanov.com/museum.html)

    Modern Art Museum of Yerevan (7 Mashtots Avenue; 374-10-539-637; mamy.am)

    Many of Armenia's best sites can be seen on day excursions from
    Yerevan. Envoy Tours (54 Pushkin Street; 374-10-530-369;
    envoyhostel.com; from 13,000 dram) and Hyur Service (96 Nalbandian
    Street; 374-10-546-040; hyurservice.com; from 5,500 dram) offer
    English-language tours to the major sites, including the Geghard and
    Khor Virap monasteries.

    http://travel.nytimes.com/2012/10/07/travel/in-armenia-art-in-the-shadow-of-ararat.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0




    From: A. Papazian
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