Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Anooshavan "Flash" Kurkjian

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Anooshavan "Flash" Kurkjian

    Anooshavan "Flash" Kurkjian
    By John Cronin

    Boston Herald, MA
    Sept 2 2004

    Anooshavan ``Flash'' Kurkjian, of Watertown and Manomet, a noted
    Boston artist, died Tuesday at Mount Auburn hospital after a brief
    illness.

    Born in Kigi, in eastern Turkey, he was forced to flee in 1915
    during the Armenian genocide. Only he, his mother and an aunt
    successfuly escaped the pogroms when they arrived in Syria.

    In the 1920s, his family settled in Watertown, where they
    settled among what is still a very large Armenian-American community.
    After his marriage, he and his wife settled in Boston's South End,
    then Dorchester and lastly Watertown.

    While attending Watertown High School, he excelled in tennis and
    basketball and earned the nickname ``Flash'' from his teammates. His
    rather long and difficult to pronounce - at least to non-Armenians -
    first name lead to his earning nicknames throughout his life, which
    was source of unending humor.

    Graduating from Watertown High, he enrolled in the Vesper George
    Art School and went on to become a comercial artist. He maintained an
    art studio in Boston's Little Building for more than 35 years.

    In a period when photography was still in the black and white
    era, he was noted for his ability to ``colorize'' photos of bridal
    and other special occcasion photos for such photography studios as
    Ciro's.

    Mr. Kurkjian was also a distinguished painter and portrait
    artist. His portrait of Pope John Paul II graced the cover of the
    then Boston Herald American Sunday magazine when the pontiff visited
    Boston in 1979.

    His portraits can be found in many homes and businesses in the
    Boston area. Another portrait, commissioned by the then Attorney
    General Scott Harshberger, of slain state prosecutor Paul McLaughlin
    hangs in the Attorney General's office.

    An avid athlete, Mr. Kurkjian was a long-time member of the
    Boston Young Mens' Christian Union. An even more avid handball
    player, he often engaged in matches with many prominent Bostonians.
    They included former Attorney General Francis Bellotti, real estate
    developer Thomas Flatley and former Globe and Herald columnist, Dave
    Farrell. At BYMCU he was called ``George.''

    In the early 1990s, he traveled to his birthplace, Kigi, with
    his son, Stephen Kurkjian, an editor/reporter with the Boston Globe.
    The trip and his reminiscences appeared in an article entitled
    ``Roots of Sorrow'' in the Globe Sunday magazine.

    Mr Kurkjian is survived by his wife of 66 years, Rosella, a
    former employee in the Boston Herald library, and three children,
    Karolyn Kurkjian-Jones of Boston, Stephen of Boston and Elizabeth
    Kurkjian-Henry of Winchester. He is also survied by his sister, Mae
    Avakian of Watertown and six grandchildren.

    Visiting hours will be held tomorrow from 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. at
    Aram Bedrosian Funeral Home, Watertown. Funeral services will be held
    at St. James Armenian Church, Watertown, at 11 a.m. Saturday.

    Burial will be in Mount Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge.

    Funeral arrangements by Bedrosian Funeral Home, Watertown.
Working...
X