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Old Jonah from New Julfa

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  • Old Jonah from New Julfa

    Old Jonah from New Julfa

    Friday, February 16, 2007
    www.hali.com

    It's officially the Year of Armenia in France, and in a
    celebrationthat is not without sadness, members of Paris's large and
    influential Armenian community have organised an exhibition at the
    Maison des Arts in the town of Antony, near Orly Airport, to mark 400
    years of the Armenian presence in New Julfa,the Armenian quarter of
    the central Persian city of Esfahan, which was founded early in the
    17th century by Shah Abbas the Great for the more than 150,000
    Armenians moved there by force from Julfa in Nakhichevan.


    Although primarily a nostalgic look at the history of New Julfa, and
    resting very heavily on late 19th and early 2oth century photographs
    of sites such as the Armenian School and Vank Cathedral, as well as of
    the families of members of the community, there were also a number of
    artefacts displayed, including items of costume and textiles, that
    relate directly to Armenian culture in Iran. Included among the latter
    was this 17th century northwest Persian/Caucasian embroidery,
    depicting the Biblical story of Jonah and the Whale, which was loaned
    for the exhibition by Artemis Achdjian. In addition to the Armenian
    crosses formed by the reciprocal space between the sixteen-sided star
    panels of the field, an Armenian Christian source is indicated by the
    drawing of the whale, shown as a giant scaly fish, which which in the
    embroidery appears beneath a stylised four-legged creature (with more
    crosses on its flanks), but which can also be seen beneath Jonah's
    boat in an early 10th century bas relief in the Church of the Holy
    Cross in Aghtamar.

    Until 29 April 2007
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