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Hetq - Carpet Weaving In Armenia

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  • Hetq - Carpet Weaving In Armenia

    CARPET WEAVING IN ARMENIA
    Lena Nazaryan

    Hetq Online, Armenia
    September 17, 2007

    Armenian Carpet Prices Rise by 40% on the International Market

    The director of one of the few carpet-weaving units in Armenia, Mkhitar
    Simonyan, said that carpet weaving was on the verge of extinction
    in Armenia. Aida Simonyan ltd., owned by the Simonyan brothers, is
    located in the Gegharkunik village of Chambarak. The unit has 150
    workers, but they only manage to gather around 40 carpet weavers,
    and that too only in the winter when people come to work there just
    because they have nothing else to do.

    In the summer, they prefer to cultivate land and raise animals. A
    carpet weaver's average monthly salary is 30,000 drams. There are
    virtually no other jobs in Chambarak.

    "We are unable to promote carpet weaving. There are tens of unemployed
    women in Chambarak who can weave carpets, but they don't come here
    to work. We cannot pay them enough to motivate them to come and not
    regret investing their time in this work," said the company director
    Mkhitar Simonyan.

    This carpet weaving unit opened in 2006, but has only managed to get
    by and is on the verge of closing, according to management. Their
    main client is Tufenkian Trans Caucasus, which exports 90 percent of
    its carpets to the United States and sells the remaining 10 percent
    in Yerevan, where the buyers are exclusively foreigners. Because of
    fluctuations in the dollar-dram exchange rate, the exporting company
    raised prices by 40 percent. The dollars brought in from carpet sales
    abroad were no longer enough to cover the expenses accrued in drams
    locally. The cost price of each carpet was higher than its selling
    price. Prices for other carpets in the international market have been
    quite stable over the past several years, while Armenian carpets have
    grown more expensive by 40-50 percent.

    "The foreign market is flooded with carpets - cheap, expensive, good
    quality, bad quality - all kinds. If the buyer does not decide to
    buy Armenian carpets specifically, then they can find other carpets
    of the same quality but at a cheaper price. How can we compete? The
    client does not agree with the price we set, but we have no other
    choice. We have to either raise prices or shut down. But if we raise
    prices we may end up without clients and have to close down anyway,"
    concluded the unit director.

    That is what happened to Sahakyan Carpets, founded in the 1990s,
    which sold its equipment to Tufenkian Trans Caucasus and left the
    market once and for all in 2005.

    A number of other small carpet-weaving units were dealt the same
    fate. Tufenkian Trans Caucasus has been operating in Armenia since
    1994. Three units continue to work in Armenia thanks to orders from
    this company - one each in the villages of Chambarak, Lchashen and
    Karmir. These units do not have other clients. The carpets are all
    hand-woven. They are brought to a central office in Yerevan from the
    units, where they undergo final processing and are the exported to the
    United States, where they are sold in shops in a number of places -
    Dallas, Chicago, New York and California.

    Arman Grigoryan, director-in-chief of Tufenkian Trans Caucasus,
    noted that carpet sales by the company had halved over the past three
    years. "We would produce and export around 800-900 sq m on a monthly
    basis two or three years ago, sometimes even 1000 sq m. Now the volume
    of our production and export is about half of that. Now we produce
    and export around 300-400 sq m a month," said Arman Grigoryan.

    Tufenkian Trans Caucasus is looking for ways to lower the cost price
    of carpets. They are searching for new suppliers are importers of
    wool and thread. "We used to think earlier that we should buy wool
    yarn from our villagers, but that would be a luxury for us now,"
    said Grigoryan. Mkhitar Simonyan, the director of the Chambarak
    carpet-weaving unit, was confident that they could produce carpets by
    themselves in a condition ready for sale, but that they could never
    succeed in selling them abroad. "Our carpets sell abroad because they
    bear the Tufenkian brand. We and others like us can't break into the
    international market and sell our carpets at even half the cost price,"
    said Simonyan.

    Carpet Weavers of Artsvashen Jobless The carpet weavers of Chambarak
    are mainly women who migrated there in 1992 from Artsvashen. During
    the Soviet period, there used to be a branch of Haygorg, the state
    carpet company, in Artsvashen. After the collapse of the Soviet
    Union and the invasion of the Azeris, the residents of Artsvashen
    migrated to Chambarak, Vardenis and Abovyan. The two-story Haygorg
    building was torn down and the storeroom, full of hundreds of carpets,
    was ransacked. The women of Artsvashen learned carpet weaving from
    their mothers and grandmothers. Many of them had worked for Haygorg
    for decades. "It was shameful for a girl or woman in Artsvashen not
    to be able to weave carpets. Even if they didn't work for Haygorg,
    they would have a weaving stand at home and make carpets," said Irina
    Ghalechyan, a former resident of Artsvashen and carpet weaver.

    In 1992, the people of Artsvashen left all they had and moved to
    the area in Armenia closest to them, the village of Chambarak. They
    came with the hope that they would be able to return in three days,
    but they have remained for 15 years. "Haygorg was operating until
    the very last day. When they would start shooting we would hide in
    the basement. As soon as the shooting would stop, we would get out,
    get to our work stations and continue weaving," said Irina. When the
    village was lost, there were around 750 households or 3,000 residents
    there. The government gave loans to the people of Artsvashen, with
    which they bought the houses of the Molokans in Chambarak.

    "People used to really value carpets before... A carpet used to be like
    an open book in ancient times, it used to have real meaning. Now it
    is just a thing of beauty and wealth. Carpets used to tell stories,
    but not everyone could read them. My ancestors used to weave from
    memory. A long time ago, people would pay in gold for the carpets of
    Artsvashen, even though many of them were woven by illiterate women,"
    said Irina. Very few women from Artsvashen work in the carpet-weaving
    unit at Chambarak. They prefer to work in fields or orchards; carpet
    weaving is no longer a means to make a living. These women no longer
    want their daughters to learn carpet weaving.

    One of the characteristic features of Armenian carpets is their
    symbolic representation of the sun, stars, animals, plants, people,
    dragons, birds and snakes.

    This is in contrast to Arabian, Persian or Turkish carpets where they
    are represented as they are, without symbolic patterns.

    "In the old days, people would hang carpets on the wall. That's how
    it would be in almost all houses.

    Carpets had the same significance to Armenians that icons had for
    the Orthodox Church. Carpets were considered sacred. My ancestors
    believed that a carpet could bring success and prosperity to the
    house. Obviously, one couldn't put a carpet like that on the floor
    or table. They would weave carpets for the floor which would not
    have any symbols representing God or light. But they would not hang
    carpets on every wall. They would leave it for the main wall of the
    house, where they would also hang their guns and pictures of their
    ancestors," said Irina.

    One of the best-known symbols on Armenian carpets represents
    the Dragon. Carpets with dragons on them are called vishapagorg,
    or Dragon Carpets. The Dragon is not considered good or evil in
    Armenian symbology; it is an element that can be both good and
    inexorably evil. The Dragon is considered a protective symbol for the
    home. Dragons are woven into the edges of a carpet but never in its
    center. This is to say that dragons protect the edges of the world,
    but the center is almost always occupied by the Sun.

    "Our grandfather dealt in the trade of ancient carpets his whole
    life. He used to say that a cow, a silver belt and a carpet were all
    equal as riches and held the same value. In my grandfather's time,
    women used to weave carpets from memory, which is why each carpet
    was an irreproducible piece of art. Now, even if the carpets are
    hand-woven, they are mass produced and are all the same because the
    women look at pictures to weave them," said Mkhitar Simonyan.

    Armenian carpets used to have different names in the past -
    Vishapagorg, Tavriz, Bayazet, Vaspurakan, Tzaragorg, Zangezur,
    Gharabagh, Dvin, Shirak, Lori, Taron, Ani - according to corresponding
    patterns and places. Now, carpets no longer have names, they are just
    given numbers.

    "In the 90s, many Armenians sold the carpets that they had for
    pennies. We lost a part of the history of our art in that way,"
    said carpet weaver Irina Ghalechyan.
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