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David Sarkisyan, Champion Of Moscow Architecture, Dies At 62

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  • David Sarkisyan, Champion Of Moscow Architecture, Dies At 62

    DAVID SARKISYAN, CHAMPION OF MOSCOW ARCHITECTURE, DIES AT 62
    By Sophia Kishkovsky

    New York Times
    Jan 20 2010

    MOSCOW -- David Sarkisyan, a former physiologist and film director
    who became famous as the director of the Shchusev State Museum of
    Architecture here and for his campaigns to preserve architectural
    monuments against rampant post-Soviet development, died on Jan. 7 in
    Munich, where he had been hospitalized. He was 62.

    The cause was lymphoma, said Joseph Backstein, the commissioner of
    the Moscow Biennale of Contemporary Art and a friend of Mr. Sarkisyan.

    Under Mr. Sarkisyan the museum, in a prerevolutionary compound around
    the corner from the Kremlin, became a center of efforts to halt the
    destruction of everything from centuries-old mansions to modernist
    masterpieces and even the Central House of Artists, constructed
    under Leonid Brezhnev in the late Soviet era, a period that has few
    architectural defenders.

    Mr. Sarkisyan, who was appointed the museum's director in 2000, warned
    of a "cultural catastrophe," saying that Moscow was losing its face
    and character. He was highly critical of Mayor Yuri Luzhkov and his
    wife, Yelena Baturina, a billionaire real estate magnate.

    His battles were hard fought but often futile. Thousands of signatures
    collected by the museum and vocal protests were not enough to save
    Voentorg, an early-20th-century department store located directly
    across the street from the museum's main building. It was replaced
    by a new building that many regarded as a poor imitation of the
    old structure.

    Moscow developers and city officials often argue that old or poorly
    maintained buildings are too damaged or too costly to save. Mr.

    Sarkisyan had proof in the courtyard of his museum of how such
    buildings could be put to worthy use.

    The museum was short of money to restore one of its wings, so Mr.

    Sarkisyan turned it into a conceptual exhibition space called the
    Ruins. The uncovered brick walls and crumbling floors and ceilings
    of the unheated space effectively became part of each show.

    Hundreds of Moscow architects and cultural figures attended his
    funeral in the museum's halls on Friday. Funeral organizers said
    city officials blocked plans to bury Mr. Sarkisyan, who was born in
    Yerevan, Armenia, at the Armenian cemetery in central Moscow. He was
    buried at a cemetery on the edge of the city.

    The work of the museum became Mr. Sarkisyan's passion and the last
    of what he called his "four lives."

    David Sarkisyan was born on Sept. 23, 1947, and had careers as a
    physiologist; as a pharmacologist, who helped develop a drug for
    treating Alzheimer's disease; and as a film and television director.

    He lived for a time in France, where he walked with the actress Jeanne
    Moreau on the red carpet at the 1991 Cannes Film Festival. Mr.

    Sarkisyan was assistant director on the film "Anna Karamazoff,"
    which was in competition in 1991 and starred Ms. Moreau.

    He is survived by a sister, Osanna, of Yerevan.

    Mr. Sarkisyan, who could speak eruditely and passionately on virtually
    any topic, fielded an endless stream of visitors in his museum office,
    which, packed from floor to ceiling with books, art, photos, souvenirs,
    sculptures and toys, was regarded by artists and critics as a work
    of art in itself.

    Grigory Revzin, architecture critic for the Moscow newspaper
    Kommersant, wrote last week that the office was a magnet for
    international celebrities.

    "And all of these foreigners," he said, "told each other that there
    are several landmarks in Moscow: the Kremlin, the Mausoleum, St.

    Basil's Cathedral and David Sarkisyan's office."
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