Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

The Word Of God: Armenian Illuminations

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

  • The Word Of God: Armenian Illuminations

    Armenian Library & Museum of America, Inc.
    65 Main Street
    Watertown, MA 02472
    Phone: 617-926-2562 ext. 3
    Fax: 617-926-0175
    Contact Person: Mariam Stepanyan
    Website: www.almainc.org

    November 13, 2006

    Press Release: For Immediate Release

    THE WORD OF GOD: Armenian Illuminations

    Featuring Herra Karagozyan's Collection

    In celebration of the 1600th anniversary of the Armenian alphabet,
    the Armenian Library & Museum of America (ALMA) will be exhibiting
    a unique collection of 30 artworks of ornamental letters inspired by
    medieval illuminations. The plates, originally drawn by master-restorer
    Herra Karagozyan, represent samples of ornamentations drawn from the
    thousands of manuscripts housed in the Mesrop Mashtots Matenadaran, the
    Institute of Ancient Manuscripts in Yerevan, Armenia. The collection
    on exhibit enables the visitors to view the evolution of the art of
    ornamentation from 9th to late 15th centuries in Armenia.

    The development of ornamentation in Armenian manuscripts emerged
    with the creation of the Armenian alphabet in the 5th century
    and the development of written literature. The tradition started
    gradually: initially, ornamentations appeared on the title pages of the
    manuscripts, and later, in "khorans", in margins, and in the details
    of dominical and plot-oriented miniatures and on surrounding areas.

    Zoomorphic, floral, and geometrical motifs, as well as heavenly
    bodies and architectural structures were predominantly used in
    Armenian ornamentation. The art of illuminations flourished in the
    12th-14th centuries in the Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia. Of all schools
    of illuminations, the Cilician school is unique in the brilliance of
    ornamentations and opulence of colors, including the application of
    gold leaf to the manuscripts. Manuscripts became one of the original
    places for the practice of Armenian fine art. The forms and colors of
    these ornamentations were lasting creations of talented illuminators,
    who were gifted with infinite imagination, limitless creativity,
    and subtle taste.

    One such contemporary artist was the celebrated miniature artist and
    manuscript restorer Herra Karagozyan. A student of the famed Lidia
    Durnova's school of art restoration and reproduction in Yerevan,
    Karagozyan was considered one of the most talented modern restorers,
    particularly due to her fine perception of colors, keen artistic
    taste, skillful drawings, and extraordinary attention to detail. Her
    renditions of medieval manuscripts and frescos were difficult to
    differentiate from the originals. Karagozyan worked for decades as a
    restorer in the Matenadaran, and her works have been exhibited at the
    National Art Gallery of Armenia and in Matenadaran. She worked on the
    restoration and reproduction of the manuscripts of Gndevank and Haghpat
    monasteries in Armenia and the St. Khach and St. Nshan monasteries
    in the Crimea. Herra Karagozyan also participated in the restoration
    of the frescoes painted by Hakob Hovnatan in the Echmiadzin Cathedral.

    The exhibit of this unique art collection will be on display at
    ALMA's Terjenian-Thomas Gallery through January 31, 2007. Museum is
    open to public on Thursday 6-pm, Friday and Sunday 1-5pm and Saturday
    10am-2pm. For more information please contact ALMA offices 617.926.2562
    or visit the website www.almainc.org.
Working...
X