Creativity, Culture and Survival: Museum Reflects Ancient Civilization and Modern Global Diaspora

By Nell Porter Brown

Harvard Magazine
January 2022

In 1207 an elderly scribe in the Armenian kingdom of Cilicia completed the Garabed Gospel. Although blinded by the 11-year undertaking, he completed the 250 inked, goat-skin pages at a monastery near what is now southern Turkey. For the next 700 years, the manuscript was passed down through that family lineage of priests, serving as a sacred object, according to the Armenian Museum of America where the volume is now on display. “If one became sick, one would ask the family for ‘the blessing of the book’ to cure their disease,” a plaque explains. 

It is the museum’s oldest book, says Executive Director Jason Sohigian, and survived the looting and destruction of other texts, art, cultural objects, and whole villages. The museum’s collection of more than 25,000 objects elucidates some 3,000 years of Armenian history and culture, from the early days of Christianity to the contemporary global diaspora. 

More contemporary are the museum’s famous portraits by Yousuf Karsh, underground works from the Soviet era and, surprisingly, a handful of oil paintings by the American pathologist, and pioneering right-to-die with dignity proponent, Jack Kevorkian, whose mother escaped the Genocide.

“Many of the objects in our collection and on display are survivors of history,” says Sohigian. “Armenians have inhabited those lands for thousands of years, and our cultural heritage has been under threat especially in recent centuries. Our museum is unique in that it preserves and displays many of these artifacts that tell the story of Armenian resilience, creativity, culture, and survival.”

Click here to read the full article:

https://www.harvardmagazine.com/2022/01/h2-armenian-culture

A Tribute to Haig Der Manuelian 

Haig Der Manuelian with his beloved wife Adele

This week we remember the five-year anniversary of the passing of Haig Der Manuelian, the larger-than-life Chairman and Co-Founder of the Armenian Museum of America. 

Born in Watertown, he attended Boston Latin School and graduated summa cum laude from Tufts University at the age of 17 and graduated from Harvard Law School before turning 21, having passed the bar exam six months earlier.  

He was a founding member of the Armenian Museum of America, the National Association for Armenian Studies and Research, the Armenian Assembly of America, the Council of Armenian Executives, and the AYF’s Camp Haiastan. His parents were survivors of the Armenian Genocide, and he was passionate that all genocides throughout the world be recognized and never forgotten. 

“Haig was a true renaissance man in every way. A visionary, he had a great sense of history and its impact on the future,” recalled Museum President Michele Kolligian. “He was proud of his Armenian heritage and recognized the benefit of being born in this country and the advantages it afforded him throughout his life. The flip side of this high achiever was the sweet and humble boy who never forgot his Armenian roots and family traditions.” 

Fifty years ago, Haig and the late Reverend Vartan Hartunian, a Genocide Survivor and the pastor of the First Armenian Church in Belmont, along with a number of other hard-working founding members, filled the basement of the Church with countless Armenian books and artifacts. This nascent collection of objects became the foundation for what would become the Armenian Museum of America. 

Today that collection has grown and relocated to Watertown, MA, and because of Haig, as he so often stated proudly, it is the largest Armenian museum in the world outside of Armenia. 

“Haig was a man of strength who excelled in every aspect of his life. His devotion and passion for the betterment of the Armenian Museum of America was unwavering. He worked diligently, selflessly, and with great integrity,” continued Kolligian. “Haig demonstrated a deep passion and dedication that made it possible for this institution to thrive and grow into the world-class Museum it is today.”  

This devotion was shared by his loving wife Adele who also volunteered endless hours of her time to the Museum. They donated over a million dollars towards the renovation of the third floor Contemporary Gallery. The Adele and Haig Der Manuelian Galleries are a reminder of their incredible generosity and commitment to the Armenian Museum.  

“Haig was multifaceted in many areas, whether practicing law, reciting Latin, playing tennis, or sailing. He never did things halfway. He was brilliant, intuitive, fearless, passionate, and always determined to do what was correct,” concluded Kolligian. “His commitment and perseverance were the driving force behind all of us who worked alongside him, and his example will guide us to continue his legacy.” 

Armenian Museum of America Partners with TUMO Center for Online Concert

Tumo Band.jpg

The Armenian Museum of America re-opened in June with three floors of updated exhibitions including ancient and medieval artifacts, displays on folk instruments, and two contemporary art exhibits. At the same time, the Museum is continuing to offer virtual programs for members and supporters around the world.

The next Online Concert hosted by the Museum will feature young vocalists and musicians from the TUMO Center for Creative Technologies. TUMO is a free education center for teens in Armenia specializing in technology and design. The TUMO Band is led by Arik Grigoryan, a member of the popular rock band Bambir. The group met during his music workshop at TUMO and they perform genres from rock to classical, fusing the traditional with the modern.

“Our goal is to return to hosting cultural events such as this in our gallery, but we are happy to host the performances online and to partner with musicians in Yerevan and other cities for our local, national, and international members and friends,” explains Executive Director Jason Sohigian.

“This exciting concert was recorded exclusively for the Armenian Museum, and it is free to attend thanks to a generous grant from the Dadourian Foundation, whose mission is to promote Armenian cultural identity,” adds Sohigian. “We do hope that viewers join the Museum as members, though, as it supports our mission to preserve and share Armenian heritage and culture. We’ve had an impressive response to our 50th anniversary membership drive and would like to continue the momentum.”

TUMO Center for Creative Technologies is made up of self-learning activities, workshops, and project labs that cover technology and design including computer programming, animation, game development, robotics, 3D modeling, filmmaking, and graphic design. More than 20,000 students currently attend TUMO centers in Armenia on a regular basis. In recent years, TUMO centers have opened in Paris, Moscow, Tirana, Berlin, and Beirut.

TUMO’s music program explores many genres and instruments, as well as songwriting, composing, and the use of digital audio software.

The 19 members of the band range in age from 14 to 23, and they go to TUMO twice a week for the afterschool music program. Ten of the group members are vocalists, and others play instruments such as cello, guitar, violin, and flute. This concert will include original songs by the band, as well as music written to accompany stories by Hovhannes Tumanyan, Mesrop Mashtots, and Rumi.

The Armenian Museum of America is the largest Armenian museum in the Diaspora. It has grown into a major repository for all forms of Armenian material culture that illustrate the creative endeavors of the Armenian people over the centuries. Today, the Museum’s collections hold more than 25,000 artifacts including 5,000 ancient and medieval Armenian coins, 1,000 stamps and maps, 3,000 textiles, and 180 Armenian inscribed rugs. In addition to more than 30,000 books in the Research Library, there is an extensive collection of Urartian and religious artifacts, ceramics, medieval illuminations, and various other objects. The collection includes historically significant objects, including five of the Armenian Bibles printed in Amsterdam in 1666.

The Armenian Museum of America is currently open Friday through Sunday from 12:00 noon to 6:00 pm. The concert will stream online on Sunday, October 24 at 2:00 pm EST (11:00 am PST) via the Museum’s Facebook page, YouTube Channel, and website www.ArmenianMuseum.org, and it will be available online for later viewing.

Armenian Church Textiles Displayed at Tufts University

Vakas, (priest’s collar) from the Armenian Museum of America

Vakas, (priest’s collar) from the Armenian Museum of America

By Aram Arkun
Armenian Mirror-Spectator
October 5, 2021

The Aidekman Arts Center of the Tufts University Art Galleries presents an exhibition of Armenian church textiles from August 5 to December 5 called Connecting Threads / Survivor Objects. It is a small but varied collection of 11 embroidered, block printed, and painted objects that are rare surviving legacies of Armenian culture. The exhibition was organized by Christina Maranci, Arthur H. Dadian and Ara T. Oztemel Professor of Armenian Art and Architecture, and Chiara Pidatella, Research Curator.

 Dr. Maranci related the origins of the exhibit: “Basically it came about by me poking around through the website of the Armenian Museum of America and also the Museum of Fine Arts and noticing the wealth of liturgical textiles. I thought it would be a nice way to exhibit Armenian art by looking at textiles because of the ways in which textiles speak to the early modern experience. I talked about it with Dina Deitsch, the director of the art galleries. That is how it came about and it seemed like a really great opportunity to teach.”

 The materials for the exhibition emerged from the work conducted in Maranci’s spring 2021 seminar, The Threads of Survival, which included 10 undergraduate and graduate students. She said, “My intention was never for this to be a large show. It was always to be something that was the product of student research. The crucial thing actually was taking objects that had been almost completely unstudied, barely catalogued, and to do deep research on them. Each student was assigned a single object, and had a chance to do that kind of careful work with a single object over the course of a semester.”

 Deitsch said, “For us as an academic art space, what was exciting was the collaboration that we were hoping to do with Christina and Chiara, and the fact that the students’ scholarship was able to have a physical realization in an exhibition. I think it was a wonderful collaboration between the Armenian Museum of America and eventually the Museum of Fine Arts.”

 Click here to read the full article:

https://mirrorspectator.com/2021/10/05/armenian-church-textiles-displayed-at-tufts-university/

 

A Tribute to Dr. Lucy Der Manuelian (1928-2021)

By Christina Maranci, Arthur H. Dadian and Ara T. Oztemel Professor of Armenian Art at Tufts University and Academic Advisor at the Armenian Museum of America

On September 20, 2021, Lucy Der Manuelian passed away at her home in Belmont, MA. Dr. Der Manuelian (fondly referred to by many of us as “Lucy”) was the founder and first occupant of the Arthur H. Dadian and Ara T. Oztemel Chair of Armenian Art in the Department of the History of Art and Architecture at Tufts. The Tufts chair is the first and only endowed professorship of Armenian art outside the Republic of Armenia. It was launched in 1984 as a rotating lectureship at Tufts in conjunction with Harvard, McGill, Boston, and Northeastern, so that courses in Armenian art could be taught at each institution in succession.

In 1989, the lectureship became an endowed position with a permanent home at Tufts. This owes entirely to Lucy’s energies, and the financial support of New Deal attorney Arthur H. Dadian and import/export magnate Ara T. Oztemel, the latter known for bringing Coca-Cola to the Soviet Union. Lucy retired in 2006.

Lucy was educated at Harvard (Radcliffe), and, after a 20-year hiatus from academia in which she raised two children, received her PhD at Boston University in 1980. Her dissertation was supported by a fellowship at the Bunting (now the Harvard-Radcliffe) Institute (1971-1973), and an International Research and Exchange Board grant in 1977 for travel to the Soviet Union.

The project, supervised by noted scholar of Islamic art, Oleg Grabar, concerned the medieval sculptural program of Geghard, and was the first serious English-language monograph on that site. Lucy’s project was innovative in its comparative approach to the monument, considering the sculptural program of Geghard in relation not only to Armenian iconography, but also to the artistic traditions of Byzantium and Islam. Her dissertation is also widely considered to be the first American dissertation dedicated to Armenian art.

Lucy lent her expertise in Armenian art and architecture to a range of scholarly projects, authoring articles on major Armenian monuments and artistic themes for Dictionary of the Middle Ages (1982-1989) and Grove Dictionary of Art (now Oxford Art Online). She was an author and researcher for the massive microfiche work known as Armenian Architecture (Inter Documentation, c. 1980-c.1990). She contributed articles to several important Armenological volumes, including Medieval Armenian Culture (Scholars Press, 1984).

In addition to work on Armenian architecture and sculpture, Lucy published widely on a variety of topics within Armenian art. Among her most noted projects are her publications on carpets, including the exhibition catalogue, Weavers, Merchants, and Kings: The Inscribed Rugs of Armenia (Kimbell Art Museum, 1984) which provided a crucial English-language scholarly foundation for the history of Armenian rug weaving.

Lucy’s interests also extended to the study of important Armenian-Americans, including Moses Gulesian. In addition to contributing to conventional academic projects, she was remarkably prescient about technology, making use of film and the internet (as early as the 1990s) in her pedagogy and research.

Lucy is best known in the Armenian community as a tireless advocate for Armenian art, lecturing to audiences around the world, and educating Armenians in the US about their rich medieval cultural heritage. Almost everyone in the community has a “Lucy story” about the first time they heard her lecture. She was an activist for Armenian cultural heritage long before that concept became familiar to us all.

Lucy was fearless, physically and psychologically. Before the era of drones, she hung out of helicopters to take good aerial shots of monasteries and churches. At the height of the Soviet period, the KGB suspected that she was a spy because of all her travel and photography. One night they visited her in Yerevan, and, to avoid handing over the film, Lucy hid it inside her dress, daring them to manhandle her. Art history won and we have the photographs.

As everyone who knew her can attest, Lucy was unconventional and indomitable. An avid tennis player, she had boundless energy. She believed in using every minute: she kept a stack of books in the car and read at every stoplight (often to the consternation of drivers behind her). She kept apples and packets of cheese and crackers in her pockets to eat on the go, but was also a very fine chef, such that Julia Child came to her house for dinner and enjoyed Lucy’s chicken cooked with cherries. Lucy sometimes held office hours in her car if she couldn’t find a parking spot.

Along with her family and friends, the entire Armenian community, the Tufts community, her students, and her colleagues, I am intensely sad to know that Lucy is no longer with us. She was a life force for Armenian art. I was so fortunate to learn from and be mentored by her. I think she was happiest standing in front of an audience, sharing her knowledge about Armenian art. I remember her telling me that before beginning a presentation, you should pause and smile at your audience (she had a thousand-watt smile). I hope she is doing that now, giving her “helicopter lecture” (as we affectionately called it) and teaching a whole new audience about Armenian art.

Note from the Museum: Lucy Der Manuelian was a long-time Trustee of the Museum and sister of our founder and late Chairman Haig, and John Vigen Manuelian. The family has requested that memorial gifts in lieu of flowers may be made to the Armenian Museum of America.