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| Sculpture |
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Stone Sculpture and Relief Carving |
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Inevitably
in a country with an architectural tradition in stone dating back to Urartian
times, the craftsmen who so carefully carved blocks of stones for walls,
fortresses, and sanctuaries had acquired the skill to sculpt stone as relief
decorations for buildings or as independent works of art. Little
sculpture has survived, however, from the pre-Christian period because
of the excessive zeal of St. Gregory and the newly convert royal court
of Armenia in destroying all vestiges associated with earlier pagan religions.
The major exception is a series of extremely large carved monolithic stones
found in various parts of Armenia and often associated with water sources.
They resemble large tailless whales. On them are fish-like designs, but
they are know as vishap-k'ar, dragon stones. They date from the second
and first millennia B.C.
Excavations have uncovered a miscellany
of sculptures from the Artaxiad and the Arsacid periods, roughly the second
century B.C. to the fourth century A.D. The famous bronze head of Aphrodite,
found at Satala near Erzinjan, now in the British Museum, or the small
female torso in white marble dug up at Armavir, testify to the popularity
of Hellenistic sculpture in Armenia. Other stone heads, anonymous but no
doubt of Armenian nobility, display a static pose far removed from the
classical style. Nearly a dozen boundary markers of king Artaxias I (Artashes)
from the early second century B.C. have also been uncovered in various
areas of Armenia, but these are more important for their Aramaic inscriptions
than for their art. The temple of Garni from the first century A.D. offers
an enormous repertory of sculpted lion heads, acanthus friezes and geometric
and floral reliefs associated with the Ionic order of Hellenistic temple
architecture.
In Christian times relief sculpture
on the façades of churches is very abundant. Almost all sixth and
seventh century churches have carved decorative bands, but some like Ptghni,
Mren, Zvart'nots' and Odzun have figural reliefs around windows and in
the tympana of doorways. The capitals of Zvart'nots' , uncovered during
the excavations of this seventh century monument, are especially elaborate,
some carved in a basket style with monograms, while the capitals of the
four supporting pillars have enormous heraldic eagles whose wings are wrapped
around the sides.
Recessed
in a niche to the north of the altar at Odzun is a finely sculpted Virgin
and Child in the Byzantine pose known as the "Guide" (Hodegetria). Christ
is on Mary's left knee with her cloak wrapped around Him. Her right hand
is pointing at Christ. Though this impressive work is attached to the niche,
it is carved nearly in three-quarters round, rare for the early Christian
period where authorities harbored strong feelings against idols.
Relief sculpture, however, was tolerated because it stopped short of recreating
the full human form, so important to classical pagan sculpture, and so
distasteful to Christian clerics.
The most famous series of relief
carvings in Armenian art are those which cover the entire facade of the
tenth century church of the Holy Cross on the island of Aght'amar. The
church with its external carvings and internal frescoes was built as a
palace church between 915 and 921 for king Gagik Artsruni. The unusually
deep carving combined with the monumental character of Christ and other
figures make this collection of sculpture unique in both Armenian and world
art. The sculptures at Aght'amar are of a mixed style, with only slight
interest in classical forms. The art is very Eastern, very Armenian, peopled
with biblical figures in rigid frontal poses. This remarkable façade
combines an Old Testament cycle on the major band with a continuous peopled
vine scroll above and, still higher, the large individual sculptures of
the four Evangelists, one in each of the four roof pediments.
Elaborate sculpted scenes on tympana
above church entrances and on the drums supporting the domes are popular
in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries. The monasteries of Tatev, Geghart,
Hovhannavank', Haghbat, Sanahin, Saghmosavank', Makaravank', Noravank'
at Amaghu, Haghartsin, Kech'aris, Ts'akhats'k'ar , and Spitakavor are among
the most famous. In both quantity and quality, these sculptures represent
a very important chapter in Armenian art, one that deserves more attention.
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There
is also a large body of free-standing stone monuments in the form of either
four-sided stelae or the famous and ubiquitous khach'k'ars. The stelae
are found on the grounds of churches; the most famous group still in part
in situ is at Talin. Some seventy stelae have been recorded. They date
from the fifth to seventh centuries; the medium was abandoned as a sculptural
form after the Arab invasions. These monolithic stones, often two meters
high, are fitted into a carved socle. The tops of some of them are recessed
suggesting they were surmounted by a cross. The motifs most frequently
represented are standing saints. St. Gregory and King Trdat appear often,
Trdat shown metamorphosed with the head of a boar following the story of
his conversion to Christianity as known through the History of Agat'angeghos.
The Virgin is also frequently depicted as is Christ; crosses or decorative
designs are sometimes found on one or more of the four sides. Narrative
scenes from the Old Testament -- Sacrifice of Abraham, Daniel in the lions'
den, the three Hebrews in the fiery furnace -- are more common than those
from the Gospels -- Baptism and the Crucifixion.
The iconography of these
funerary or commemorative stelae is in keeping with early paleo-Christian
models; in style and in the use of certain motifs an Oriental influence is
apparent, both early Mesopotamian and Sasanian. Among the most notable of these
carved blocks are a very small number that are very tall, reminiscent of
obelisks, and mounted on stepped platforms. The most famous are a pair nearly
four meters high and enshrined in protecting arches next to the church of Odzun.
Two or three sides of their faces are carved and separated into ascending
panels; pairs of saints, individual figures, and even a short narrative cycle,
make up the catalogue of representations.
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| Khach'k'ars (Stone Cross) |
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The
most characteristically Armenian medium for sculpture was the khach'k'ar,
from the word for cross (khach') and stone (k'ar). These free standing,
rectangular shaped cross-stones are found everywhere in Armenia; there
are thousands of them in all sizes from forty centimeters to two meters
high and more.Without exception the central motif is a cross, elaborately
and elegantly carved. Smaller khach'k'ars are often found inserted into
the walls of churches, for example Hovhannavank', and placed at church
doorways. Like the stelae of the earlier centuries, which perhaps they
replaced starting in ninth century, they were used both as gravestones
and as commemorative markers.
Khach'k'ars were often inscribed
with a date, the name of the person remembered, and at times the name of
the artist. The earliest examples from the ninth, tenth and eleventh centuries
are usually sober in their design, though often elegant in execution. The
cross is always framed by an elaborately carved band and sometimes surmounted
by an arch. Small carved circles are placed at the corners of the concave
ends of each of the four arms of the cross; in later centuries these circles
are transformed into trilobed foliage.
Leaves sprout upwards from each side
of the base of the cross of a khach'k'ar towards its arms; they are usually
stylized and in the early period in the form of palmettos. This foliage
demonstrates that symbolically the khach'k'ar represented the living cross.
Its wood is not dead, but alive with new leaves. The cross of the Crucifixion
was thought to be made from the Tree of Life, and like the Crucifixion
itself, was not a mark of death, but of rebirth through Christ's Resurrection.
Without the Crucifixion the Resurrection was impossible; the living cross,
the flowering cross, symbolizes the hope of a new life. Because the cross
was the sign of the ultimate Christian message of salvation through the
Crucifixion and Resurrection, in Armenia it became the most powerful religious
image, more prevalent than the Virgin or even Christ Himself.
Thirteenth
and fourteenth century khach'k'ars were highly ornate sculptural monuments
often surrounded by intricate lace-like geometric bands carved on several
levels. Many were of monumental size and some were supported by altar-like
structures. Often they were graced with figural representations. The best
known type of the latter variety was the so-called Amenap'rkich' or Savior
of All with a fully rendered Crucifixion scene in place of the bare cross.
The earliest example of this type, one of the most impressive of all khach'k'ars,
is dated 1273 and is preserved at the monastery of Haghpat. The best known
sculptor of khach'k'ars, Momik, lived at the end of this thirteenth century;
an artist of impressive skill he was also a noted architect and miniaturist.
Regional styles developed in the
carving of these crosses. Artists working in the merchant town of Julfa
on the Arax evolved one of the most characteristic types. Practically nothing
remains of that city destroyed by Shah Abbas in 1604 except its graveyard
with its thousands of khach'k'ars, many still standing after nearly four
centuries of abandon and neglect in the autonomous region of Nakhichevan
now part of Azerbaijan. In the last decade of the sixteenth century
Julfan sculptors produced an immense variety of stone crosses, extremely
precisely and regularly carved, almost machine made in appearance. The
type was graced with a decorative band, often of delicate eight-pointed
stars, around a complex cross recessed under an ogival niche. Below
the cross was an intricately carved rosette and underneath that, the deceased
was shown mounted next to an identifying inscription. In a horizontal band
at the top, Christ was seated in judgment flanked by angels. Another form
of burial stone was a ram carved in the round, popular in Julfa in the
sixteenth century; such ram-stones are also known in Iran and Azerbaijan.
Several of these late sixteenth century khach'k'ars are now preserved in
the precincts of Holy Etchmiadzin. A more robust style is used on khach'k'ars
from the largest extent group in Armenia proper in the cemetery of Noraduz
on the northeastern side of Lake Sevan.
The
carving of khach'k'ars has continued into our times, even though they have
been gradually transformed into the modern forms of gravestones we see
in cemeteries of western countries. The consistence with which these cross
monuments were employed is unique to Armenia; the only comparable tradition
is the much less developed and short lived one of medieval Ireland.
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| Their practical significance |
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The khach'k'ars were erected on different
occasions to commemorate military victories, immortalize historically important
events, and to commemorate the completion of churches fountains, bridges
and other constructions. It is possible to date the khatchkar with the help of
the inscriptions of the donors, the "varpet" (masters), and reasons for their
erection. For instance, in order to remember the liberation of Amberd from the
Turks, Zakare built a khatchkar on the spot. For the same reason, the minor
clerk Peter placed a second khatchkar along the road leading to the village Kosh
near Ashtarak. In 1119, to the memory of the dead king Abas, his wife Vaneni
built the bridge of Sanahin and a khatchkar with a long inscription. Near
Yegheknadzor in 1282 the "varpet" Schnorhavor built a khatchkar to celebrate the
construction of the village Martiros. Others were built to commemorate the works
for a restored or new church. To remember the name of the donor and with a
votive aim, some khatchkars were embedded, sculpted, and at last freely placed
on the walls of the churches.
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There
is a relative paucity of wooden and ivory sculpture perhaps because these
materials were precious commodities in Armenia in historical times; furthermore,
stone, especially the easily carved tufa, was very plentiful. The most
important piece of ivory carving preserved in Armenia is the binding, with
upper and lower plaques, each in five fitted sections, of the Etchmiadzin
Gospels. These were probably carved in the sixth century in a Byzantine
workshop and later imported into Armenia. The upper cover shows shows the
Virgin with Christ with scenes from her life, including the Presentation
of the Magi at the bottom. The lower cover has a beardless Christ in the
central panel with scenes from His life. There are also a number of finely
carved ivory bishop's crosiers often with twin dragon heads.
Wood was a much more fragile medium
than stone or metal and much of what must have been produced has been burned
or otherwise destroyed. We know, however, that wood carving was as favored
a craft in ancient times as it is today in modern Armenia.
What remains of sculpted or carved
wood from medieval Armenia are church doors, capitals used on the columns
of a ninth century church, an important carved plaque of the Crucifixion,
and a few miscellaneous items including lecterns. The most important carved
wooden doors are dated by inscriptions: 1) 1134, double paneled door, Monastery
of the Holy Apostles, Mush, now
in Erevan, Armenian Historical Museum; 2) 1176, single panel door, Monastery
of the Holy Apostles, Sevan, Erevan, Armenian Historical Museum; 3) 1253,
single panel door, Monastery of Tat'ev; 4) 1327, double paneled door, Church
of the Nativity, Jerusalem; 5) 1355/6, double paneled door, entrance to
Chapel of St. Paul, Armenian Patriarchate, Jerusalem; 6) 1371, double-paneled
door, from Armenian church in Crimea, now in the Hermitage, Leningrad;
7) 1486, single panel door, Church of the Holy Apostles, Sevan, now in
Erevan, Armenian Historical Museum. The borders or frames of all of these
are covered with geometric bands or vine scrolls. Those of Mush show mounted
warriors at the top either fighting or hunting exotic animals; on the sides
there are rows of animals, too. The fields of the doors are varied: The
Mush door has an all over geometric design of radiating eight-pointed stars;
the Jerusalem door of 1355/6 and that from the Crimea of 1371 have equal-armed
crosses alternating with eight-pointed stars similar to the arrangement
of Kashan tiles; those in Bethlehem, Sevan (the one of 1176), and Tat'ev
have large crosses carved on them imitating contemporary khach'k'ar designs.
The Sevan door of 1486 is in a very separate category. A monumental and
magnificently carved scene of Pentecost covers the greater part of it;
below there is a large rosette similar to those found on contemporary khach'k'ars
and on the upper panel, Christ in Glory. The iconography of this panel
is perfectly Armenian; its model was no doubt a manuscript miniature.
The oldest examples of sculpted wood
are the carved capitals from the Holy Apostles Monastery on the island
of Sevan; they may be contemporary with the building of the church in 874
or slightly later. They are richly and deeply carved with floral scrolls,
birds, six pointed stars, and crosses. Several folding wooden lecterns,
undoubtedly from churches, are preserved in the Armenian Historical Museum.
They date from the eleventh to the thirteenth century and are elaborately
carved with geometric designs, birds, and in one case a lion rampant.
The
single non-functional wooden sculpture that has survived from the early
period is the wooden panel offered by Gregory Magistros in 1031 to the
church of Havuts' T'ar. The panel, now in the Treasury at Etchmiadzin,
shows Christ being removed from the cross by Nicodemus and Joseph of Armathea.
The simple but delicate carving and the unusually expressive quality of
Christ being removed from the cross help to create one of the masterpieces
of Armenian sculpture. The iconography is unique in Christian art, because
it incorporates the elements of the Trinity: the hand of God, the dove
of the Holy Spirit, and Christ. The panel, regarded by some as a wooden
icon, was much admired in the thirteenth century and may have had an influence
on khach'k'ars of the period.
The craft of wood craving continues
to flourish in Armenia. In villages utilitarian items for the household,
especially kitchen utensils, are still delicately fashioned. The Folk Arts
Museum in Erevan has an impressive collection of nineteenth and twentieth
century wood carving. Hand carved gifts of very high quality are also readily
available in shops in Erevan.
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