This book presents Armenian ornamental art with all its diversity. Meticulous drawings of the patterns and images done by Armen Kyurkchyan are accompanied by original photographs by Hrair Hawk Khatcherian. The book also has a CD where the reader can find all the samples included in the book.
The independent Armenian publisher Craftology has announced the American release of the twin titles Armenian Ornamental Art and Armenian Ornamental Script—the result of a landmark collaboration of artist-designer Armen Kyurkchyan and photographer Hrair Hawk Khatcherian, who spent more than a decade excavating and capturing the Armenian patterns, symbols, and scripts that have survived centuries and civilizations to take their place in the world cultural treasury.
For the first volume, Armenian Ornamental Art, the collaborators journeyed across the eastern and western homelands, crossing rivers and borders to visit every church, cemetery, and monument where an Armenian craftsman might have taken chisel to stone. They uncovered thousands of miniature masterpieces: rosettes, birds, human figures, angels, crosses. Now, for the first time, these masterpieces have been captured both as photographs (taken by Khatcherian) and as meticulous drawings (rendered by Kyurkchyan), which are presented side-by-side in print as they are on a CD accompanying the glossy, full-color volume.
“Our intent was not merely to collect and present our national treasures for admiration on coffee tables and in classrooms,” Kyurkchyan said, “but also to offer our country’s native designs—true masterworks of medieval art—to practicing designers, architects, and artists who might incorporate them in their own creations, giving them new life in the 21st century.”
The second volume, Armenian Ornamental Script, sent the collaborators on a journey of another kind—an excursion to the libraries, repositories, and archives of the world, where ornamented Armenian manuscripts have been scattered through time. In their pages the authors found the original 36 Armenian letters, but not in their standard geometric forms. The Armenian masters have transformed our letters from mere symbolic units into unique masterpieces of ornamental art. Now we, too, can see them—letters that blossom into flowers or take flight into birds or find higher life, with a sudden burst of imagination, in human forms.
“The Armenian illuminated manuscripts are especially dear to me,” Kyurkchyan said, “decorated as they were not only by skilled professionals, but also by monks—sometimes even by their young students. These illustrations are my favorite. They are so simple, so charming, even naïve. It is almost heartbreaking to consider their innocence and sincerity.”
Both volumes are now available on Amazon and at select bookstores across the world.