Sirarpie Der Nersessian

Sirarpie Der Nersessian
Born September 5, 1896
Constantinople, Ottoman Empire
Died July 5, 1989 (aged 92)
Paris, France
Fields Armenian studies, Byzantine studies
Institutions Dumbarton Oaks, Wellesley College, Harvard University
Alma mater Sorbonne University
Doctoral advisor Gabriel Millet
Influences André Grabar, Charles Diehl, Henri Focillon, Gabriel Millet
Notable awards Order of Saint Gregory the Illuminator (1960, First Class)
Anania Shirakatsi Award (1981, Armenian Academy of Sciences)

Sirarpie Der Nersessian (September 5, 1896  July 5, 1989) was an art historian of Armenian origin, who specialized in Armenian and Byzantine studies. Der Nersessian was a renowned academic and a pioneer in Armenian art history. She taught at several institutions in the United States, including Wellesley College in Massachusetts and as Henri Focillon Professor of Art and Archaeology at Harvard University.[1][2] She was a senior fellow at Dumbarton Oaks, its deputy director from 1954–55 and 1961–62 and a member of its Board of Scholars. Der Nersessian was also a member of several international institutions such as the British Academy (1975), the Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres (1978) and the Armenian Academy of Sciences (1966).[2]

Biography

Education

Der Nersessian was born the youngest of three children in Constantinople in 1896. She came from a well-to-do family and her maternal uncle happened to be the Armenian Patriarch of Constantinople, Malachia Ormanian.[2] Her parents died while she was still young: her mother Akabi, when she was nine, and her father Mihran, when she was eighteen.[3] She graduated from Yesayan Parochial School and the English High School in Constantinople, gaining fluency in Armenian, English and French at an early age. In 1915, during the height of the Armenian Genocide, Der Nersessian and her sister Arax (by then orphans) were forced to leave for Europe, where they took up residence in Geneva. Der Nersessian studied at the University of Geneva for several years until settling in Paris, France in 1919.[4]

Der Nersessian was admitted to Sorbonne University, studying history at the École des Hautes Études de l'université de Paris. She studied under the notable Byzantinologists Charles Diehl and Gabriel Millet and art historian Henri Focillon.[4] In 1922, she became Millet's assistant, and with his help, published one of her first articles in 1929.[2] The two theses (graduates students then had to submit two theses) that she presented for her doctorat d'etat, "L'illustration du roman de Barlaam et Joasaph" and a paper on Armenian illuminated manuscripts during the late medieval period,[3] were well-received (earning a Mention très honorable), and both of them were awarded with prizes by the Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres and Revue des Études Grecques when they were published in 1937.

Professor and pioneer

In 1930, Der Nersessian moved to the United States at the suggestion of her three mentors, Byzantinists Charles Rufus Morey, Albert M. Friend Jr., and Walter Cook, becoming a part-time lecturer at Wellesley College in Massachusetts. She taught art history at Wellesley, quickly gaining a full professorship and later becoming the chairwoman of the Department of Art History and Director of Farnsworth Museum.[4] Der Nersessian was the first woman to teach Byzantine art at a woman’s college, the first woman to be decorated with the medal of Saint Gregory the Illuminator by His Holiness Catholicos Vazgen I in 1960, the first woman invited to lecture at the Collège de France in Paris, the only woman in her time to gain full professorship at Dumbarton Oaks, and the second woman to be honored with a gold medal from the Society of Antiquaries of London in 1970.[5] In 1947, she received the Achievement Award from the American Association of University Women.

Der Nersessian remained at Dumbarton Oaks until 1978, when she retired to France and lived with her sister in Paris.[2] Upon retirement, she had her entire library shipped to the Matenadaran in Yerevan, so as to better help Armenian scholars in their studies. Shortly after her death in 1989, an endowment fund for prospective art history students in Armenia, Fonds Sirarpie Der Neressian at the Institut de Recherches sur les Miniatures Arméno-Byzantines, was created in her honor.[3]

Bibliography

Der Nersessian's work primarily concerned Armenian art history, including the study of church architecture, illuminated manuscripts, miniatures and sculpture. Below is a partial list of books and articles that she authored.[6] Her 1945 book, Armenia and the Byzantine Empire, was praised by art historians David Talbot Rice,[7] Jurgis Baltrušaitis,[8] and Alexander Vasiliev.[9] Vasiliev wrote in his review of the book that she is "the best authority of our day on Armenian history, art, and civilization."[9]

Books

Articles

Notes

  1. Kouymjian, Dickran (2005). "Sirarpie Der Nersessian (1896-1989): Pioneer of Armenian Art History". In Jane Chance. Medievalists and the Academy. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press. p. 483. ISBN 0-299-20750-1.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 Allen, Jelisaveta, Nina G. Garsoïan, Ihor Ševčenko, Robert W. Thomson (1989). "Sirarpie Der Nersessian: 1896-1989". Dumbarton Oaks Papers 43: ix-xi.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 . Dictionary of Art Historians http://www.dictionaryofarthistorians.org/dernersessians.htm. Missing or empty |title= (help); |chapter= ignored (help)
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 Chookaszian, Levon (1985). "Տեր-Ներսեսյան, Սիրարփի Միհրան [Ter Nersesyan, Sirarpi Mihrani]". Armenian Soviet Encyclopedia (in Armenian) 11. Yerevan: Armenian Encyclopedia. p. 683.
  5. Kouymjian. "Sirarpie Der Nersessian", pp. 482-493.
  6. For a more comprehensive list, see: Dumbarton Oaks Papers. "Sirarpie Der Nersessian." Dumbarton Oaks. Vol. 21, 1967, pp. 1-5.
  7. "Armenia and the Byzantine Empire by Sirapie der Nercessian Review by: David Talbot Rice". The English Historical Review (Oxford University Press) 61 (240): 271–272. May 1946. Miss Nercessian's factual treatment is again welcome in a field where narrow partisanship has often tended to obscure the issues. Her book is likely to prove useful to all students of near eastern history, as well as to archaeologists and art historians.
  8. "Armenia and the Byzantine Empire. A Brief Study in Armenian Art and Civilization by Sirarpie der Nersessian; Henri Grégoire Review by: Jurgis Baltrušaitis". The Art Bulletin (College Art Association) 28 (2): 124–125. June 1946. In bringing together elements of such diversity, and in placing them clearly in their true relations, Sirarpie Der Nersessian has accomplished a tour de force. If I have allowed myself to add a few comments, it is not by way of correction or criticism, but only as reflections suggested by a richly significant perusal, and one that has taught us much.
  9. 9.0 9.1 Armenia and the Byzantine Empire. A Brief Study of Armenian Art and Civilization by Sirapie Der Nersessian Review by: A. Vasiliev. Speculum 20 (4) (Medieval Academy of America). October 1945. pp. 491–494. …its subject is very little known, and is here dealt with by the best authority of our day on Armenian history, art, and civilization… …I can say from the point of view of Byzantine studies that I consider Miss Der Nersessian's book the best study which has yet appeared in which, in a concise and most reliable form, the reader for the first time has a picture of political, religious, cultural, and artistic interrelations between Armenia and the Byzantine Empire.