Ijevan Branch of Yerevan State University

“THE MOST WONDERFUL CREATION OF NATURE IS A HUMAN BEING, HUMAN BEING IS NATURE”… MARTIROS SARYAN

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YSU Ijevan Branch is pleased to introduce interesting facts about famous Armenian painter Martiros Saryan.

Martiros Saryan, in full Martiros [Sergeyevich] Saryan, Saryan also spelled Sarian, (born February 16, 1880, Novy Nakhichevan, near Rostov-na-Donu, Russia—died May 5, 1972, Yerevan, Armenia.

He is a major Armenian painter of landscapes, still lifes, and portraits.

Saryan received training in painting at the Moscow School of Painting, Sculpture, and Architecture (1897–1903) and then worked in the studios of the noted painters Konstantin Korovin and Valentin Serov. Soon Saryan became a member of a group of Moscow Symbolist artists, and he began exhibiting his brightly coloured paintings. He continued to paint during his travels to Constantinople (1910; now Istanbul), Egypt (1912), southwestern Armenia(1913), and Persia (1914; Iran); these trips inspired a series of large, frescolike works in which he attempted to communicate the sensuousness of the Middle Eastern landscapes. He also incorporated into a number of his paintings the Persian motifs he had seen in the Middle East. Like many Russian artists of the early decades of the 20th century, Saryan was greatly influenced by Impressionism. He was also interested in the paintings of the French artists Henri Matisse and Paul Gauguin, as can be seen in his use of areas of flat, simplified colour.

In 1921 Saryan moved to Yerevan, where he organized and became director of the museum of archaeology, ethnography, and fine arts now called the National Gallery of Armenia. He thereafter spent most of his career painting scenes, especially landscapes, of his adopted homeland, often employing the Impressionist technique of using vivid, dappled colour to capture the effects of light. He also painted many floral still lifes as well as portraits.

In addition to painting, Saryan illustrated books, including Armenian Folk Tales (1933), and he designed sets and costumes for the theatre. He served as a deputy to the second, third, and fourth convocations of the U.S.S.R.’s Supreme Soviet (the country’s highest legislative body). Among his awards were three orders of Lenin.

Here are famous quotes by Martiros Saryan:

“Life is an island. People come out of the sea, cross the island, and return to the sea. But this short life is long and beautiful. In getting to know nature man exalts the wonder and beauty of life”.

“Nature’s ways are wonderful and unfathomable. The grain swells in the soil, the sprout grows and flowers when the time comes and then it bears new fruit and so does not die. We are like grain. We never die because we are One with Nature. To understand this is to comprehend Immortality–the Apotheosis of the Human Race. It is with this conviction that I have lived my Life. My Life is a store of my experience, a Life of aspirations, sorrows, joys and triumphs”.

 

“The land is similar to a human being, it has its own soul, one would hardly find his own self, his own soul, without his homeland, without being in close touch with his native land”.