Rafayel "Rafo" Israyelian[1][2][3] (Armenian: Ռաֆայել Իսրայելյան; 17 September [O.S. 4 September] 1908 – 8 September 1973) was a Soviet Armenian architect.
Israyelian was born in Tiflis (modern-day Tbilisi, capital of Georgia), then part of the Russian Empire, on 17 September [O.S. 4 September] 1908 to Armenian parents. His father, Sargis, was a philologist and folklorist born in Shusha (Shushi), Karabakh, while his mother, Mariam (née Hakhnazarian) was a teacher, originally from Nakhichevan.[5]
He attended an Armenian school in Tiflis and continued his education at the State Academy of Arts of Georgia, from which he graduated in 1928 as an architect. He later moved to Leningrad, where he studied at the Leningrad Institute of Communal Building from 1929 to 1932. He thereafter continued his education at the Ilya Repin Leningrad Institute for Painting, Sculpture and Architecture (formerly the Imperial Academy of Arts) until 1936.[5][7]
Israyelian moved to Yerevan, Soviet Armenia in 1936[8] and worked at different state-run architectural organizations. He taught at the Yerevan Polytechnic Institute from 1941 to 1963.[6] In 1936–41, Israyelian worked at the Haypetnakhagits (Armenian State Project) Institute for urban planning. He completed a number of projects there, including the retirement home in Nor Kharberd and the dormitory of the Metallurgical Technical College in Yerevan.[9] Israyelian then worked at the Yerevan Polytechnic Institute first as a lab technician, then as an assistant, and after 1947, as an associate professor.[9]
From 1942, Israyelian started working in the Committee for the Protection of Monuments of Armenia, whose chairman was academician Hovsep Orbeli. Because of the war, there were no funds for the restoration of the monuments, thus the committee engaged in research instead.[9] During these years Israyelian toured the entire territory of Armenia on foot. At that time, he thoroughly studied the khachkars, drew sketches authored a large volume of research. His research on khachkars was published posthumously in the Etchmiadzin magazine in 1977. It was the first thorough study of khachkars.[9] During World War II, Israyelian also served in an anti-aircraft defense unit based in Yerevan.[2]
In 1947, at the conference of young architects held in Moscow, Israyelian's works won the first prize. At that time, he was already working on the Victory Monument the construction of which was completed in 1950.[9] In 1952, after defending a thesis at the Leningrad Academy of Fine Arts, the topic of which was "My architectural works", he received the scientific degree of candidate of architecture. Israyelian was also designing a number of residential houses at the time. In addition to architectural works, he made sketches for applied art, some of which were accepted for wide production.[9] He closely worked with the Armenian Apostolic Church, under Catholicos Vazgen I and was part of the architectural committee of the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin from 1956 to 1972.[6]
Israyelian died on September 8, 1973, aged 65, at his Yerevan home, after a long illness.[8][1]
Family
Israyelian married Sofia Muradyan in 1934. They had two sons and three daughters.[5] His first son, Vahagn (b. 1937), is a geologist and second son, Areg (1939–2001), was an architect, who completed some of his father's unfinished works.
He extensively studied khachkars and his studies were published in Etchmiadzin magazine posthumously in 1977.[2][14]
Memorials
Israyelian created two memorials dedicated to the victims of the Armenian genocide, when its 50th anniversary was commemorated in 1965. The better known monument is located at Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin and was inaugurated on April 24, 1965. It features several crosses inspired by traditional khachkars and a sword and shield, symbolizing Armenian self-defense efforts during the genocide.[15] The second memorial is located Yerevan's Erebuni District. The latter was sculpted by Ara Harutyunyan.[16][6]
In 1967 a memorial designed by Israyelian was erected in the Armenian-populated village of Banants (Bayan) in Azerbaijan dedicated to the villagers killed in World War II.[17] The memorial was demolished around 1990 during the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.[10]
Genocide memorial in Yerevan (1965)
Genocide memorial in Ejmiatsin (1965)
Sardarapat Memorial (1968)
Nor Hachn Memorial (1974)
Musa Dagh (Musa Ler) Memorial (1976)
Bash-Aparan Memorial (1979)
Religious
Israyelian designed two altars for Etchmiadzin Cathedral, Armenia's mother church: the Main Altar (1958) and the Altar of Descent (1962).[19][17][8]
Israyelian designed several Armenian churches both in Armenia and abroad. In Yerevan he designed reconstructions of two churches: St. Sargis and Saint John the Baptist. Both were completed after Israyelian's death. St. Sargis, which was entirely reconstructed, was completed in 1976.[17] Architect Artsrun Galikyan further contributed to the design after Israyelian's death.[21] The reconstruction of Saint John the Baptist church, designed by Israyelian, was completed in the 1980s. The reconstruction works were further developed by Baghdasar Arzoumanian and engineer Avetik Teknejian.[22]
St. Vartan is the first Armenian cathedral built in the US.[28] It is based on classical Armenian church architecture,[29] namely Saint Hripsime Church in Ejmiatsin.[30] According to some sources, it was designed by Walker O. Cain,[31] however, the Armenian church publication indicates Israyelian as its architect.[32]Varazdat Harutyunyan noted that Israyelian's design was only modified slightly.[6] According to the website dedicated to Israyelian, it was designed by Israyelian, but because he could not travel to the US, its construction was supervised by Édouard Utudjian.[33]
Israyelian designed two structures at Victory Park in Yerevan. The first is the pedestal for the statue of Stalin (removed in 1962), which has served as a museum of "Great Patriotic War" (World War II). It was completed in 1950. It is now also the pedestal of the monument Mother Armenia (erected in 1967).[17] The second is the main entrance to the same park, completed a decade after his death, in 1982.[17]
Israyelian designed several popular monuments near prominent landmarks of Armenia. In 1957 "Eagle of Zvartnots", created with Yervand Kochar, near the seventh century Zvartnots Cathedral.[7][34] In the same year, on a small hill on the road to the temple of Garni, a monument known as Charents Arch was erected. It offers a panoramic view of Mount Ararat. It is often referred to as the "Arch of Ararat". Lines from a Yeghishe Charents poem glorifying the mountain are inscribed into the monument.[7] The "Lion of Geghard" was erected near the monastery of Geghard in 1958.[7] It was sculpted by Ara Harutyunyan.[7] The monument is inspired by the coat of arms of the Proshian noble family found inside Geghard.[10]
In 1960 a monument conventionally known as the "Western Entrance of Yerevan" was erected in the outskirts of Yerevan, facing those entering the capital from the west (i.e. from the direction of Vagharshapat/Ejmiatsin).[17]
He also designed some of the buildings of the Kanaker Aluminium Plant (KanAZ) in 1948–50, a campus of the Yerevan Physics Institute on the slopes of Mount Aragats (1960), a large hotel (pansionat) in Sochi, Russia (1977), several residential buildings in Yerevan and other structures.[17]
In mid-2000s Israyelian's son Vahagn proposed to turn the second floor of Israyelian's house at 9 Saryan St. in Yerevan into a house-museum.[40] The house, designed and built by himself, was demolished in October 2011 to make way for a hotel.[41] The Municipality of Yerevan stated that Israyelian's son, Vahagn, had sold the house earlier and gave formal permission to demolish it.[42]
^Architecture + Design, 1988, vol. 5, p. 25 "Rafael Israelyan. He has developed links with the Armenian tradition by drawing upon its origins which are close to ancient Assyrian forms"
^"About Us". chiesaarmena.org. Chiesa Apostolica Armena d'Italia. 2013. Archived from the original on 18 April 2019. Now the only functioning church in Milan is the Church of S. Forty Martyrs, built in 1957 (architects R.Iisraelian, P. Suryan), the church was consecrated in 1958.
^Harutyunyan, Varazdat (1995). "Ծառայություն գահակալներին". Etchmiadzin (in Armenian). 52 (2–3): 131. էլ ավելի ընդարձակելով աշխարհագրական սահմանները, հայրենիքի փորձառու ճարտարապետների միջոցով էսքիզային նախագծեր տրամադրվեցին Նյու֊Յորքի Սուրբ Վարդան (հեղինակ Ռաֆայել Իսրայելյան), Վիեննայի (հեղինակ էդվարդ Սարապյան), Միլանի (հեղինակ Ռաֆայել Իսրայելյան) և Մոնտեվիդեոյի (հեղինակներ Ռաֆայել Իսրայելյան և Վարազդատ Հարությունյան) եկեղեցիների կառուցման համար:
^"May 5 Concert To Honor 50 Years of St. Vartan Cathedral". armenianchurch.us. Eastern Diocese of the Armenian Church of America. 1 April 2018. Even while it was under construction, he could see that St. Vartan Cathedral was modeled "along the lines of the 7th-century St. Hripsime Church in Armenia...
^"Սամվել Սաֆարյան վաստակավոր ճարտարապետ [Samvel Safaryan]". archmuseum.am (in Armenian). National Museum-Institute of Architecture of Armenia. ...Կառավարական 2-րդ շենքը Երևանի Հանրապետության հրապարակում (համահեղինակներ՝ Ռ.Իսրաելյան, Վ.Արևշատյան)...
^Gevorgian, A. O. (1979). "Yerevan". The Great Soviet Encyclopedia. The main architectural ensemble of the city is Lenin Square, at which several streets converge. On the square are a monument to V. I. Lenin (cast bronze, 1940, sculptor S. D. Merkurov), the Government House of the Armenian SSR (1926-41, A. I. and G. A. Tamanian), the second Government House (1955, S. A. Safarian, V. A. Arevshatian, and R. S. Israelian), the Armenian Historical Museum (1975), the Hotel Armenia (1958), and the building of the Communications Ministry and the Trade Union Council (1956-58); the last three were designed by M. V. Grigorian and E. A. Sarapian.view article online