Marousia Vahramian (; 15 March 1919 â 1 July 2012) was an IranianâÂÂArmenian impressionist painter, silver engraver, musician and theatre director based mainly in Tabriz, Iran. She has been described as one of the early professional Iranian women impressionist painters and among the first Iranian female silver engravers.
Born Marousia Arakelian in an upper middle class family in Armavir, Russia, in 1919, Vahramian moved to Iran as a child when her father Gevork Arakelian resettled the family in Tabriz and became a coâÂÂowner of an early flour factory in the city. Her parents encouraged the education of their three daughters; she attended an Armenian school and later the Russian Gymnasium in Tabriz, studying piano and foreign languages privately. She became fluent in Armenian, Persian, Turkish, Russian, French and English.
In her late teens she studied painting under (and later married) artist Grigor Vahramian Gasparbeg, who had relocated from Moscow to Tabriz. She practised classical drawing techniques in his studio, producing early blackâÂÂchalk heads (Zeus, Apollo, Socrates) and selfâÂÂportraits prior to her mature oil work. Her first exhibitions were held in Tabriz and later in Abadan and Tehran (dates variably reported).
Vahramian worked for the Ministry of Education and, with her husband, was invited to teach at the newly founded Mirak School of Fine Art in Tabriz, where she taught painting to female students for over 25 years. She also gave private piano lessons and later served as a guide and translator at the Tabriz Museum. Her theatre involvement began in 1938âÂÂ1939 (1317âÂÂ1318 SH) with Shushanik Khan AramianâÂÂs literary and artistic group, performing in plays such as Khatabala and The Destroyed House by Gabriel Sundukian, and later in Levon Shant's The Queen of the Fallen Castle. She eventually directed and designed productions, leading a tenâÂÂmember troupe and staging works including The Foreign SonâÂÂinâÂÂLaw, For the Sake of Honor, Khatabala, The Destroyed House, and Another Victim between the 1980s and 2000s.
Vahramian produced floral still lifes (roses and Persian lilacs from her garden), urban and domestic landscapes of Tabriz, and natural scenery from Urmia and Maragheh. Her drawings reflect exposure to GrecoâÂÂRoman classical forms, while her engraved silver pieces combine figurative and decorative filigree motifs (examples dated 1945, signed "M. Arakelian" / "Studio Vahramian").
In addition to painting and theatre, Vahramian studied engraving and filigree at a time when the craft in Iran was maleâÂÂdominated. Surviving signed silver plaques (e.g. an interpretation of the Brothers Grimm's "Golden Bird" and military portrait miniatures) illustrate her adaptation of narrative and mythological subject matter into metalwork.
A 30âÂÂminute documentary titled Maroosya (dir. Navid Mikhak) portrays her preparing to stage a final theatrical piece titled Komitas. The film was screened at the Arpa International Film Festival (Hollywood), the Kazan Festival (Russia), the International Apricot Festival (Armenia), and IranâÂÂs Cinema Vérité International Documentary Festival.
Her sixâÂÂdecade career was highlighted in the 2005 Raffi Calendar, which reproduced twelve oil paintings and a short biographical note labelled "Iranian Painter Mrs Marousia Vahramian". Vahramian has been noted within IranianâÂÂArmenian cultural histories for integrating visual arts, music and theatre in regional artistic life.
Marousia Vahramian was a versatile and prolific artist. Her painting Our Balcony depicts the balcony designed by her husband Grigor Vahramian Gasparbeg supported by Corinthian columns adorned by climbing plants at the base of the columns and a fusion of white roses on the left. This was painted in 2006 when she was 85 years old.
Marousia's passion for art never left her and she continued painting until her death. Not being dictated by patrons or by financial rewards, gave her the freedom to immerse herself in her art. The artist's keen eye for beauty and the appreciation for nature that so captivated her soul all her life is especially evident in her still lifes where she brings up the beauty of the flowers-notably lilacs, roses and chrysanthemums.
Marousia has left a rich legacy of artwork that includes engravings, drawings, intricate filigrees and paintings. These works span over seven decades.
Vahramian died on 1 July 2012 in Tabriz at the age of 93.