Christina Maranci

WATERTOWN — The Armenian Museum of America will host a series of programs the weekend of September 23-24, highlighted by an artist panel discussing Ara Oshagan’s “Disrupted, Borders” exhibition currently[...]

WASHINGTON — Professor Christina Maranci, Harvard University Mashtots Professor of Armenian Studies, presented an engaging illustrated lecture titled “Armenia and the World in Art and Culture” on March 23. This[...]

WATERTOWN — Professor Christina Maranci was appointed to the Mashtots Chair in Armenian Studies at Harvard last summer, and the National Association for Armenian Studies and Research (NAASR), which helped[...]

BELMONT, Mass. — On Saturday, January 21, the National Association for Armenian Studies and Research (NAASR) hosted a virtual panel discussion to analyze why the current blockade of Artsakh has[...]

MEDFORD, Mass. – The Aidekman Arts Center of the Tufts University Art Galleries presents an exhibition of Armenian church textiles from August 5 to December 5 called Connecting Threads /[...]

WASHINGTON – On June 24 a presentation titled “Ancient Faith: The Churches of Nagorno Karabakh” was held at the Museum of the Bible celebrating the launch of a new online[...]

SOMERVILLE, Mass. – It may have taken as much as one thousand years, but images deliberately obscured and faded are now coming to light in the famous cathedral of Ani.[...]

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — Dr. Christina Maranci’s 2015 book Vigilant Powers: Three Churches of Early Medieval Armenia (Brepols) became the first recipient of the Karen Gould Prize of the Medieval Academy[...]