Arman Manookian Armenian-American, 1904-1931

Biography
Often referred to as "Hawaii’s van Gogh", Arman Manookian’s short life was filled with hardship and tragedy before his death by suicide in 1931 at the age of 27. Born in Turkey in 1904, he was a survivor of the Armenian Genocide, and he immigrated to the United States in 1920 at the age of 16. He studied illustration at the Rhode Island School of Design and took classes at the Art Students League in New York City, before enlisting in the U.S. Marine Corps in 1923. As a Marine, he was clerk to Major Edwin North McClellan, a writer and historian who soon had the young artist doing illustrations for his own historical publications and for Leatherneck: Magazine for the Marines. When McClellan was sent to Pearl Harbor in 1925, Manookian accompanied him.
 
In 1927, Manookian was discharged from service, but he stayed on in Honolulu and came into his own as an artist, creating flamboyant fantasies of ancient Hawai‘i that enlivened public spaces and private homes alike.
 
A contemporary of Arshile Gorky — another Armenian-American artist and a profound influence on the New York School — Manookian, too, developed a singular mode of abstraction rooted in French fin-de-siècle painting and theory, particularly that of the Symbolist Paul Gauguin. Echoing Gauguin’s directive to “derive…abstraction from nature while dreaming before it,” Manookian described his own compositions as “certain arrangements of forms and colors quite independent of objective nature [and] capable of producing a sensation much more pleasing, satisfying, lasting and profound than any representative painting will ever achieve.” Indeed, like Gauguin in Tahiti, Manookian’s theory of abstraction freed him to re-imagine Hawaii, and to picture it as a dazzling earthly paradise far removed from the corruption and sorrows of contemporary society.​
Original Works
Exhibitions
  • Art Deco Hawaiʻi

    Art Deco Hawaiʻi

    3 Jul 2014 - 11 Jan 2015
    Honolulu Academy of Arts
    The Honolulu Museum of Art presents Art Deco Hawai‘i , the first major museum exhibition to focus on the seductive Hawaiian take on the international Art Deco style, which flourished in the islands from the 1920s to the 1940s. At once contemporary, classicizing, eclectic, and adaptable, Art Deco manifested itself...
    View more details
Publications
Inquire

Learn more about Arman Manookian

Please fill in the fields marked with an asterisk
Sign up for mailings *

* denotes required fields

Custom privacy policy form message