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The National Gallery of Armenia is the largest fine arts museum in Armenia and home to the most comprehensive collection of Armenian art in the world.
Founded in 1921, the Gallery preserves more than 42,000 works of Armenian and international fine art and decorative-applied arts. Its collections include masterpieces by world-renowned artists such as Hovhannes Aivazovsky, Vardges Sureniants, Arshile Gorky, Marc Chagall, Wassily Kandinsky, Donatello, Tintoretto, and many others. The Gallery also preservs unique fragments of medieval Armenian church frescoes from Armenia and Armenian cultural centers abroad, including Aruch, Lmbatavank, Tatev, Haghpat, Ani, Talin, Akhtala, Kobayr, Meghri, and Crimea. In addition, it houses an exceptional archive of approximately 200,000 items, including photographs, notebooks, letters, articles, personal belongings, and documentary materials related to prominent Armenian and international artists and significant cultural events.
Today, the National Gallery of Armenia is the only museum in the region distinguished by the breadth and scale of its collection of world fine art. It serves as a key center for national cultural memory, creative thought, and artistic values, contributing to the international recognition of Armenian art and fostering intercultural dialogue while strengthening Armenia’s place on the global cultural map.
The National Gallery of Armenia is housed on eight floors of a building recognized as a monument of national significance and operates 14 branches in Yerevan and across the regions of Armenia.
Drawing upon international best practices and adapting its activities to the standards of the contemporary museum, the Gallery continues the mission initiated more than a century ago: preserving, studying, and transmitting Armenia’s spiritual and cultural heritage to future generations.
The collections of the National Gallery of Armenia represent an immense intellectual, emotional, and cultural resource, offering both Armenian and international visitors the opportunity to discover and engage with the treasures of Armenian and world art.
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