WASHINGTON, DC — An Armenian rug woven by orphans in the 1920s was formally presented to the White House in 1925. A photograph shows President Calvin Coolidge standing on the carpet, which is no mere juvenile effort, but a complicated, richly detailed work that would hold its own even in the largest and most ceremonial rooms, The Washington Post writes.
The article says the plants and animals depicted on the rug may represent the Garden of Eden, which is about as far removed as possible from the rugâs origins in the horrific events of 1915, when the fracturing and senescent Ottoman Empire began a murderous campaign against its Armenian population.
In the article Philip Kennicott states that: âThere was hope that the carpet, which has been in storage for almost 20 years, might be displayed Dec. 16 as part of a Smithsonian event that would include a book launch for Hagop Martin Deranianâs âPresident Calvin Coolidge and the Armenian Orphan Rug.â But on Sept. 12, the Smithsonian scholar who helped organize the event canceled it, citing the White Houseâs decision not to loan the carpet. In a letter to two Armenian American organizations, Paul Michael Taylor, director of the institutionâs Asian cultural history program, had no explanation for the White Houseâs refusal to allow the rug to be seen and said that efforts by the U.S. ambassador to Armenia, John A. Heffern, to intervene had also been unavailing”.
The Washington Post article
âPresident Calvin Coolidge and the Armenian Orphan Rugâ
The Washington Post: Armenian "Orphan Rug" is in White House Storage, as Unseen as Genocide is Neglected
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