Mikhail Vartanov (Russian: Михаил Вартанов, Armenian: Միքայել Վարդանով, February 21, 1937 – December 29, 2009) was a Soviet filmmaker and cinematographer who made significant contribution to world cinema with the documentary films Parajanov: The Last Spring and Seasons.[1][2][3][4]
He is considered an important cinematographer and documentarian of his generation, noted for artistic collaborations with Sergei Parajanov and such influential documentary films as Parajanov: The Last Spring, The Seasons (directed by Artavazd Peleshyan), The Color of Armenian Land, and a series of essays including The Unmailed Letters.
Early career
Vartanov's debut film, The Color of Armenian Land, marked the beginning of his trademark style, afterwards dubbed as the "direction of undirected action." This documentary, featuring a stylized silent commentary by painter Martiros Saryan, also featured Vartanov's friends, the dissident artists Minas Avetisyan and Sergei Parajanov. The film was censored in the Soviet Union; leading up to Avetisyan's assassination and Parajanov's imprisonment shortly after.
Friendship with Sergei Parajanov and the blacklist
Mikhail Vartanov had a close relationship with imprisoned director Sergei Parajanov. He was first acquainted with Parajanov's work in 1964, having watched the latter's film Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors and the test footage of the unfinished Kiev Frescoes as a student at Moscow’s Gerasimov Institute of Cinematography. Their lifelong friendship began after they met for the first time in 1967, in Armenia, and discussed the screenplay of The Color of Pomegranates (also known as Sayat Nova).
Vartanov's next film Autumn Pastoral—written by Artavazd Peleshyan and scored by composer Tigran Mansurian—was shelved. After Sergei Parajanov was arrested in Kiev in 1973, Vartanov immediately protested to the Prosecutor General of Ukraine. The recently declassified document proved that it was that letter in support of Parajanov that prompted the intensified harassment that Vartanov endured, and his subsequent firing from the Armenfilm Studios 4 months after Paradjanov's imprisonment. In a letter from prison, Parajanov wrote to Vartanov: "You and your purity are colliding with circumstances and predators… That's life."[5]
Cinematographer
Peleshyan and Gennadi Melkonian petitioned the Soviet Russian and Armenian authorities to work with Vartanov, who was by this time blacklisted and unemployed, and he was eventually allowed to participate as a cinematographer in two essay films: The Seasons (also translated as The Seasons of the Year, 1975) and The Mulberry Tree (1979).
Essayist
After a 9-year absence from directing, Vartanov was asked to save a troubled project, The Roots (1983) which he later wrote was "the best film made in Armenia that year." During this period he also worked as a university professor of cinema and photography, while publishing his writings. They appeared in several languages, including French, in Cahiers du cinéma.
Later career and death
For over 20 years, Vartanov's films had been largely suppressed, unmentioned by press, or blocked from submission to foreign film festivals. In a letter to the imprisoned Parajanov, Vartanov wrote, quoting his favorite poet Boris Pasternak: "the time will come and the power of meanness and malice would be overcome by the spirit of kindness."[6] Parajanov responded to Vartanov: "Dear Misha, I received your amazing letter... Never have you been more accurate in evaluating the world and expressing yourself...".[7]
Mikhail Vartanov's last documentary trilogy consisted of The Color of Armenian Land (1969), Minas: A Requiem (1989), and the influential film Parajanov: The Last Spring (1992).
Parajanov-Vartanov Institute was established in Hollywood in 2010 to study, preserve and promote the artistic legacies of Sergei Parajanov and Mikhail Vartanov.[8]
Quotes
"In our land, the government manufactures the biography of the Artist. It honors and awards one, for nothing, and it dishonors and imprisons the other -- a wise government -- it desires to turn both into obedient slaves."[9]
"Probably, besides the film language suggested by Griffith and Eisenstein, the world cinema has not discovered anything revolutionarily new until the 'Color of Pomegranates,' not counting the generally unaccepted language of the 'Andalusian Dog' by Bunuel."[10]
Quotes about Vartanov
Vartanov's film Parajanov: The Last Spring [...] exemplifies the power of art over any limitations." (Francis Ford Coppola)[11][12]
"Vartanov [...] Brother and friend in arts and in soil... Dear, beloved, rare and wonderful. Perhaps, you're the only friend, who compels me to live... You possess everything an artist needs -- mind, kindness, principles, freedom. Create... That's your mission." (Sergei Parajanov, 1974)
"Vartanov's fascinating document Parajanov: The Last Spring...is an important and alluring film for all those who love the form of cinema..." Jim Jarmusch[13]
"My dear friend [...] If you like the screenplay (Desert), together we could make a masterpiece [...]" (Artavazd Peleshyan, 1980s)
"On January 9, came Vartanov [...] Parajanov's most devoted man [...] an amazing man [...] gave an amazing speech [...]" (Gayane Khachatryan, 1990)
"Vartanov's film [...] Excited and filled me with strength [...]" (Tonino Guerra, 1993)
"Vartanov was an amazing intellectual, perhaps one of the last [...]" (Yuri Mechitov, 2010)
"Misha Vartanov [...] One of the most principled and righteous men I have ever met [...]" (Roman Balayan, 2010)
"We have to ensure that the work of seminal artists like Mikhail Vartanov is preserved, promoted and accessible to the widest possible audience. His films, made against all odds and under the harshest conditions, are crucial to the important heritage of world cinema." (Agnieszka Holland)[15]
"Vartanov made a wonderful film Parajanov: The Last Spring [...]" (Martin Scorsese)
Awards and honors
Golden Antelope Award (for diploma film, The Monologue of the Mask) Dakar, 1965.
Cinematographer of the Year (for The Song of Eternity), USSR Film Festival, 1973
Russian Academy of Cinema Arts Award (for Parajanov: The Last Spring), Moscow, 1993
Golden Gate Award (for Parajanov: The Last Spring), San Francisco International Film Festival, 1995
Golden Palm Award (for Parajanov: The Last Spring), Beverly Hills Film Festival, 2003
A film retrospective and an art exhibition, Busan International Film Festival, Korea, 2012
A film retrospective at the Copenhagen Cinematheque, Denmark, 2020 [16][17]
A film retrospective at the Oslo Cinematheque, Norway, 2024
Filmography
Year
English title
Original title
Romanization
Notes
1969
The Color of Armenian Land
(in Russian) Цвет Армянской Земли
Tsvet armyanskoy zemli
Banned debut film. Behind the scenes of Sergei Paradjanov's Color of Pomegrantes. Documentary trilogy, part I.
1971
Autumn Pastoral
(in Russian) Осенчяя пастораль
Osenn'yaya pastoral'
Written by Artavazd Peleshian. Shelved.
1972
And So Every Day
(in Russian) И так каждый день
I tak kazhdiy dyen'
Scored by Tigran Mansurian. Vartanov narrates for the first time. Black & white. Shelved.
1974
Kadjaran
(in Russian) Каджаран
Kajaran'
Unfinished. Vartanov fired.
1975 (cinematographer)
Seasons of the Year
(in Russian) Bремена Года
Vremena Goda'
Directed by Artavazd Peleshian, lensed by Vartanov.
1979 (cinematographer)
The Mulberry Tree
(in Russian) Шелковица
Shelkovitsa'
Directed by Gennadi Melkonian, lensed by Vartanov.
1984
Roots
(in Russian) Корни
Korni'
First directing work in 10 years. A project deemed unfilmable by all filmmakers at Armenfilm (Armenia)