CATALOG RAISONNÉ






Edgar Papazian is an artist who has practiced architecture with a license.


He believes architecture has the capacity to heal and protect by providing personal space for privacy and thought, free from reductive and restrictive social class roles.

The many drawings herein are meant to be considered research, autonomous from any built analogues and not simply instruments of service.

Edgar is a graduate of Columbia and Yale Universities and is professor at the New York Institute of Technology, Old Westbury, USA, where he teaches architectural studios at a college level. He was president of American Institute of Architecture - Peconic chapter  in 2024.

This website serves as a location for current research and creative projects (SET-A), and also as a repository of digitised hand-drawn works created between 1993 and 2024 both as a student and as a pracitising architect (SET-B).










“...He apparently had no significant master and followed no specific architectural tradition. Like some other priest-architects from the major orders... he was first of all an intellectual - a mathematician and a philosopher - and for him architecture was a form of erudition.”   -Richard Pommer (referring to the architect Guarino Guarini), Eighteenth-Century Architecture in Piedmont, 1961.
Edgar Birge Papazian    e.papazian.73@gmail.com





SHOW: All  SET—A  SET—B

0402.01
2004-05 The Bronx, lower Manhattan, USA
Armenian Genocide Museum and Memorial. 14th and G streets, Washington, DC. First proposal, rejected by museum board member. 

Comentary:  I was able to send in a booklet with my vision for this project based on an RFI that was sent to the architecture firm I was working for at the time. The major donor to the project read my proposal and began a years-long discussion about what this museum “wanted to be.” The organization had purchased the land and an adjacent historic bank building two blocks from the White House in Washington, DC. I developed the conept of a “husk” a shell from which somethign had been forcibly removed. This became the memorial space.

This project was intensely personal to me and became a yearslong project, trying to encapsulate a historic event that was denied by its perpetrators. 

Category
Tag-3, Tag-4, Tag-5
©2024Edgar B. Papazian