Background
Of Armenian descent, Mari Gerekmezyan was born in the Talas village near Kayseri.
Of Armenian descent, Mari Gerekmezyan was born in the Talas village near Kayseri.
She attended the local Vart Basrig Primary Armenian School. She moved to Constantinople where she attended the Yesayan Armenian School.
While studying at Yesayan, Gerekmezyan had the opportunity to meet famed Turkish author Ahmet Hamdi Tanpınar. Tanpınar inspired Gerekmezyan to pursue a degree in philosophy. She would go on the study at the University of Istanbul.
She would become a guest student at the sculpture division of the Güzel Sanatlar Akademisi (Great Arts Academy).
At the Academy, she was taught by famed German sculptor Rudolf Belling. Gerekmezyan was also an Art and Armenian language teacher at the Getronagan and Yesayan Armenian High Schools.
At the age of 35, Gerekmezyan died from tuberculosis. She is buried in the Sisli Armenian Cemetery.
While Gerekmezyan was a guest student at the sculpture division of the Güzel Sanatlar Akademisi (Great Arts Academy), she met Bedri Rahmi Eyüboğlu.
Throughout the 1940s, Gerekmezyan assisted Bedri Rahmi Eyüboğlu in his artwork. The two would eventually fall in love. Their relationship is compared to the likes of Auguste Rodin and Camille Claudel.
Gerekmezyan had sculpted many busts of Eyüboğlu and Eyüboğlu likewise drew many sketches of Gerekmezyan.
Eyüboğlu wrote his famous poem Karadut (Mulberry) for Mari Gerekmezyan after her death:
Original Turkish:
Karadut
Karadutum, çatal karam, çingenem
Nar tanem, nur tanem, bir tanem
Ağaç isem dalımsın salkım saçak
Petek isem balımsın ağulum
Günahımsın, vebalimsin. Dili mercan, dizi mercan, dişi mercan
Yoluna bir can koyduğum
Gökte ararken yerde bulduğum
Karadutum, çatal karam, çingenem
Daha nem olacaktın bir tanem
Gülen ayvam, ağlayan narımsın
Kadınım, kısrağım, karımsın.
English translation:Mulberry
My black mulberry, my forked darky, my Gypsy,
My grain of pomegranate, my grain of light, my only one;
I am a tree, my limbs, a porch hanging with grapes,
I am a hive, you are my honey, my bitter honey,
My sin, my ague. Tongue of coral, teeth of coral, thighs of oyster,
My black mulberry, my forked darky, my Gypsy,
What more will you be to me, my odd one, queer one,
My smiling quince, my weeping pomegranate,
When he first read the poem in public, Eyüboğlu cried.
lieutenant is believed that Eyüboğlu continued to love Gerekmezyan the rest of his life.
The poem would become popular as it was incorporated into Cem Karaca"s song Karadut. The Getronagan Armenian High School in Istanbul hosted an exhibition for Mari Gerekmezyan in December 2012, organized by famed Armenian photographer Ara Guler.