Toros Taronatsi or Mshetsi lived and worked mainly in Gladzor,
during the first decades of the XIV c., at a period when the University of Gladzor, that
higher type of school, was called the "Second Athens" by contemporaries. People
from various parts of Armenia, even from far away Cilicia, came to Gladzor in order to
improve their knowledge. Here Toros Taronatsi was educated, having as his teacher
the famous scientist and the rector of Gladzor University, Yesayi Nchetsi. A talented
artist, Toros Taronatsi was at the same time a scientist possessing profound knowledge, a
renowned poet and a skilled scribe. Mkhitar Erzinkatsi, his contemporary, speaks of him as
a "kind and fine-looking person..., full of wisdom and well-versed especially in
literature and painting...". Two main tendencies characterize Toros Taronatsi's art:
adherence to old traditions and the adoption of the achievements of the Cilician school of
miniature painting. The manuscripts illustrated by him are distinguished for their variety
of ornamental designs and their exceptional richness. Here, side by side with various
floral and geometrical designs, we see numerous kinds of animals, both real and fantastic.
Their origin is often connected with old pagan notions which, however, in the Middle Ages,
acquire a different sense due to the new Christian ideology. As for subject paintings,
though they are up to the standards of art of that time, they retain the originality of
style arising from local, popular art creations. In Toros Taronatsi's miniatures the
images of the characters with their expressive, beautiful, almond-shaped eyes and
dark-shaded, arched eyebrows produce a particular impression. The bright and saturated
colouring convey a special splendor to Troops Taronatsi's miniatures. Gareguin Hovsepian
defines Toros Taronatsi as a skillful and a most versatile artist. This productive master
copied and illustrated a lot of manuscripts, most of which have come down to our days.
They are now dispersed in the various collections of Armenian manuscripts. The Mashtots
Matenadaran has 7 such manuscripts of Toros Taronatsi: the most important among them are
Yesayi Nchetsi's Bible, the "Masterpiece of the Gladzor scriptorium" written in
1318 A.D. (Matenadaran, codex 206) and the richly decorated Gospel of 1323 A.D.
(Matenadaran, codex 6289). Toros Taronatsi's paintings are a most valuable contribution to
Armenian medieval art heritage.