• Sayat Nova Dance Company of Boston is named after him. • The 1969 Armenian film
Sayat Nova directed by
Sergei Parajanov follows the poet's path from his childhood
wool-dyeing days to his role as a courtier and finally his life as a
monk. It was released in the United States under the title
The Color of Pomegranates. It is not a biography of Sayat Nova, but a series of
tableaux vivants of Armenian costume, embroidery and religious rituals depicting scenes and verses from the poet's life. • A book on his life and work by
Charles Dowsett was published in 1997 titled ''Sayat'-nova: An 18th-century Troubadour: a Biographical and Literary Study''. • The first translations of the Armenian odes of Sayat Nova in European languages were in Russia by
Valery Bryusov in 1916, in
Georgia by
Ioseb Grishashvili in 1918, in Poland by
Leopold Lewin in 1961 and in France by Elisabeth Mouradian and the French poet
Serge Venturini in 2006; the book was dedicated to
Sergei Parajanov. • There is a street and
a music school named after him in Yerevan, Armenia; an
Armenian-American dance ensemble in the United States; and a pond in
Mont Orford, Quebec, Canada. • A brand of Armenian Cognac is named after him. • An Armenian restaurant opened in Chicago's
Streeterville neighborhood in 1970 is named after him. • In 2020, a perfume created by Dmitry Bortnikoff and Rajesh Balkrishnan was named after him. • The piano piece "Elegy in Memory of
Aram Khachaturian" by
Arno Babajanian is based on a melody by Sayat-Nova. ==Gallery==