Archimandrite
KYPRIAN (Pyzhov) (+2001)
Towards
Understanding Orthodox Iconography
One often
hears discussions and even arguments over how to properly
paint icons: in the old or new style.
When icons of the old style are discussed, these
are usually thought of as the ancient primitive types, darkened
from age, archeologically interesting, and often feigned copies
from them made by home-grown artist-dilettantes. The new
style is described as icons without any style, in bright,
pastel tones. Such superficial, ordinary way of painting icons
limits the understanding of many who make judgments on one
style or the other. Such arguments often arise among parishioners
and clergymen, when a parish church is to be adorned with
icons. Some recognize only the Vasnetsoff style!
Squabbles over styles often heighten to the point
of conflict and the ruination of friendships, for the reason
that generally, the recognition of true art from amateur attempts
of printed icons, whether in the old or new style, which often
do not correspond to the original works of art, sometimes
copies of originals or of amateur works. The absence of original
icons and of professional icon-painters possessing the techniques
of one type of icon painting school or another, can be considered
the main reason of the observed decline. Torn away from its
native culture, most compatriots lost the ability to discern
an original from a fake, the true from the false; this sickness,
touching upon the various facets of life of the Russian emigration,
is apparently reflected in the attitude towards ecclesiastical
art, simplifying the ability to understand it to the point
where the Catholic publications of paper copies in the pseudo-ancient
and pseudo-new styles are accepted by Orthodox émigrés
as genuine icons. Of course, if blessed by the proper Church
rite, these paper icons replace real icons; but one cannot
accept this and move on without desiring to replace it with
a hand-painted icon created by the hand of a master
But,
one hears, where does one find such a master?...That is a
valid question; still, the hope remains, and God will help
find one, if the desire is earnest and true. If not, the habit
of accepting imitations will take root, and it may atrophy
the very desire to pray before icons. The ancient art of icon-painting,
blessed by the Church, may be lost, and along with it, the
ignorance of the dogma of the veneration of icons confirmed
at the VII Ecumenical Council will be firmly established.
Fortunately, there remains that desire among many Russians
to see real icons in their churches and homes; there is no
dearth of those who wish to practice icon-painting; but without
the technical training, not knowing the A-B-Cs,
it is impossible. Ignorance of the laws of painting, lack
of training and knowledge of its forms and techniques preclude
one from becoming a master painter. This is required for all
forms of art and craft, and it is more important for those
who take to depicting the holy faces of the Savior, the Mother
of God, the apostles and other saints of God.
Icon-painting abroad remains on an amateur level because it
is often approached without the proper training; lack of training
in drawing, possessing no sense for the laws of the harmonic
arrangement of colors and not knowing how to use paints, those
who paint icons from inspiration set out to paint
the image of Christ, or the Mother of God. Those desiring
to paint in the new style copy famous depictions
of the Savior or the Mother of God by the artists Vasnetsoff
for the Cathedral of St. Vladimir in Kiev. Most often they
copy German-made lithographs thereof.
The iconographic legacy shared by Russian masters, even during
recent times, with the sources of origination, was interrupted
in the diaspora, and attempts towards its rebirth are halting,
and success is seen only in separate instances.
In our homeland, the art of icon painting often changed: technical
methods of different periods varied as much as compositional
ones. But deeply rooted in Byzantine religious art, and assuming
its legacy, our art of icon painting is a branch of that tree
which manifests in color the teaching of the Orthodox Church.
Discovered by scholars, the surviving wall paintings of the
ancient churches of the Russian north are witness to the lofty
artistic culture of the Russian masters of the Novgorod School
of the XIV, XV, XVI and part of the XVII centuries, which,
developing in original forms, was undoubtedly connected with
the golden age of the great artistic culture of the southern
Slavic masters of the Balkan Peninsula (especially Macedonia)
of the XII and XV centuries and in close artistic relation
to the great art of ancient Byzantium.
The academicians N.P. Kondakov, N.P. Likhachev, N.V. Pokrovsky,
P.P. Muratov and other scholars of ancient Russian painting
(by painting, we mean wall-painting in churches and icons
painted on wood), fairly consider this period the blossoming
of the art of icon painting in Rus, and its highest manifestation.
The end of the XVII century is considered the beginning of
the decline of purely-artistic creativity and the development
of mannerism, which lowered the artistic quality of icon-painting.
Recognizing the authority of such profound scholars and connoisseurs
of art as the above-mentioned scholars, who showed that mannerism
forced out the pure art of the ancient schools of icon painting,
one however cannot value the high value of the mannerist period,
developing on the grace-filled foundation of the previous
epoch, which was created on the symbolism of catacomb Christianity.
The mannerist period not only imitated the lofty heights of
its ancestry, it had its own achievements and breadth of scope,
expressed in the original artistic directions of the Stroganoff,
Suzdal, Muscovite, Tver, Yaroslav and other schools, which
distinguished themselves in their originality and in the technical
methods of painting, yet had one common thread: they were
deeply spiritual! Icon painters of those times well-knew the
spiritual essence of the teachings of the Church of Christ
and with remarkable resourcefulness could illustrate it on
walls and in icons.
Mannerism crowded out the lofty achievements of the masterpieces
of the artistic golden age. But it could not do otherwisewho
could satisfy the enormous need for icons in the growing territory
of Holy Rus?
If the XVII century is considered the period of mannerist
icon painting, then truly it can be called the age of the
flowering of mannerism through to the present day.
The schools of icon painting mentioned above gave us excellent
masters, who, by heading the icon-painting studios, adorned
with frescoes a multitude of churches of Muscovite Russia
and its principalities. In the second have of the XVII century,
the canonical severity of the icon-painting style gradually
lost its form; spiritually ascetic faces of saints were replaced
with Europeanized, almost portrait-like, images of the salaried
icon painter of the Faceted Palace, Simon Ushakov, who laid
the foundation of the new trend called the Ushakov School.
The unification with Little Russia, where the religious art
developed under Polish influence, which assumed everything
created by Catholic Italy, which in turn blindingly
recreated pagan classicism on the walls and ceilings of its
churches and palazzi, began to be reflected in the religious
art of Muscovite Russia.
The age of reforms of Peter I attracted famous architects
from abroad: Tresini, Lebnon, Rastrelli and many others who
built palaces and churches in the popular Baroque style of
the day, with their interiors resplendent with the busy Rococothe
French decorative style more suitable for ballrooms than Orthodox
iconostases.
European architecture demanded its corresponding style of
icon painting: images of saints assuming mannerist poses appeared,
with rosy cheeks, styled hair and costumes of the salon style.
For the realization of the new damands, lay artists were invited,
whose students became master icon painters, the disseminators
of new forms in the art of icon painting. These forms, along
with its technique, were quickly mastered by Russian masters
and amateurs, who boldly covered the walls not only of new
churches but even old onesmonuments of ancient Russian
art--with their Europeanized paintings. Individual icons prepared
in provincial workshops with pretensions to some sort of Rennaissance,
or Rococo are singularly unattractive; but still,
there is a method, a skill in its craft.
Since the middle of the last century [the 19th], the Italian-Polish
manner assumes a more severr formthe saccharine mannerism
disappears, and the Europeanization of icon painting becomes
more appropriate for the depiction of Orthodox sensibility,
losing, at the same time, any significance in artistic value.
Despite the facelessness and limpness of the established mannerism,
it entered the mainstream of life, the eye of the Orthodox
worshiper becomes accustomed to it, and in this way, the new
style is granted the right to exist, as mentioned in
the beginning of this article.
The taking root of this taste in icons of this type was to
a great degree aided by the oleographic publications of Fesenko,
Pleshcheev and others in Odessa. These prints were mostly
made from crude lubok-type originals, but they
were eagerly purchased by the people thanks to their low price
and attractive bright colors. Still, these anti-artistic icons
were not painted by self-taught amateurswith all their
faults, they possessed a level of skill. The icon workshops
of Mt. Athos, Valaam and many other monasteries, and also
in private workshops, icon painters of the school of Realism
had an expertise in the technique of oil painting; they could
carefully render every curl of hair and every fold of cloth.
The masters of this school, as in all things, were highly-qualified,
some not; but there was always the skill of craft evident
in each icon painted in Russia distinguishing it from those
painted abroad. If earlier centuries, which tied Russian church
painting with the lofty artistic-spiritual heights of Byzantium,
comprised the epoch of pure art in Russia, and subsequent
periods excelled in craft, then the icon painting done abroad
in our century can truly be called the émigré
style.
What is happening in the Homeland now, we dont know;
it is very possible that the catacombs of today have developed
new symbolism, instead of icons, which are being destroyed
by the godless Soviet state; but Russian abroad, over the
course of a half a century, emulating both styles of icon
painting could not elevate it to the level of craft. Imitators
of ancient painting, that is, those who paint in the old
style did not understand its main valuethe ability
to express the spiritual essence of the person depicted, but
they concentrate on the incorrectness, that is
on those particularities which contradict realistic perception,
they took this as the most important thing, and in their pseudo-ancient
works they stressed that which could have been avoided without
violating the general composition and style.
The process of decline and crude imitations of religious art
to a greater degree touched upon the countries of the Orthodox
East. At the present time in Greece there is an artistic rebirth
of the Byzantine style, which is expressed in the distortion
of wonderful forms and lines and the stylistically-developed,
spiritually lofty creations of the ancient artists of Byzantium.
The contemporary Greek icon painter Contaglou, with the cooperation
of the Church of Athens, published a series of reproductions
of his works, which cannot but be considered artless emulations
of the great Greek artist Panselinos, who adorned with his
frescoes the churches of Mt. Athos of the XIV century. Contaglous
admirers and his students say that saints should not
look like real peoplebut what are they supposed
to look like? The primitiveness of such reasoning harms those
who see and do not superficially regard the spiritual and
esthetic beauty of ancient icon painting and who rejects its
surrogates, offered as examples of an allegedly-reborn Byzantine
style.
Often, the expression of enthusiasm for the old style
is not genuine, revealing in its proponents simply a pretension
and inability to discern true art from crude imitation.
In imitative works by contemporary icon painters, style is
over-stylized, picking out one certain characteristic
of the body, the head or hands, expressing in old icons a
prayerful reverence, the contemporary stylizer subjects it
to intolerable emphasis, to the point where the holy image
becomes laughable. An detailed rendering of folds of cloth,
which requires special study, when subjected to such stylization,
looks more like rough-hewn wood than folds of silk. Faces
are intentionally darkened so that they would look like
the old style, when the darkness of ancient icons is
not an original characteristic, but the opposite: properly
cleaned icons of old are striking in the color. At the present
time, the Latin church has also become interested in Byzantine
artthe pages of Catholic publications are splashed with
almost-blasphemous distortions of the images of the icons
of the Eastern Church. (These illustrations are often added
to articles on the Eastern Rite, which reveals
the artificiality of the Catholic understanding of Orthocox
icon-painting.)
The false opinion that icons must be painted with pre-arranged
types, with harshly-defined contours, to show some sort of
expressiveness, differentiating saints from real
people, evokes the opposite reaction in many people,
which recalls the German [Expressionist] lithographs, or copies
thereof, and leads to the impression that the new style
is better, after all!
But what about the Vasnetsoff style? We respond
that icon painting does not know such a style. Everyone knows
that a great artist lived in Russia, Viktor Mikhailovich Vasnetsoff,
who painted The Three Bogatyrs, Alyonushka,
The Blind Bards, and that he illustrated stories
and fables. The main memorial of Vasnetsoffs work is
the fresco work in St. Vladimir Cathedral in Kiev with its
grand image of the Mother of God over the altar. Reproductions
of the images of the Savior and the Mother of God with Child
were widely distributed. These two icons by Vasnetsoff are
everywhere and are used in schoolbooks, calendars and other
publications. These images can often be seen on iconostases
(especially in America). These images limit the possibility
of using the Vasnetsoff style for wider use. All
attempts to paint like Vasnetsoff lead to poor
results and have a very amateurish flavor. The same can be
said for the artist Nesteroff, who painted the famous work
Holy Russia, with the wonderful landscape of the
Russian North. Nesterov took part in painting the frescoes
of St. Vladimir Cathedral and the church of the Convent of
SS Martha and Maria in Moscow. In his image of the Savior,
Nesterov wished to reproduce, in a painterly fashion, the
wonderful image of Christ by Rublev, yet he distorted His
features with an imaginary psychological expression.
The icons of Saints Martha and Maria, on the same iconostasis,
are clearly the portraits of persons known to the artist,
as are all the other holy images painted for the Vladimir
Cathedral and Convent of Martha and Maria. Nesterovs
paintings are also widely distributed as prints, known as
the Nesterov style.
And so, in tearing away from ones natural roots and
losing the legacy connecting the Russian master icon painters
with the sources of Russian icon painting, can one hope for
its rebirth in the diaspora? Apparently, no. But the improvement
in the quality of icons painted by various individuals who
have no schooling or artistic training is possiblebut
only when the main attention is paid to preparation. If those
who wish to paint icons do not labor over mastering draftsmanship,
the interrelation of color, proportion and composition in
general, if they do not try, repeatedly, to copy the details
of good, clear reproductions (which can be easily obtained
now), then it will be impossible to hope for the improvement
in the quality of icon painting abroad.
The quality of any icon depends not only from artistic taste
or religious inspiration of the artist, but from the knowledge
of technique, beginning with the preparation of the panel
and ground, the ability to use paints, both tempera and oils,
and others, the ability to gild, burnish, etc. If developed
technique defines the quality of any craft, this applies more
so to that of the painting of icons.
Russky Pastyr, No. 39, 2001
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