Saint George (icon, 1130) explained

Backcolor:
  1. FBF5DF
Saint George
Artist:unknown
Medium:Tempera
Height Metric:230
Width Metric:142
City:Moscow
Museum:Tretyakov Gallery

Saint George (Russian: Святой Георгий) is a Russian icon of Saint George painted in Novgorod by an unknown artist. It was the main icon of the Yuriev Monastery before it was moved to the Tretyakov Gallery in Moscow.[1]

The year it was painted is unknown, but 1130 is commonly given and is based on the inscription with this year on the back of the icon. However, the back itself was only made in the 19th century. Art critics also give the year 1030, which is when the Yuriev Monastery was founded, or 1130s–1140s, when the consecration ceremony for the Saint George Cathedral in the monastery was held. This theory is supported by art historians Viktor Lazarev, Engelina Smirnova and Natalya Salko.[2] [3] [4] Viktor Lazarev states that its size is suitable for that purpose.[2]

The iconography corresponds to the common Byzantine depiction (from the 10th century) of Saint George not as a warrior, but as a young martyr.[2]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: George. Christianity in Art. Russian. 4 September 2014.
  2. Book: Lazarev, Viktor. Viktor Lazarev

    . Русская иконопись от истоков до начала XVI века. 2000. Iskusstvo. Moscow . Russian . 163—164 . Viktor Lazarev.

  3. Book: Smirnova, Engelina. Живопись Великого Новгорода. Середина XIII — начало XV века . 1976. Nauka. Moscow . Russian. 175—178.
  4. Book: Salko, Natalya. Живопись Древней Руси XI — начала XIII века: Мозаики. Иконы. Фрески. 227, 234. 1982. Художник РСФСР. Leningrad. Russian.