Saint Theodora | |
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Greek: Η Αγία Θεοδώρα, Italian: Santa Teodora | |
Artist | Emmanuel Tzanes |
Year | c. 1671 |
Medium | tempera on wood |
Movement | Late Cretan School |
Subject | Saint Theodora |
Dimensions | 40.5 cm× 29 cm(15.9 in× 11.4 in) |
Location | Byzantine and Christian Museum, Athens, Greece |
Owner | Byzantine and Christian Museum |
Website | Official Website |
Saint Theodora is a tempera painting by Emmanuel Tzanes. Emmanuel Tzanes was a priest and painter. He was from Crete. He migrated to Venice with his two brothers, painter Konstantinos Tzanes and poet Marinos Tzanes. Emmanuel was a priest at San Giorgio dei Greci. The painters remaining works number over 130. He painted in the Greek mannerisms prevalent at the time. Empress Theodora is one of the most important figures in Greek-Italian Byzantine art history. She ended the second scourge of iconoclasm. The word literally means image breaking. Countless priceless icons and paintings were destroyed. The empress was a savior to artists. The painting is at the Byzantine Museum in Athens, Greece. [1] [2] [3] [4]
The painting is egg tempera on gold leaf. The dimensions are 40.5 cm (15.9 in) × 29 cm (11.4 in). The Empress is seated on a throne. The image over emits the gold character prevalent in this style of painting. Italian painters compensated for the removal of gold by adding realism to their paintings. Renaissance oil painters no longer venerated religious figures with gold. The top left and right sides of the painting feature an elaborate decorative rococo motif. The sides are both decorated with ancient Greek corinthian columns. The Empress is covered in precious stones from head to toe. [5]
The green, red and pink garment features clear striations and folds of fabric. The face of the royal is painted in adequate detail, flesh tones are clearly visible. She points to a painting of the Virgin and Child. The painting is the traditional hodegetria. Jesus is dressed in gold emphasizing the veneration of the deities with the precious metal. The painter clearly exhibits the empress as the savior of the arts. Two eagles are present one faces the east, and the other the west. The open book has a Greek inscription venerating the champion of the arts. It states: In this icon you are venerated, as an icon of the ancients, but also as a saint against iconoclasm. Two angels sit behind her thrown to her left and right. [6]
Cretan School describes an important school of icon painting, under the umbrella of post-Byzantine art, which flourished while Crete was under Venetian rule during the late Middle Ages, reaching its climax after the Fall of Constantinople, becoming the central force in Greek painting during the 15th, 16th and 17th centuries. The Cretan artists developed a particular style of painting under the influence of both Eastern and Western artistic traditions and movements; the most famous product of the school, El Greco, was the most successful of the many artists who tried to build a career in Western Europe, and also the one who left the Byzantine style farthest behind him in his later career.
The Heptanese School of painting succeeded the Cretan School as the leading school of Greek post-Byzantine painting after Crete fell to the Ottomans in 1669. Like the Cretan school, it combined Byzantine traditions with an increasing Western European artistic influence and also saw the first significant depiction of secular subjects. The school was based in the Ionian Islands, which were not part of Ottoman Greece, from the middle of the 17th century until the middle of the 19th century. The center of Greek art migrated urgently to the Ionian islands but countless Greek artists were influenced by the school including the ones living throughout the Greek communities in the Ottoman Empire and elsewhere in the world.
Emmanuel Tzanes, also known as BounialisEmmanuel Tzane-Bounialis, Emmanuel Zane, and Emmanuel Tzane. He was a Greek Renaissance painter. He was an author, clergyman, painter, and educator. He was the parish priest of the church of San Giorgio dei Greci. An important Greek church in Venice. He was affiliated with the Flanginian School of the Greek Confraternity in Venice. He was a prominent painter. His known works number over 130 pieces. His works can be found in public foundations, private collections, churches and monasteries in Greece. He collaborated with many artists namely Philotheos Skoufos. Both artists were members of the Cretan School. He was influenced by the Venetian school. Emmanuel's brothers were famous painter Konstantinos Tzanes and poet Marinos Tzanes. His most popular work is The Holy Towel finished in 1659.
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The Icon of the Triumph of Orthodoxy is the festal icon for the first Sunday of Great Lent, a celebration that commemorated the end of Byzantine Iconoclasm and restoration of icons to the church in 843, and which remains a church feast in Orthodoxy. It is the earliest known depiction of this subject, and thought to have been painted in Constantinople, capital of the Byzantine Empire. It was purchased by the British Museum in 1988. The dimensions of the icon are: height: 37.8 cm, width: 31.4 cm, depth: 5.3 cm.
Ioannis Skordilis was a Greek painter. He was active on the Cycladic islands. He shared the same last name as Antonios Skordilis and Emmanuel Skordilis. The family originally came from Crete. They were probably related. Skordilis was a prominent name associated with Cretan painting since the 1500s. Other notable painters of the Cycladic Islands were Christodoulos Kalergis, and Defterevon Sifnios. Twelve of his works survived. They are mainly on the Cycladic islands. His most notable work is at the Byzantine and Christian Museum. It is called the Holy Trinity and Saints. The piece is similar to a work completed by Emmanuel Tzanes; it was a common theme among Greek painters.
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