The paper deals with the phenomenon of popular piety in the eighteenth century and its reflections in art media through several prints made by the Serbian engraver Zaharija Orfelin. Paper icons, the cheapest means of meeting the spiritual needs of Orthodox Serbs in Hungary in the eighteenth century, were mass produced and easy to transport to remotest places. As they were the main channels of expressing piety, it is not unexpected that some artists-entrepreneurs such as Orfelin started such a lucrative production. Orfelin shaped the iconography of those images, combining the traditional Orthodox heritage and contemporary Baroque models that had migrated from Central European religious art. His imagery included particular national saints and...
Šio straipsnio tikslas yra išryškinti smulkiųjų grafinių elementų, naudotų Lietuvos Didžiosios Kunig...
It is a false concept that the ideas of the Enlightenment and national awakening were transferred t...
The engraving of the Finding of Moses from Caspar Luyken's Amsterdam (1694) and Nuremberg (1708) bib...
The purpose of this paper is to discuss different aspects of the miraculous depictions of the Virgin...
This study examines icon revetments produced during the late Byzantine period (1261–1453), situating...
The article outlines the role of religious motives in the Ukrainian bookplate (or ex-libris) in the ...
From Tempera to Ink to Code traces the remediation of Orthodox icons. It examines icons’ unexplored,...
Byzantine icons have attracted artists and art historians to what they saw as the flat style of larg...
This paper discusses sensory experience in the practice of devotion of two highly venerated icons in...
Two paintings of the Virgin and Child from the Collection of Paintings and Frames of the Department ...
Over the centuries, the typographic medium and book printing responded to the political, economic, c...
The altar painting that the Cattaran Fraternity of Leather-makers commissioned from the Venetian pa...
The altar painting that the Cattaran Fraternity of Leather-makers commissioned from the Venetian pai...
Although traditionally associated with Eastern Christianity, the practice of venerating icons became...
The focus of the article is one icon – the image of “The Kneeling Jesus” (second half of the 17th ce...
Šio straipsnio tikslas yra išryškinti smulkiųjų grafinių elementų, naudotų Lietuvos Didžiosios Kunig...
It is a false concept that the ideas of the Enlightenment and national awakening were transferred t...
The engraving of the Finding of Moses from Caspar Luyken's Amsterdam (1694) and Nuremberg (1708) bib...
The purpose of this paper is to discuss different aspects of the miraculous depictions of the Virgin...
This study examines icon revetments produced during the late Byzantine period (1261–1453), situating...
The article outlines the role of religious motives in the Ukrainian bookplate (or ex-libris) in the ...
From Tempera to Ink to Code traces the remediation of Orthodox icons. It examines icons’ unexplored,...
Byzantine icons have attracted artists and art historians to what they saw as the flat style of larg...
This paper discusses sensory experience in the practice of devotion of two highly venerated icons in...
Two paintings of the Virgin and Child from the Collection of Paintings and Frames of the Department ...
Over the centuries, the typographic medium and book printing responded to the political, economic, c...
The altar painting that the Cattaran Fraternity of Leather-makers commissioned from the Venetian pa...
The altar painting that the Cattaran Fraternity of Leather-makers commissioned from the Venetian pai...
Although traditionally associated with Eastern Christianity, the practice of venerating icons became...
The focus of the article is one icon – the image of “The Kneeling Jesus” (second half of the 17th ce...
Šio straipsnio tikslas yra išryškinti smulkiųjų grafinių elementų, naudotų Lietuvos Didžiosios Kunig...
It is a false concept that the ideas of the Enlightenment and national awakening were transferred t...
The engraving of the Finding of Moses from Caspar Luyken's Amsterdam (1694) and Nuremberg (1708) bib...