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Nativity (15th c., GTG) - Public domain dedication image

description

Summary

“"The Nativity". Reproduction”. "The Nativity" from the festive row of the iconostasis, early XV century. Reproduction. The State Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow.

Byzantine architectural and visual style was a style that existed with remarkable homogeneity within the Eastern Roman empire between the 6th century and until the capture of Constantinople by the Turks in 1453. The Byzantine style's presence extended to Greece. Through Venetians, who became Constantinople's archrivals, it spread to Italy, and Sicily, where it persisted almost intact through the 12th century and became a foundation for the Italian Renaissance. Preserved by the Eastern Orthodox church, the Byzantine style spread to eastern Europe, the Balkans, and particularly to Russia, where it remained, with little or no local modification, through the 17th century. Byzantine architecture and painting remained uniform in tradition rather than changed with time and personal expression. The result is a sophistication of style and spiritual expression not paralleled in Western art. As with all large Picryl collections, this one is made with the assistance of AI image recognition. It allows collections of sizes never seen before. We do our best to clean after AI as it is based solely on visual resemblance and we apologize if we missed a few images in the collection that do not belong to the Byzantine style.

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Tags

russia icons 15th century icons of russia icons by andrej rublev in the tretyakov gallery icons formerly attributed to andrej rublev icons of nativity in russia russian icons orthodox faith illumination of books and manuscripts illuminated manuscripts
date_range

Date

1450
collections

in collections

After Byzantium

Byzantine Style after the fall of Constantinople in 1453
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Source

Wikimedia Commons
link

Link

http://commons.wikimedia.org/
copyright

Copyright info

public domain

label_outline Explore Icons Of Nativity In Russia, Icons Formerly Attributed To Andrej Rublev, 15th Century Icons Of Russia

Topics

russia icons 15th century icons of russia icons by andrej rublev in the tretyakov gallery icons formerly attributed to andrej rublev icons of nativity in russia russian icons orthodox faith illumination of books and manuscripts illuminated manuscripts