Warning: include(header) [function.include]: failed to open stream: No such file or directory in /home2/serbian1/public_html/culture/history/Hist_Serb_Culture/chf/Middle_Ages_Art.html on line 2
Warning: include() [function.include]: Failed opening 'header' for inclusion (include_path='./:./include:/home2/serbian1/public_html/include:/home2/serbian1/public_html:/usr/lib/php:/usr/local/lib/php') in /home2/serbian1/public_html/culture/history/Hist_Serb_Culture/chf/Middle_Ages_Art.html on line 2
ART IN THE MIDDLE AGES
BY VOJISLAV J. DJURIC
| I. THE NATURE OF THE CHARACTERISTICS,
TYPES AND TRENDS
|
The existence of painted artwork among the Serbs in the Middle Ages
was defined by a series of factors of varying calibre and strength.
The most important of them are, of course: the size, power and fate of
Serbian states; the confessional choice of the people and the position
of their ecclesiastical establishments in relation to Constantinople
and Rome; the developmental level of society and the financial
potentials of patrons; the goal of religious artwork, and also its
political role.
The time frame of artwork among the Serbs in the Middle Ages can be
precisely defined. Its themes were exclusively religious without a
single trace of the secular. Artwork appeared in the Serbian milieu
when the Serbian state turned to Christianity in the second half of
the ninth century. The first works were, in fact, destroyed - the
oldest preserved works date from the end of the tenth century. Artwork
vanished together with the disappearance of the last Serbian state
near the end of the fifteenth century, when it lost some of its
important creative characteristics.
The Angel at Christ's Sepulchre, a
fresco at the monastery of Mileseva
The historical scene of that artwork was the central area of the
Balkan peninsula between the rivers Sava and Danube to the North, the
Adriatic and Aegean seas to the South, from the rivers Timok and
Struma to the East and Vrbas and Cetina in the West. At the beginning,
its centres clustered around the Raska River, and after that they were
along the Adriatic coast between the Cetina and Bojana. Those centres
were thus in the areas where the first Serbian states were first
constituted. Thereafter, the rise and expansion of Serbia and Bosnia
followed, and they reached their greatest expanse in the fourteenth
century. Gradually they were regionalized as individual territories of
the Serbs which became more-or-less independent states: in Serrai,
Epirus and Thessaly, in the regions of Vardar, Kosovo, Morava,
Herzegovina, Bosnia, Montenegro, and in the coastal communities. As
the individual territories fell to the Turks, first those in the South
and East, the shape and character of the artwork were lost. This
process went on for a whole century: the territories in Macedonia were
lost at the end of the fourteenth century, and in Herzegovina and
Montenegro at the end of the next century.
Of ultimate importance for the spirit of Serbian art was the fact
that the towns of the Serbian state on the Adriatic coast and in their
immediate hinterlands were under the influence of the great Apennine
spiritual and artistic centres, such as Rome, Venice and Apulia,
whereas the territories inhabited by the Serbs in the interior of the
Balkans were turned toward the Byzantine political and cultural
centres: Constantinople, Salonica, and Athos. The position of the Serb
nation, between the East and West, became especially delicate after
the Great Schism in the mid-eleventh century, when most of the Serbs
fell under the jurisdiction of the Patriarchate of Constantinople, and
the smaller portion along the coast and the Romance population living
in the coastal towns fell under the authority of the papal curate. Up
to the beginning of the thirteenth century, Orthodox Serbs were under
the authority of the autocephalous church of Ohrid, until they
obtained autocephalous status themselves in 1219. The Catholic
population had their own church leader till the end of the eleventh
century, in the person of the archbishop in the town of Bar. Later he
began to be called the Serbian Primas (primas Serviae). However, the
archbishopric in Dubrovnik coveted jurisdiction over Serbia as well,
just as the town of Bari on the opposite side of the Adriatic was the
ecclesiastical-governing centre for several Catholic bishoprics in
Serbia.
In contact for centuries, Orthodox and Catholic artwork did not react
in the same way as architecture or sculpture. While Orthodox church
buildings and their sculpted decorations could appear to be completely
western, done in Romanesque and Gothic styles, while preserving the
function of Orthodox design, artwork was quite obstinate in its
Byzantine iconographic compositions and stylistic conceptions.
Painting, so often the subject of theological debate in the Eastern
church, stubbornly preserved its Orthodox character. Catholic artwork
along the coast, like that in many Italian towns up to the time when
the Gothic style prevailed, was inclined to Byzantine-Romanesque and
Byzantine-Gothic permeations in frescoes and icons, enriching the
humanistic features of painting with a new iconography. Both churches
went their own ways in art without greater conflict along the
boundaries between Orthodoxy and Catholicism, always on their guard,
up to the very end of the Middle Ages.
The fact that a special church organisation appeared in the state of
Bosnia, the so-called "Bosnian church", had some influence on Serbian
art, especially from the end of the thirteenth century to the
beginning of the fifteenth century. The Orthodox and Catholic
hierarchy both considered the Bosnian church heretical.
The supporters of artistic creativity were, above all, members of the
ruling houses and the church leaders; from the fourteenth century
onward, eminent aristocrats and regional rulers were included. In the
coastal towns, among the Catholics, along with the aristocrats, there
were also members of the Benedictine order in the earlier period, and
from the thirteenth century onward there were also Franciscans and
Dominicans who became patrons as well.
Patrons and donators influenced the artistic programme and its
ideological contents profoundly. Everyone wanted to record their own
role or the role of their ancestors in the activities of state or
church. The paradigms for this existed in the Byzantine and western
centres. Iconographic models were thus borrowed and then reworked for
domestic use. Thus, Serbia managed to construct a special iconography,
mostly through various portraits of patrons, which was an iconography
of the rulers and the aristocracy, of the church and of the monkhood.
Artists came to Serbia from abroad, most by invitation, but the
studios of native artists existed throughout the medieval period.
Foreigners played a decisive role at crucial moments, when they
introduced the most recent artistic ideas and the high standards of
more well developed milieus. This was especially evident in Serbia at
the beginning of the thirteenth century, and at the beginning and end
of the fourteenth century, when the greatest artists of Constantinople
and Salonica worked in Serbia by invitation or out of necessity. In
the coastal towns, Greek artists (pictores graeci) were written into
the history of art at the end of the thirteenth century and in the
first half of the fourteenth century, and Venetian and Italian
painters at the beginning of the Renaissance.
The Serbs cultivated three artistic genres: wall painting or painting
with fresco techniques; painting on wooden panels, that is
iconography, usually using tempera techniques on a base of gold leaf;
painting on parchment or paper, such as illuminations or miniatures in
hand-written books, done in various coloured inks, temperas, and at
times with gold leaf. Among the Catholics all three genres went hand
in hand in a stylistic sense. Among the Orthodox Serbs the decoration
of books had special rules. Hand-written books among all Slavs who
used Cyrillic (the Bulgarians, Russians, and Serbs) did not follow the
decorative model of the Greek manuscript, which was usually identical
to iconography and painting. Among the Serbs, all three artistic types
did not become identical in the language of art until the fourteenth
century.
The Patron's Portrait of Mihailo,
the King of Zeta, on a fresco at the church of St. Michael in Ston
The historical periods of Serbian artwork and art as a whole
practically overlap with the basic periods of Serbian political and
national history. Undoubtedly, within the temporal boundaries of
Serbian history, three caesurae were decisive. The first occurred in
the middle of the twelfth century, when the state of Raska was being
built, and when Stefan Nemanja stepped into a leading role in it. He
became the founder of the dynasty that ruled for two centuries. The
state consolidated and expanded, Orthodoxy put down its roots and soon
after became the national church, and Byzantium became the cultural
and political paragon. From Byzantium, the monumental and plastic
language of painting was accepted and then reworked, and it left its
mark on the epoch. The second great change occurred at the end of the
thirteenth century with the expansion of Serbia into the Vardar Basin
and Macedonia. The new Byzantinization of the society, institutions
and art clearly marked the new epoch. The style which got its name
from the Byzantine emperor's family name - Paleologos - covered,
through the workshops of the Serbian royal court, all the Serbian
territories, including some of the Catholic areas as well. The Serbian
ruler began preparations to replace the Byzantine basileus. In the
mid-fourteenth century, the Serbian state spread from the Danube and
Sava to the Adriatic Sea, the Aegean Sea and Ionic Sea, as far as the
Bay of Corinth. The breakdown of that empire was prepared gradually,
and the Battle on the Maritsa in 1371 marred it with its first
significant defeat on the battlefield. The Turks occupied or annexed
large territories in the South. The new era was not different just
because of the political disunity in the Serbian state and lands, but
also because of the variety of local phenomena and schools (of
architecture, art). However, the main models were still Salonica and
Athos and their new artwork, saturated with emotions. At that time,
the coastal Catholic areas accepted the Gothic style from the West.
They influenced Orthodox believers with it, including followers of the
Bosnian church as well, who were more closely tied to the towns on the
Adriatic.
Between the crucial events in Serbian art history, which influenced
artistic expression as well, there were some minor successes,
developments and failures, which, however, left fairly evident traces.
In the periodization, they indicate the specific character of the
shorter periods or artistic elements, especially in the fourteenth and
fifteenth centuries.
|
| II. CHARACTERISTICS OF THE OLDEST WORKS
|
The trends in artwork among the Serbs till the middle of the twelfth
century cannot be established because there are only a few preserved
fragments of what were once complete works. Another difficulty is that
those from the interior of the country, from the centre of the Raska
state, are older by a century than the newer works done along the
Adriatic coast. Even so, however insufficient they are for the
presentation of a more complete picture of the events in artistry,
they do disclose the two sources of inspiration for the painters who
worked in those times long ago among the Serbs. Influences from the
Byzantine provinces poured into Raska in the tenth century. In Zeta
they came from the Apennine peninsula and from the old Romance towns;
Dubrovnik, for example, was such a town at that time.
The frescoes of the oldest layer in the rotunda of the church of St.
Peter and Paul in Ras - preserved in the tambour of the cupola and on
the walls in the cupola bay, with several scenes from the life of
Christ, from the Annunciation to the Baptism - have certain rare
specific qualities which have no clear analogy anywhere else. The
frescoes in the cupola are painted in splendid frameworks. In the
cupola bay they are encompassed by a system of ornaments and crosses
at the tops of the arches and in the niches, carved into the fresh
mortar. With the aid of the sgraffito technique, these frescoes
imitated a luxuriant system of ornamental frameworks by means of
tracery in the plaster, which was applied in Carolingian and Ottonian
art in Western Europe. Figures with restrained movements, almost
without plasticity, done in the colour of ochre and in pinkish tones,
with two-coloured white and yellow backgrounds, bear a distant
resemblance to rare Byzantine provincial pieces from the end of the
tenth century and very beginning of the eleventh century (Koropi in
Attica, St. Stephen in Castoria). Because of the extent of their
fading, these frescoes do not offer much data about the mixture of
Byzantine and western stylistic expression.
There is more evidence of this in the works coming from the territory
of the state of Zeta, from Dubrovnik and its environs. The fragments
of paintings from the Dubrovnik cathedral, from the church of St.
Nicholas on Prijeko, and St. Elijah on Lopud, were mostly found during
archaeological investigations. They indicate that, in the decades
around the turn of the twelfth century, there was, in Dubrovnik, a
favourite kind of painting in which the Byzantine type of saint and
Byzantine stylisation of form were simplified in a Romanesque way: the
lines are significantly thicker, the shadows stronger, the rendering
left without half-tones, and the expressiveness of faces and movements
are highlighted.
The balanced relationship between Byzantine and Romanesque stylistic
traits was often disturbed by an overemphasis on one of them in the
works done in Dubrovnik; most often, the Romanesque western influence
prevailed. This is true in the layout and style of the paintings in
the little church of St. John the Baptist on the island of Sipan. The
Byzantine characteristics are represented there only in the plan of
the apse with the Deesis and Church Fathers, where some of the other
portrayals of the saints also invoke the Byzantine prototype, while
individual figures in the nave and the angels in the vault are all
Romanesque.
The painters of Dubrovnik most certainly worked for the dignitaries of
the Serbian state in Zeta as well. Several fragments with faces from
the paintings in the ruins of St. Thomas at Kuti in Boka Kotorska are
the work of the same hand as several of the holy figures uncovered at
the early Romanesque cathedral in Dubrovnik. The church of St. Thomas
had larger dimensions than its contemporaries in Zeta. The painting
was framed by low-relief ornamentation and profiles in the plaster-
work which, along with the lavish plastics of the iconostasis, reveals
that its patron was an eminent dignitary in the government, if not the
king himself.
The Holy Virgin Odigitrija, an icon
from Hilandar
Two other churches from the same period, from the end of the eleventh
or beginning of the twelfth centuries, are examples of two opposing
choices made by patrons. In the church of St. Michael at Ston, the
endowment of the King of Zeta most probably King Mihailo, a
significant part of the frescoes of the completely Romanesque layout
in the decorations remains: The Original Sin in the apse, the Maiestas
Domini in the vault of the chancel, the evangelists and standing
saints in the niches to the sides, and the King and patron with a
model of the church in his hands. All of this was also done in a
provincial variant of the Romanesque style, with highlighted
distortions whose remarkable models were found in the Roman art of the
eleventh and twelfth centuries. In contrast to this conception was the
work of the painter who did the frescoes in the small single nave
church on Panik near Trebinje. This church is now in ruins. The
refined drawings of the heads of the saints, the gentle plasticity,
are quite Byzantine in their style. They were accompanied by Greek
inscriptions, which can be seen in the remains which have been dug up.
The Greek inscriptions over the frescoes from Panik are unique,
because all the other inscriptions from the area around Dubrovnik are
in Latin. These are the only outward signs of the confessions of these
churches - some were of the Catholic cult, others in the Orthodox. The
King of Zeta himself, judging from his clothing and the insignias
found on the portrait in St. Michael's above Ston, was a follower of
the court fashion and customs of western Europe. At that time, Romance
Dubrovnik was for neighbouring Zeta, and especially for its immediate
Serb environs, the artistic centre and main mediator in its relations
with the European West.
|
| III. FROM STEFAN NEMANJA TO KING MILUTIN
1. MONUMENTALITY AND PLASTICITY
|
In the 1160s, the Great Zupan Stefan Nemanja consolidated his power on
the throne in Raska. Soon after, the country expanded to the coast
between Peljesac and Scutari which remained part of the country more
or less throughout the Middle Ages. His successors expanded the
country to the North by the end of the thirteenth century, at one time
as far as the Sava and Danube, and to the South almost to Skopje.
Although Nemanja's sons got the title of king and established the
church as independent by making it autocephalous, developed the
economic system and coined money, became richer and more
sophisticated, the times, the work and person of Stefan Nemanja
remained a great model and an example to be emulated by the younger
generations. Immediately upon his death he was conferred the title of
chrismatory saint, his heirs were considered to be of a holy lineage,
and his churches and paintings were considered to be prototypes.
Stefan Nemanja initiated the artistic endeavours of the time - in his
day, a new type of church architecture was created by crossing the
Byzantine style and space with the Romanesque exterior, while the
models for painting became endowments of Byzantine rulers or
aristocrats with their typical programmatic, iconographic and
stylistic traits. When Stefan Nemanja decorated the frescoes of his
monument to victory, the church of St. George, also called Djurdjevi
Stupovi, on a hill outside the capital in Ras, he transferred the
contemporary trend in Byzantine decoration to the Serbian ruler's
endowment. The contemporary churches in the Byzantine dynasty of the
Comnen family had similarly framed scenes and figures supplemented by
drawn arches and pillars. The figures were uniformly done with many
lines, and the clothes were fluttering, with wafting hems, so that the
impression is left of a greater sweep by the figure, and thus the
scene itself becomes highlighted to a greater extent.
Nemanja acquired the mosaic icon, the Holy Virgin Odigitrija, toward
the end of his life as that of his Serbian Orthodox slava for his
monastery Hilandar; Mary shows the signs of her spiritual life in her
large eyes, as did so many saints of Comnenian times. The same ideals
were then sweeping throughout the lands of Orthodoxy, from Ladoga to
Venice, including the vicinity of the Serbian state (the monastery of
Nerezi near Skopje and Veljusa, Backovo in Bulgaria, Osios David in
Salonica, etc.). The calming of the heightened emotions and the forms
appropriate to them began at the end of the twelfth century (for
example: the remains of the fresco of the second layer in St. Peter's
near Novi Pazar). This trend in the Byzantine Empire was suddenly
halted in 1204 when two of its key spiritual centres, Constantinople
and Salonica, were invaded and captured by Catholic knights.
Nemanja's main endowment, the monastery at Studenica, was painted only
after his death. His sons - Stefan, the heir to the throne, Vukan the
great Prince, and Sava who was then the hegumen of the monastery -
invited a famous Byzantine painter who did the church in the new
spirit in 1208-1209. Large, dignified figures of the saints, with
peaceful faces and calm drapery, the plastic clarity of size of the
figures and the monumental character of the scenes - these are new
expressions of beauty. Highlighted luxury in the form of golden
leaflets in the backgrounds of some of the frescoes and on the
inscriptions, and expensive azure in the background of others and
decorative frames around especially respected saints - all of this is
an essential part of the prestigious ambitions of the Serbian Great
Zupans in relation to the other Orthodox rulers in the environs. The
beauty and luxury of the frescoes at Studenica, and especially the
authority of Studenica as the mausoleum of the first Serbian saint, as
well as the general situation in the former Byzantine territories,
caused Serbian kings in the thirteenth century to use Studenica as a
model.
The new style in Serbia gained a powerful stimulus with the arrival of
painters from Constantinople at Zica in 1220, at the time when it was
being finished as the cathedral church of the autocephalous Serbian
archbishop. Sava, who had fought for the new status of the Serbian
church, and first sat at its head, and who had been a monk at Athos
for many years, knew the situation in art quite well, so he always
chose the best of the Greek painters for Serbian endowments.
The Crucifixion of Christ, a
fresco from the church of the Holy Virgin at Studenica
Due to him, King Vladislav also brought Greeks in when he was painting
the monastery of Mileseva around 1225, as the mausoleum church for
Sava and himself. Greek painters, most probably from Salonica, brought
a style of painting to Mileseva, introduced in a fresco technique,
which was cultivated in the mosaic workshops in the city of St.
Dimitrios. In several ways it evokes the artwork of Salonica's older
and more respectable churches such as the churches of St. Dimitrios
and St. George. Small rectangles, like an imitation of mosaic tiles,
were painted in the backgrounds of the frescoes which were gilded in
the nave. Because of the luxuriant effect, this was a technique which
would be repeated many times over in the endowments of Serbian rulers.
The figures in Mileseva are much more plastic-looking than those at
Studenica and Zica, and they lead directly to the ultimate realization
of the artistic ideal of the thirteenth century.
Apart from the great Greek painters, other artists worked in Serbia
for whom it cannot be said, as for the painters of the church of the
Holy Virgin in Studenica or those of Mileseva, that they did not know
the Serbian language. This suggests that they were native painters, or
foreigners who had grown completely accustomed to the Serbian milieu.
They painted for archbishop Sava in the bell tower at Zica, for King
Radoslav in the outer narthex and accompanying chapels beside it at
the monastery of Studenica. One of their groups, probably one studio,
left its traces in the oldest frescoes of the church of the Holy
Virgin of Ljevisa (around 1230), in the little church of St. Nicholas
in Studenica (Nikoljaca, probably around 1240) and in Moraca (1251-
52). In the older parts, the remains of the style of the twelfth
century are still seen, sometimes even in the rough graphics, while in
the newer churches the effort to achieve the trends in plastic
expression is obvious. The gradual filling the form with volume is
especially seen in the works of the workshops in Ljevisa-Nikoljaca-
Moraca. In Moraca, the artist achieved his peak in quality and in
stylistic maturity. The Moraca cycle, dedicated to St. Elijah, is the
direct predecessor of the greatest achievements of the epoch.
The frescoes in the church of the Holy Apostles at the Patriarchate of
Pec (around 1260) and in Sopocani (around 1265) are the culmination of
the monumental and plastic style of the thirteenth century. The former
are based on Studenica and Zica with their dark resonance and mystical
poetics, and the latter are - with their bright colours, the gold
leafing on all frescoes, the beauty of figures and their athletic
builds - a continuation of Mileseva and Moraca and their fascination
with classical antiquity. The former were more suitable for the
ecclesiastical circles around the archbishopric, and the latter for
royal court circles. The Ascension in the cupola of Pec, like the
Crucifixion scenes in Studenica and Zica, symbolises (like every
masterpiece) the highest artistic ideals of its time, in this case the
ideals of Serbian spiritualism in the thirteenth century. The
Assumption in Sopocani, like its predecessors in Serbia - the angel
from the resurrection in Mileseva or St. Elijah in the cave in Moraca
- comprises the aesthetics of the high lay classes of society, and not
only in Serbia. Sopocani, as the monument in the Serbian capital,
built and painted at the time when Constantinople was liberated from
the Catholics, is at the same time a monument to the victory of
Orthodoxy over Catholicism (hence it was dedicated to the Holy
Trinity, the nature of which had been the subject of so many
disagreements with the Catholics). The icons of Christ and the Holy
Virgin Odigitrija from the monastery of Hilandar, which are very close
to the artwork of Sopocani, are probably even closer to the figures in
the Deesis in Hagia Sophia in Constantinople. They indicate even more
directly that the conceptions in Sopocani had their roots in
Constantinople.
In Sopocani a decorative plan was carried out which was formed
throughout the thirteenth century - in the chancel there are
liturgical scenes, in the nave Christ's salvation work is shown
through a cycle of the Great Feasts, in the narthex the Old Testament,
dogmatic and eschatological themes are presented. Through the
iconographic portraits of the Nemanjic family and through historical
scenes, the aspects of Serbian dynastic ideology are disclosed:
celebrated ancestor saints, Simeon Nemanja and Saint Sava as Old
Testament forefathers and Christian spiritual fathers, and Serbian
rulers as the guardians of Orthodoxy. Contemporary Serbian dignitaries
are presented as faithful followers and eminent heirs of their saintly
predecessors and of their activities. In Mileseva, the position and
relationship of the Serbian dynasty to the Byzantine basileus is shown
through artwork, and with it certain spiritual subjection of Serbia to
Byzantium. In the side chapel of Studenica, the coordination between
church and state in the young Serbian state is declared, based on
Nemanja's forsaking of power for the sake of his faith. Although the
icons are done in the Byzantine style or borrowed from the Byzantine
Empire, Serbian clergymen, with their knowledge of theology and law,
had a great influence in formulating the Serbian dynastic, ruling and
ecclesiastical ideas in a special way.
After Gradac (about 1275), the endowment of Queen Jelena, the wife of
the founder of Sopocani - King Uros I - whose painters were high on
the scale of creativity, there was a hiatus in creative artwork in
Serbia. The last quarter of the thirteenth century saw the repetition
of previous concepts, without the great painters of earlier times (the
frescoes in the chapel at Djurdjevi Stupovi from 1282-83 with
significant historical artwork; Arilje 1296; St. Peter near Novi Pazar
- with its third layer dating from the end of the century; the icons
of saints Peter and Paul in Rome, with portraits of Queen Jelena and
her sons, kings Dragutin and Milutin). While painters in Serbia were
holding on to their old teachings, the Byzantine painters in the great
cities of Constantinople and Salonica were preparing a new style,
through paintings of miniatures and frescoes, which would be named
after the new Byzantine dynasty of Paleologos.
The Raven Feeding St. Elijah, a
fresco at the church of the Assumption of the Holy Virgin in the
monastery of Moraca
The painting of Serbian royal endowments and cathedrals in the
thirteenth century, filled (in the whole history of Byzantine artwork)
the gap which was created by the Catholic capture of Constantinople
and the destruction of the Byzantine Empire. It is the product of the
best painters working in the Orthodox world at that time.
*
In Boka Kotorska, Serbia's most important access point to the sea, two
bishoprics - one Catholic with its see in Kotor, and the other
Orthodox on the Prevlaka peninsula, which belonged to the Serbian
autocephalous church at the beginning of the thirteenth century - both
cultivated their own kinds of artwork. Catholic frescoes and icons
most often carried Latin inscriptions, although there were some in
Serbian Church Slavonic; those of the Orthodox church had Slavic
inscriptions, although there were also some in Greek.
Five or six monuments, all built in the period from the end of the
twelfth century to the end of the thirteenth century, reveal the
tastes of the two confessions of the artwork's patrons. At that time,
the patrons came from the station of the Serb and Catholic church
dignitaries and the urban aristocracy of Romance origin. If a
comparison is made of the three saintly figures in St. Luke's in Kotor
from the very end of the twelfth century (the endowment of
aristocratic family Casafranca), with the frescoes in the apse of the
church of the Veil of the Holy Virgin in Bijela from the first two
decades of the thirteenth century (painted on the initiative of the
Orthodox bishop Danilo), it can be seen that they differ in their
inscriptions, iconography and stylistic traits. The inscriptions in
St. Luke's were in Latin and in Bijela they were in Greek. The three
saintly figures in St. Luke's are wearing clothing of both Catholic
and Orthodox cults. In Bijela the frescoes of the Holy Virgin
(accompanied by two bowing angels) and the Procession of the Hierarchs
are done in the iconographic style which appeared at that time in
Byzantine art, and in the neighbouring archbishopric of Ohrid as well;
the Orthodox archbishopric of Boka Kotorska was under the authority of
Ohrid. The stylistic traits of the frescoes in St. Luke's, with a
combination of Comnenian Byzantine and Romanesque characteristics,
have parallels in the paintings of the caves in Apulia in that period.
The frescoes in Bijela carry characteristics unique to Byzantine
painting from the beginning of the thirteenth century, the time when
stylistic expression began to liberate itself from Comnenian linear
designs.
In the 1270s, the frescoes in the Catholic church of St. Paul in
Kotor, over the grave of its founder Pavle Bari, and in the choir of
the Orthodox church of St. Peter in the village of Bogdasici were
done by order of the Serbian archbishop on Prevlaka. The figure of
the apostle Paul from St. Paul's has certain naturalistic features of
Gothic origin, although they are expressed through Byzantine
stylization. The saints and scenes in Bogdasici are the brilliant work
of a painter who brought the teachings of Sopocani to the Adriatic
from the interior of Serbia.
The frescoes from the end of the thirteenth century in St. Mary at the
River (Koledata) in Kotor are the culmination of the artwork in Kotor
at the time. They are also an illustrative example of the position of
the Catholic church in terms of religious artwork on the boundaries of
the Orthodox world. The layout is completely Catholic: scenes from
the sufferings of Christ are set around the crucifixion scene in the
apse, with an unusual collection of saints on the western wall.
However, the iconography is basically Orthodox, while in the style
itself there are intrusions of the Gothic into the Byzantine
conception. The artist probably took the Roman artwork around the
studios of the masters Toriti and Rusutti as his model.
From the example in Boka Kotorska, it can be seen that the artists who
worked for Orthodoxy closely followed what was happening in the
central areas of Serbia, remaining faithful to the Orthodox
conceptions of painting, while the Catholic artists turned their eyes
to the artistic centres in Italy, choosing for themselves those styles
which did not differ, at first sight, from those of Orthodoxy. Even
the Renaissance and Baroque Catholic prelates, when inspecting the
bishoprics, noted that there were still churches preserved in which
tota depicta picturis graecis.
|
| 2. CYRILLIC ILLUMINATION BETWEEN THE EAST
AND WEST
|
The separate existence of illumination in Serbian handwritten books,
without significant influences from the contemporary style of frescoes
or icons, was primarily evident from the end of the twelfth to the end
of the thirteenth centuries. Illumination appeared, above all, in the
painting of initials, and only later in bannerets and vignettes, while
illustrations or pictures covering an entire page appeared only in
exceptional cases. The illustration of contemporary Russian and
Bulgarian books was practically the same.
The first examples were two richly illuminated books from the end of
the twelfth century, Miroslav's Gospel and Vukan's Gospel. The former
is dominated by large initials of geometric, vegetative, zoomorphic
and figure design, and in the latter there were most often small
initials with geometric tracery, sometimes with a wolf's head at the
top. Yet, Vukan's Gospel also has two figures, done as drawings on
entire pages - John the Evangelist and Christ Emmanuel. While
Miroslav's Gospel, done somewhere in the hinterlands of the Adriatic,
has elements of the Romanesque style, the figures in Vukan's Gospel
show the traits of the Byzantine style of the Comnenian period.
The common Serbian manuscript from the thirteenth century has more
humble initials than those in these two manuscripts; mostly they were
of geometric and teratological character. The "Animalist Style" of
initial makes them related to the general Slavic illumination of
Cyrillic books. It was a special favourite of the copyists at the
monastery of Hilandar. On that basis, from time to time a rare
luxuriant or unusual manuscript would be produced. The Hilandar
Gospel (no. 22) from the beginning of the century, is characterised by
large initials whose forms were inspired by Miroslav's Gospel; the
lavishness of their gold leafing, unique in the thirteenth century,
reveals that the patron was wealthy. The Belgrade Paroemaic, from the
same period, has several exceptional drawn figurative and animalistic
initials, which are appropriate to that manuscript, which is perhaps
the most beautifully calligraphed manuscript of the thirteenth
century. Another paroemaic, from Hilandar, is the work of daring but
artistically unskilled drawers of initials, over-imaginative ones at
that. From the end of the thirteenth century, the so-called Prizren
Gospel with rich figurative decorations in the margins of the pages,
drawn and vividly coloured, was probably done at a colony of Serbian
monks in the Holy Land. In those initials, there are many oriental and
western stylistic traits, and the clothing of the figures shows
something of Islamic fashion.
The Holy Virgin with the
Angels, in the church of the Holy Apostles, the Patriarchate of
Pec
Even though they were quite faithful to the Slavic tradition in the
decoration of books, done apparently on the basis of the experience of
Byzantine provincial scribes, in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries
Serbian illuminations were also under the influence of the West, by
way of the Adriatic coast lands. They accepted inspiration from
Byzantine book and wall artistry and were open to oriental influences
as well. In spite of that, they retained their independence and that
which differentiated them from other artistic genres.
|
| IV. FROM KING MILUTIN TO THE FALL OF THE
EMPIRE
1. CLASSICISM AND ACADEMISM
|
The liberation of Constantinople from Catholic hands made it possible
to place the capital of the Empire, and its second great city
Salonica, again at the forefront of artistic creativity in all the
Orthodox world. In the last decade of the thirteenth century, the last
efforts to maintain the monumental painting of the thirteenth century,
of energetic plastic expression, were extinguished. Painters in that
generation were inspired by a new intellectual climate, by the ideas
of Greek classical education and theological views which relied on the
teaching of the church fathers once again. The liturgy changed as well
under the influence of religious poetry, and the number of
interpreters and homilists grew. The effect this had on artwork was
manifold, especially since the patrons and their counsellors were
members of the most highly educated classes of society. The layout of
the paintings in churches was expanded by learned themes and cycles;
the iconography took in unusual interpretations, metaphors and
symbols; the style was adapted to a multitude of stories and
interpretations and became narrative, with pictures overflowing into
the figures and episodes. The placement of the pictures tended ever
more toward classicist views, the appearance and the proportions of
the figures became classical.
The conquests of King Milutin in Macedonia, at the end of the
thirteenth century, and his marriage with a Byzantine princess,
created the conditions for the Serbian milieu to get involved in the
new trends in art (the so-called Paleologos renaissance), thanks to
the royal court, around the year 1300. From that time forward every
change in artistry, even the smallest, which occurred in
Constantinople or Salonica had reverberations in Serbia. Apart from
that, King Milutin managed to bring the famous painter named Michael
Astrapas to Serbia from Salonica, from the reputable family of
painters, the Astrapas, along with Eutyches and his assistants, by
creating the conditions for them to work in continuity. It was
through them that he ensured high artistic quality in his frescoes.
Immediately before that, these painters had worked together in Ohrid,
in the church of the Holy Virgin Periblepta, with a famous Byzantine
aristocrat who was also a son-in-law to the Emperor's dynasty. There
they broke with old conceptions. They retained figures with strong
physical traits, but they broke down their solid forms; they
transformed their dignified tranquillity into strong movement, and
their philosophical facial expressions into anger and wrath. They
achieved this through a "cubist" stylisation not known before that
time, with broken lines and their choice of a warm colour scheme.
It is possible that they came to Serbia around 1300 when the western
part of the church of the Holy Apostles was being painted in the
Patriarchate of Pec. There are striking similarities between those
frescoes and the ones they did in Ohrid, although the figures are more
elongated and quieter, and the rendering is more restrained. However,
that was the general trend in Byzantine artistry at the time. It is
certain that they were in Serbia around 1310, when the Holy Virgin of
Ljevisa in Prizren was painted, because Astrapa signed his work there.
In Ljevisa, as in Zica, where artists similar to them were at work,
one still sees the hesitation between the monumental and the
narrative, between the large figures and the scenes which were re-
established in a new way, between the emotional and the rational.
In the 1310s in Constantinople, Salonica and Serbia, the classicist
ideals were realised, toward which artwork had been aspiring since the
end of the previous century. The endowments of King Milutin in which
the painters Michael and Eutyches had worked till 1321 - the King's
church at Studenica, Staro Nagoricino, St. Nicetas near Skopje,
Gracanica - along with the frescoes and icons of some of the painters
from Salonica in the monastery of Hilandar, at Athos, the monastery
which was renovated by King Milutin, these are masterpieces not only
in Serbia but all over the Orthodox world at the time. A balance was
established between thematic richness and formal design, between the
emotional character of the scenes and the structure of the
composition, immoderate demonstration of moods in gestures or facial
expressions was restrained. A balance was also established between
mass and symmetry; the relationship between light and dark, the
relations between warm and cold colours became uniform. The
backgrounds became architectonic structures or landscapes; the
backdrops were assembled so that it was possible to place a myriad of
figures in the foreground. This inverse perspective brought the event
closer to the believer in the church, making him a witness and not an
apathetic observer. Classical clothing, the appearances of the faces
and the movements of the figures, extracted from earlier Byzantine
artistic "renaissances", made it possible for this period of the so-
called "Paleologos Renaissance" to be called classicist.
Serbian artwork from the endowments of King Milutin was a unique
entity compared to its contemporaries in the capital of the Empire
and in Salonica. It was not left behind either in its conceptions nor
in its value in relation to the most beautiful works such as the
mosaics in Constantinople in Christ Chora or the Holy Virgin
Pamakaristos or Salonica's in the Holy Apostles or the frescoes such
as those at Protaton on Athos, St. Nicholas Orphanos in Salonica or
the Holy Salvation in Veroia.
After the last monument of King Milutin, up to the mid-fourteenth
century, there were no significant changes in the iconography or style
of painting in Serbia, although patrons came from the aristocracy or
from among the lesser church dignitaries, and though the boundaries
were changing and the government was being perfected. The royal court
still tried to find good painters, and the aristocracy followed the
examples that came from them. Even though the amount of artistic work
was increased, artists from domestic workshops were still the
mainstay.
As in the Byzantine world, in the 1320s there were certain
vacillations in terms of stylistic expression, while the number of
themes was further enriched and expanded. Trained artists attempted
not to betray the classicist conceptions of the 1310s; the best of
them wanted to step away from the familiar, stressing the emotional
side of the painting, enlarging the figures or highlighting their
expressiveness. The frescoes in St. Nicholas in Dabar, and the large
icon in the church of St. Nicholas in Bari in Apulia, endowed by King
Stefan Decanski, are all examples of the fresher approach and the
special designs done on classicist models. Master painters in the
Serbian archbishopric in Pec in the fourth decade of the century (the
church of the Holy Virgin and the exonarthex) worked essentially along
the same lines, attempting to attain something new through
deformation, but they were not nearly as talented as the artists in
St. Nicholas in Dabar.
The Assumption of the Virgin, a
fresco at Sopocani
The frescoes in aristocratic endowments - Holy Salvation in
Kuceviste, Rila, Treskavac, Polosko - from the fourth and fifth
decades of the century were done in the spirit of the preceding
concepts, along with a certain reduction in form and simplicity in
colour, as it was among artists of the academic trend. Central
monuments of that trend are the frescoes in the nave and icons from
the iconostasis at Decani, done in 1345, under the care and at the
expense of King Stefan Dusan. Large numbers of artists tried for years
to create hundreds of scenes from the numerous cycles and thousands of
figures, in order to capture contemporary theological teachings as
well as possible at the bequest of the King's advisors. Because of the
prestigious ambitions of the King at that time, he intended his
endowments to look as luxuriant as possible. Thus the frescoes were
painted in the most expensive colours; they were gilded in many places
and framed wherever possible with wide decorative tracery, full of
floral and leafy vine designs. While they were painting Decani, the
Serbian archbishops also finished the work begun by their predecessors
in their see in Pec. They borrowed the king's painters for that
occasion (the frescoes in the church of St. Dimitrios, and some of
those in the church of the Holy Apostles). It is not known whether it
was inadvertent, but the academic conceptions loyal to classicism from
the second decade of the century were defended by the authority of the
sovereign and the archbishop. Perhaps the royal court and church
thought that such artwork was actually appropriate to their dignity.
Local painters, who stayed to work for the aristocracy in Raska
(Karan, Dobrun) or for the urban lords in Prizren (at Holy Salvation,
St. Nicholas), did not distance themselves from modern stylistic
patterns. They only simplified the designs.
In the coastal regions, on the actual border of Orthodoxy and
Catholicism, in the first half of the fourteenth century the most
interesting are the pictores graeci. They came from Greek towns and
settled, temporarily or permanently, in Kotor and Dubrovnik. Adapting
their style to that of the West, they were granted large jobs by the
Catholic authorities and believers. About 1330 they painted the large
cathedral of St. Triphonos, of which only a few figures and scenes
remain. Their mainstay was Byzantine art, but under the influence of
the Gothic style they greatly deformed the figures when they
represented their internal life in dramatic situations. They achieved
designs similar to those of the mosaics in the baptistery of St.
Mark's in Venice. It is possible that the same painters worked for a
while in the Venetian Republic before coming to Kotor.
Basically, at the same time the little church at the monastery of
Duljevo, above Budva, was also painted; it is possible that it was
already the extension of the monastery of Decani. Apart from the
saints, King Stefan Decanski was also portrayed in the frescoes,
holding a model of the church and accompanied by his son Dusan. The
pictures are Romanesque-Gothic, with few remains of Byzantine
stylisation, even less than those in the cathedral of Kotor. Powerful
figures of unusual appearance remain as a testimony of the living and
unpredictable trends in the artwork of Serbia in the second quarter of
the fourteenth century.
|
| 2. THE PERIOD OF EMOTIONALISM AND LUXURY
|
The artwork of the period of the Serbian Empire (1346-1371) contains
certain unique stylistic and iconographic features which set it off
from the preceding and following periods in the history of Serbian
art, more definitely from the former than from the latter. The
academism of the Paleologos renaissance from the second quarter of the
fourteenth century was satisfied with seeming repetitions of the
preceding forms done only with artisan skill and with designs lacking
in creative ambitions. Expertise had come completely to the
forefront. The new conceptions in the period of the empire, as opposed
to the preceding ones, emphasized the emotional in paintings. Some
painters did this primarily by highlighting the expressive character
of the painting with suggestive looks and by means of stylization, or
even through the deformation of physiognomic lines; to this, they
most often added expressive postures, sometimes with unnatural or
surprising movements. In that way they amplified the dramatic
character of the frescoes. Other artists opted for a delicate and
light colour scheme, gentle expressions and calm postures for the
figures, thus conjuring up clarity and lyric tendencies. Both trends
flooded into painting after 1371. At that time, the creators attained
even stronger personal traits, and their studios became characterized
by unique traits.
John the Evangelist, a
miniature from Vukan's Gospel
If the stylistic changes occurred suddenly with the founding of the
empire, changes in iconography were not significant; in fact, they
were hardly noticeable. However, in the iconography of Serbian rulers,
they were quite distinct, and the groundwork for them was being laid
over a long period. The goal for them was to show how the Serbian
ruler was suited to replace the basileus on the throne of the Orthodox
Empire. This idea had been cultivated from the time of King Milutin.
The obsession with the creation of the royal lineage of the dynasty
was quite powerful, emphasizing the holiness of the lineage and its
loyalty to the faith. Earlier series of chosen members of the Nemanjic
house, painted one after the other or one on top of the other, with
St. Simeon Nemanja and St. Sava at the head, were converted into a
vertical genealogy of the dynasty or a family tree, under the
influence of learned theologians or writers. Similar to the tree of
Jesse which is a picture of the Old Testament predecessors of Christ,
on the tree of the Nemanjic family Nemanja is at the root like Jesse,
while the contemporary Serbian sovereign is at the top, like the Holy
Virgin with Christ in the tree of Jesse. King Milutin made the first
such genealogy at Gracanica, and Dusan accepted it and repeated it
three times over: in Pec, Matejic and in Decani. Serbian sovereigns
are glorified as defenders of the faith, as the new Constantines, to
whom Christ sends the sovereign's crown and vestments from heaven, as
He did for Constantine. Just before proclaiming the empire, Dusan did
the Lineage of Serbian Rulers at Matejic, into which are woven several
Byzantine emperors as well as his own predecessors. With this he
wished to justify his political pretences for the throne in
Constantinople.
In ecclesiastical literature the Serbian kings were compared to the
Old Testament fathers and Kings, and in artwork they were given
iconographic features which revealed them to be as such. Dusan and his
father, above the entrance to the nave of Decani, are receiving divine
messages like David and Solomon of old, whose pictures stand next to
them. In Polosko, Dusan is the new Joshua, because he is receiving the
victory sword from the hand of the archangel, sent by Christ. The
title of the Serbian sovereign is of divine origin, like the one in
the Byzantine Empire, because members of the Nemanjic family are shown
receiving the crown from angels who bring it from heaven, a depiction
which occurs several times from Milutin's era forward.
With the proclamation of the Empire, the Serbian archbishopric was
raised to the status of a patriarchate. Harmony between church and
state is shown with the painting of dignitaries of the church together
with the Emperor's family (the church of St. Dimitrios in Pec, the
narthex of Decani, and in Ohrid at St. Sophia, St. Nicholas the
Protector of Hospitals, and the Holy Virgin Periblepta). The decision
of the Serbian Council of State, concerning questions of government or
ecclesiastical questions, were considered to be equally inspired by
God, just as much as the decisions of the individual ecumenical
councils (the church of St. Dimitrios in Pec, etc.).
These were mostly questions of borrowings from Byzantine iconography.
They were made possible only when the ideas of the new mission of the
Serbian state and church became mature in the Serbian milieu, in
Serbian literature and in theological thought.
Important changes in wall paintings and iconography, those which
characterized the whole period of the Serbian Empire, happened
suddenly in the endowments of the rulers during the preparations for
the proclamation of the empire, or just after it. The painting of
Decani was in process when the crowning of the emperor took place in
Ohrid, on Easter Day in 1346. The painters had moved their scaffolding
from the nave into the narthex and begun to work on it. At that time
the old artists (adherents of the academic trends) were replaced with
new artists, who followed other tendencies. They lightened the
colours, disturbed the figures, and deformed the faces by emphasising
their spiritual exertion. They increased the dramatic character of the
scenes, and impressed powerful character traits upon the saints. It
seems that Dusan found these artists in his own capital in Skopje,
because there are other monuments painted by masters from the same
studio in the vicinity of Skopje. Immediately after the narthex in
Decani, some of them went to paint the nave of Lesnovo, in its cupola
and in the cupola bay; the others went to the monastery of Lesak. Some
time later they were in the small church of the village of Celopek
near Tetovo. Finally, they did their masterpiece in the lower zones of
Marko's monastery. The reverberations of their conception are seen in
the frescoes of St. Nicholas in Sisevo near Skopje and in the church
of the village Lipljane in Kosovo, which are probably from the 1370s,
as well as in the monastery church of Zrze near Prilep (1368-69). The
Serbian aristocracy gladly followed the example of their emperor.
The other three endowments of the sovereign - Matejic near Kumanovo
(before 1346), the Holy Archangels near Prizren, and St. Sophia at
Ohrid (both around 1350) - all got frescoes with lighter and more
gentle colours, also rich thematically, but without dramatic
highlights in their contents or forms. The painters at Matejic were
also doing the frescoes in the nearby aristocratic endowment of
Ljuboten near Skopje. In St. Sophia at Ohrid two painters left their
signatures. One of them Ioannes Theorianos, a Greek, created an entire
school at Ohrid. He worked with his assistants in the little churches
around Ohrid at that time: the little church of the Holy Healers, the
Holy Virgin of the Hospitals, St. Panteleimon (the monastery of St.
Clement), while the work of his followers was continued in the Holy
Virgin Periblepta (especially in the south chapel), at Celnica and
Pestani near Ohrid. The exceptional two-sided icon with the figures of
St. Clement and St. Naum, the protectors of Ohrid, is also the work of
Theoreianos. The largest and most successful work of his pupils is
found in the nave of St. Sophia at Ohrid, in the little church in the
village Recica not far away, and in the endowment of King Vukasin and
King Marko, in Marko's monastery (in the upper zones and among the
standing figures). His followers in Recica and Marko's monastery
brought his style to a point of exceptional expressiveness. They
abandoned the light colour scheme to achieve mystical splashes of
light on the dark gamut of the painting, they elongated the bodies and
robbed them of their depth; they made the saints look suggestive. The
domestic artwork of Ohrid experienced its zenith in their work.
Somewhere between those two trends, which more or less overlapped, a
whole series of aristocratic endowments was done in the Vardar basin
in the time of Emperor Uros: Zaum, the second layer of frescoes in
Treskavac, Konce, Recani, Psaca, and St. John Prodromos near Serrai.
The gentle distortion of the figures, the ornamental stylisation of
the hair, the moderately light colour scheme without sharp contrasts -
these are the special traits of their work. In that collection there
is also a series of contemporary icons in Ohrid.
The Nativity of the Mother of
God, fresco, King's church at Studenica
The period of the Empire left a significant trace on Athos, which
became part of the Serbian state just before Dusan was crowned; it was
no longer part after the defeat on the Maritsa in 1371. The monastery
of Hilandar was under the charge of the Serbian emperor, as it had
been under the previous sovereigns. In the time of Emperor Uros, one
great painter did ten icons for the main church, one with a large
Deesis on the iconostasis, and the other as processional icons for the
church's Serbian Orthodox slava. On the request of Hegumen Dorotej in
1360, he decorated one of the older gospels with miniatures of the
evangelists. At the same time, he did the miniatures and icons in the
neighbouring monastery of Vatoped. In that classicist work, there is a
slight deformation of the figures and a calculated use of the light-
dark effects aimed at achieving the impression of a mystical
meditative atmosphere. At that time, the mystical was ever more the
centre of attention of monks and clerics.
The authority of the sovereign stood behind stylistic "academism" up
to the proclamation of the empire, and it is obvious that it was
actually that same authority which contributed to the changes that
caught hold of the entire Serbian milieu and almost all levels of
society from which the patrons came. In the Byzantine Empire itself
there was some indecision in choice of style after 1320. The decisive
academism or even the sudden about-face in the stylistic concepts
around the middle of the century were not as obvious. There are few
pieces preserved from the main artists of the Byzantine Empire for one
to trace this development. From that period, there was a great Greek
painter who combined a classicist underpinning with the new
emotionalism and presented it in light colours for the Bulgarian
Emperor Ivan Alexander at Ivanovo. From the groups of frescoes which
were done by the most significant painters in the Byzantine Empire in
the second half of the fourteenth century, in Mistra, Salonica,
Mingrelia or Novgorod, it was clear that a turn about in the
aesthetics of the painting had occurred somewhere around the middle of
the century. The language of the painting was close to that in Serbia
from the same period. An eminent connoisseur had helped the Serbian
emperor to keep up with the times and to put those in the lead who
would help the new trend take root.
In the period of the empire, a reorientation occurred in Serbian book
decoration. It seems that Hilandar, due to its copying workshop,
became its propagator. A monk named Simeon (or Simon) is connected to
a large number of Serbian and Bulgarian books in which there are
miniatures of the so-called "enamelled" style. They are exactly equal
in quality to miniatures in the most luxuriant Byzantine manuscripts
from the Emperor's workshops. Among other things at Hilandar, the
gospel of Patriarch Sava and the gospels of the great Duke Nikola
Stanjevic are kept; most likely they were donated and made at the
monastery. Now in London, the manuscript of the Metropolitan of Serrai
Jakov also belongs to that collection, as do the figures of the
evangelist in the so-called Kumanovo Gospel, and the decoration of the
apostles from Vuk's collection in Berlin (no. 47). In that fundamental
change of artistic decoration of liturgical books, when it was
decided that the luxury of Byzantine books was to be copied, it is
certain that the prestigious ambitions of Serbian aristocracy and the
Serbian emperor played an important role. It was only then that
Serbian miniature art fell in step with painting and iconography.
Emperor Andronicus and King
Milutin, fresco at Hilandar
The figures of the evangelists in the manuscripts of the monasteries
in the Vardar basin belong to the third quarter of the fourteenth
century; judging from the signatures, they were done by Greek masters
from small Macedonian towns (the Hlud Collection in the Historical
Museum in Moscow, no. 10; the Saltikov-Scedrin Collection in the
Public Library in St. Petersburg F I 114). One of them is known by
name. His name was Michael and, on account of the monks at Hilandar,
he inserted paintings of the evangelists in an older Greek manu-script
of the monastery Polosko (manuscript now in Chicago). All of those
paintings are similar to the frescoes and icons of the Serbian
aristocracy in the Vardar basin at the time. Stylistic changes took
place everywhere in the leading artwork of the time, and in the works
of lesser-known masters who worked in Slavic copying shops at the time
as well.
|
| V. FROM THE FALL OF THE EMPIRE TO THE
TURKISH CONQUEST
1. THE COMPARATIVE CHARACTER OF DRAMATIC AND LYRIC TENDENCIES
|
The year 1371 was disastrous not only for the Serbian Empire, but also
for the artwork which had been cultivated in Serbian society until
that time. With the defeat in the battle against the Turks on the
Maritsa, large territories were taken from the Serbs, and those
territories were thus no longer under the influence of their artwork.
With the death of Emperor Uros the same year, the unified authority
also disappeared and local lords with varying titles and pretences
began shaping their own states. For an entire century and longer, even
later, art was an essential part of the cultural history of those
regional states. Some of them were quite ephemeral. Others held out
for quite a while and attained high levels of economy, culture and
art. The first decades after the disintegration of the empire rendered
richer and more important results than those to come later; as the
Turkish sable began to swing, one by one the Serbian states began to
fall under Turkish rule.
The history of the southernmost part of the Serbian Empire was short,
where the Serb aristocracy governed Thessaly and Epirus, led by
members of the Nemanjic dynasty, the head of which was Dusan's half-
brother Simeon (Sinisa). That part was extinguished in the last decade
of the century, but its works were safeguarded in the monasteries in
the Meteora in Thessaly. The frescoes and iconostasis in the monastery
of the Transfiguration (Great Meteora), the endowment of the last
Serbian Emperor Jovan Uros Paleologos, and the icons of his sister and
her husband Despot Toma Preljubovic, from the ninth decade of the
century, are among the most significant of the epoch. All of them are
very luxuriant - icons with silver frames, sometimes decorated with
jewels and pearls. The emperor's works are extremely expressive, with
a lot of pathos and sharp dark-light effects; those of the Despot are
smooth, harmonious, as finely done as if they had been done by an
artist of Constantinople.
The realm of the Mrnjavcevic family did not last much longer either in
the Vardar region, with its capital in Prilep, relying on the
archbishopric in Ohrid. At that time, the see of the Metropolitan was
in Prilep, and it was held by Metropolitan Jovan who was important as
an artist. He and his brother, Hieromonk Makarije (also a painter),
were the descendants of one of the settled Serbian aristocratic
families which erected the monastery of Zrze in the vicinity of
Prilep, back in the time of Emperor Dusan. The heads of the family
became monks in their advancing years, and lived out their lives in
the monastery of Zrze. The brothers were subordinated to the church
from their childhood, but they were educated as artists in one of the
Byzantine centres of art. They were the main painters of the Prilep
royal court during the time of King Marko and his brother, Andrejas
the prince.
Andrejas was entrusted the painting of Jovan's endowment in the
church of St. Andrew in the ravine of the river Treska, not far from
Skopje in 1388-89. The Metropolitan carried out the job with the help
of his assistant, the monk Grigorije; they both signed their work. The
artwork of Andrejas reveals that Jovan relied on the monumental style
of the thirteenth century, but that he kept in touch with the
contemporary ideas in the Byzantine Empire. Loud colours, sharp
light-dark effects, "baroque" in its feeling for depth and movement,
classical in the faces of the saints, decoratively and carefully
painted, Jovan took people of strong character and appearance to be
the heroes of his artwork.
The artwork in the newer layers in the cathedral of Prilep, St.
Dimitrios, was not signed, but it bears the marks of Jovan; it is
something less skilfully done than the works he signed, as if he had
done it at the beginning of his career. It is obvious that he was
working with a single assistant. However, the large icon of Christ the
Saviour and Giver of Life, from 1393-94, from the iconostasis in the
monastery of Zrze, has the same characteristics as in the painting of
the endowment of Andrejas.
Jovan's brother, Hieromonk Makarije, painted the large icon of the
Holy Virgin of Pelagonia for the same iconostasis in 1421-22. He also
did the Deesis with an assistant. The fresco of the Holy Virgin with
Christ in the niche above the entrance to the church in the village of
Zrze is most certainly the unsigned work of Makarije, as is perhaps
the one above the entrance to the church of the Holy Virgin Immaculate
in Prilep. In a formal sense, Makarije's artwork relies heavily on
that of Jovan.
Makarije lived and worked in Prilep even after the Turkish conquest,
after his brother had already died. With the change in the political
situation, the brothers were not able to take care of their familial
endowment, the monastery of Zrze, and they willed it to their village
mayor (kmet) as part of his family inheritance. Their studio produced
other apprentices besides the monk Grigorije and the unknown assistant
from the Deesis in Zrze. There was one artist named Aleksije, who
painted the frescoes in the cave of St. Mary in their style, near the
village of Globoko on Lake Prespa; he vaunted himself in his signature
as the "student of Jovan the zograf". The influence of their work was
felt in the domain of the Serbian despots in the Morava region.
|
| 2. NOBILITY AND MELANCHOLY
|
The most significant heir to Serbian statehood was the Serbian
Principality, which had had its capital in Krusevac; it was ruled by
despots from 1402 onward, whose capitals were in Belgrade and
Smederevo. Before it fell to the Turks in 1459, the Morava region was
the meeting place of educated refugees from Salonica, Macedonia,
Bulgaria, and Athos, who made it a significant cultural centre of
literacy, literature, and art. The foundation of cultural development
was, above all, the wealth of Serbian metal mines, especially those
producing gold and silver.
The new Lazarevic dynasty held on to the heritage of the Nemanjic
family, which was to be felt in the ideology of the sovereigns. In
laymen's iconography, the older forms were accepted and applied - for
the patrons, the sovereign himself interceded before Christ, his
sovereignty was of divine origin, the archangels themselves prepared
him for victory, bringing him a sword and spear from the heavens.
Through artwork, the hierarchy of society was felt. In Studenica,
where the holy relics of the founder of the Nemanjic dynasty were
placed, a large painting of the lineage of the Serbian sovereigns was
painted on the facade of the tower at the entrance; in it the
Lazarevic family are represented as the heirs of the Nemanjic family,
attaining its holy lineage through the maternal side of the old
dynasty. The genealogies of the time justified the relationship of the
Lazarevic family and the Nemanjic family.
A Portrait of the Evangelist, a
miniature in Radoslav's Gospel
The Lazarevic dynasty continued giving endowments where the Nemanjic
family had ceased. They took over responsibility for their endowments,
especially those at Athos, but they also built new ones of their own,
large and luxuriant, practically as great as the former. Obviously on
the advice of informed prelates and educated monks who had immigrated,
they depended on artists from the workshops in Salonica and Prilep,
and on their students living in the land. They rarely had the chance
to work on the layout of the artwork in churches which could include
more than three cycles from the life of Christ - the Great Feasts, the
Passion, the Sermons with the Miracles; most often, the layouts were
smaller. Sometimes a cycle dedicated to the patron of the church would
be done. The lower zones of the walls were painted with individual
representations of the saints.
The painters from Salonica came to Serbia when Prince Lazar painted
Ravanica after 1380. They brought azure-pink-grey compositions with
them, often decorated with gold, specific to the artwork of Salonica
from the time of the frescoes of the Holy Apostles, along with saints
who were "realistic" in appearance. Examples of the latter are the
saints in the Old Metropolis in Voden or in the church of the
Pantocrator at Athos. However, in Serbia they constructed a special
decorative system, with edges covered with ornamentation and
vegetative decoration, and the medallions with busts are connected by
frames of the colours of the rainbow.
The second wave of artists from Salonica arrived around 1400, bringing
with them the spirit of the aristocratic artwork of Salonica and its
blue-gold effects, and also the iconographic models which were beloved
there. Working first for the prominent monk Sisoje in Sisojevac, and
then for Despot Stefan in Resava (till 1418), they applied their
knowledge and taste. They painted holy warriors like those in the
church of the Holy Anargyroi in the monastery of Vatoped, which was
the endowment of Despot Jovan Ugljesa. It was made possible for them
to create the impression of luxury by applying gold and azure, but
they were required to create that decorative system in the same manner
as the one in the endowment of Prince Lazar; in the Despot's endowment
it was to be more effective and richer. In Resava the heavenly court
in the cycle of Christ's parables is painted like the earthly; the
participants were in the clothing of the despot's dignitaries of the
time. Christ's teaching, made contemporary in this way, obtained
something of the spirit of the times. The painters of Resava far
surpassed the significance of the all that had been previously done in
similar stylistic expressions in the churches of Salonica.
The melancholic and elegiac artwork of the monastery of Kalenic stands
in opposition to the lordly artwork of Resava, of cold harmonies, of
royal nobility and knighthood. Kalenic's patron was the Despot's
courtier Bogdan and his family. The system of decoration established
in Ravanica also came to expression in this church, but the luxuriance
was not repeated. The painter wished to show the scenes and figures
illuminated in a restrained light, which appears as if it were coming
from a natural source, leaving transparent shadows, saturating almost
all the forms with nuances of ochre. The saints have small eyes,
gentle expressions, calm movements and steps, corresponding to a
prayerful quietness which is special, peaceful and illuminated with
reverence.
This poetics left a trace on the miniatures of the so-called
Radoslav's Gospel (now in St. Petersburg), where the evangelists, the
same as the saints in Kalenic, were done in 1429 by the painter
Radoslav. The amount of similarity between his miniatures with the
artwork of Kalenic is evidence that he painted (with his assistants)
the endowment of the Treasurer (Protovestijar) Bogdan. His conception
of painting was close to that of the miniaturist Teodor, who painted
the decorations in the manuscript of The Sermons of John Chrysostom
(from the monastery of Hilandar). It is as if he was not only his
successor, but was even one of his students.
It is quite certain that the painters of the studio in Prilep came to
Serbia at the beginning of the fifteenth century. In the monastery of
Koporin, with its mediocre frescoes, the same models were used for the
scenes from Christ's suffering that Metropolitan Jovan had at his
disposal at the endowment of Prince Andrejas. At the endowment of the
Princess Milica, Ljubostinja, in a painting of around 1405, the
painter Makarije signed his name. From the types of saints and the
rendering, it is certain that the hieromonk and zograf Makarije, the
brother of Metropolitan Jovan, was the artist. In Ljubostinja his
works are in a cold harmony of blue and grey, while those in Zrze are
warm, ochre tainted, and there are more decorations and ornaments on
the clothing in Ljubostinja, as it should be at the endowment of a
princess.
The endowments of the aristocracy - such as those at Nova Pavlica,
Rudenica, Ramaca, and Josanica from the end of the fourteenth to the
beginning of the fifteenth century - have artwork which is, in many of
its traits and qualities, equal to that from the workshops in the
small towns in Macedonia, such as Ohrid, Castoria, Veroia, Veles and
so on. They vary in their decoration of forms in the contemporary
understanding. At times, like in Veluca, or in the miniatures of A
Serbian Novel about Alexander, the works of artists who are not so
skilled at drawing appeared, impoverished, raw and clashing in colour,
and their forms tend more toward the surface than toward depth.
The Flight into Egypt, a
fresco at the church of the monastery of Kalenic
In the miniature painting in the domains of the princes and despots,
where education was the ideal and books were carefully cultivated,
artistic values were at a peak. This artwork is dominated by the same
concepts which existed in wall and icon painting. Siloan's Gospels
from the end of the fourteenth century has figures of the evangelists
similar to the prophets in the calotte of the cupola in Ljubostinja,
with the first layer of frescoes done before 1389. The most luxuriant
Serbian book from the Middle Ages, the so-called Serbian Munich
Psalter, done perhaps for Despot Stefan at the beginning of the
fifteenth century, has about 150 illustrations of the highest artistic
quality. Their colours are light, the rendering gentle, there is
harmony in the blue-pink and gold, and they belong to that branch of
Serbian royal art that kept up with the most modern of trends. This is
similar to the miniatures on the charter of Despot Djuradj for the
monastery of Esphigmenou at Athos from 1429, where seven members of
the Despot's family are represented. They stand in parade vestments,
all with striking portrait lines. Some time before the issuing of the
charter, the portrait of the despot's son Todor (who had died young)
was also done for the monastery of Gracanica.
The frescoes and miniatures of the court painters in the Morava
region, with their system of decoration, the special expression and
high quality, together with the works of the Byzantine painters
Theophanes the Greek in Novgorod, kir Emmanuel Eugenikos in Georgia or
the anonymous painter at Mistra, all enter into the anthology of the
best artwork of the last century of great Byzantine art.
Because of the political difficulties which came about and the
military failures, the artwork in the domains of the despots began to
falter. Almost three decades before the capital in Smederevo would
fall to the Turks hardly anything was being painted. After the second
fall of Salonica to the Turks, and Constantinople after it, there were
no longer any centres of creative work that could inspire the entire
Orthodox world, which included the lands of Serbia.
|
| 3. THE SPREAD OF THE GOTHIC AND THE
RENAISSANCE
|
The right to the heritage of the Nemanjic family was claimed also by
the Bosnian ban, Tvrtko. He based his claim on the fact that he had
control over territories which had once belonged to the Nemanjic
family, and by his claim that he was related to them through the
maternal line. He ordered a lineage to be done, from which it could
be seen that he had a holy lineage, he had himself crowned in Mileseva
and took the title of King of the Serbs and of Bosnia - which his
descendants kept until the state fell to the Turks; he adopted the
customs and offices of the Serbian court.
Bosnia is included in the entirety of Serbian art because of its
Cyrillic handwritten books and their decorations from the fourteenth
and fifteenth centuries. In their contents, these books did not differ
from the Orthodox liturgical manuscripts, although most of them were
ordered by the Bosnian church. Only one of these manuscripts was
intended for use in the Catholic cult. The type of initials and
bannerets mostly continued the tradition of the teratological,
geometric and figurative illumination of Serbian books from Miroslav's
Gospel to the manuscripts of the thirteenth century. Even so, at the
end of the fourteenth and beginning of the fifteenth centuries,
certain coastal, Gothic influences appeared. The books illuminated for
the Bosnian court or for Duke (Herzeg) Stefan Vukcic Kosaca at the
beginning of the fifteenth century - like the Venetian Codex, Hval's
Manuscript, and Hrvoje's Missal of Split (the only glagolitic and
Catholic book in this group) - have scenes and figures in the Gothic
style. They were done by artists from Dalmatian towns, mostly from
Split, which was a part of the Kingdom of Bosnia at the time.
The south-eastern part of the state, up to the fourteenth century
under the rule of the Nemanjic family, began to separate from Bosnia
and the name Herzegovina began to be used for it. The aristocratic
family Hranic-Kosaca, which ruled there, belonged to the Orthodox
church and was under the jurisdiction of the Metropolis which had its
see at Mileseva. As patrons, the members of this aristocratic family
relied on the tradition of the coastal architects, and they ordered
rich clothing from the tailors, as well as jewellery and expensive
vessels from the coastal goldsmiths. Painters from Dubrovnik and Kotor
came to paint their churches, or the icons for those churches were
ordered from them. Therefore, it is no surprise that the frescoes in
the Orthodox monastery of Savina, the endowment of Duke Stefan in Boka
Kotorska which was nearby his winter capital of Novi, were painted by
the greatest Gothic Renaissance painter on the coast, Lovro Dobricevic
from Kotor, in the middle of the fifteenth century. The style is
western, the iconography came from both confessions, the inscriptions
are in Serbian, while the monastery was built as an Orthodox one.
In the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, Lovro Dobricevic and the
majority of the native painters in Kotor and Dubrovnik followed the
teachings of the Venetian painters who had gone down the path from the
Gothic-Byzantine conceptions to those of the early Renaissance. They
worked mostly for Catholic congregations, but they were also often
invited to paint for the Orthodox. The Union of Florence-Ferrara in
1440, made the spread of the western language of painting into the
formerly closed Orthodox milieu possible. At a point in time, it began
to accept Byzantine-Gothic combinations (the frescoes in the church of
the Holy Virgin in Mrzep from 1451; the miniatures in the gospel from
the monastery of Beocin, now in the Museum of the Orthodox Church,
Belgrade, no. 357, etc.) with a confidence in them which it had not
had before.
When the first Cyrillic Serbian liturgical books were printed between
1494 and 1496 in Cetinje, on account of the regional lord of
Montenegro Djuradj Crnojevic, the graphic illustrations were done
mostly with the same stylistic combination. The typography was brought
in from Venice, the craftsmen were native, but the graphic artists
must have been from an art studio in Kotor or Dubrovnik. In the
scenes from the Oktoih petoglasnik (known as the Octoechoes) the
iconographic designs are certainly Byzantine, Orthodox, but the
drawings themselves are quite Gothic, with naturalistic
characteristics. However, the bannerets, initials and vignettes are
renaissance as a whole, often with winged figures, flowers and vines.
They are done in the spirit of Venetian printing from that same
period.
One after the other, the last remains of the once powerful state of
the Serbs in the Middle Ages were crushed under the Turkish conquest:
Bosnia 1463, Herzegovina 1481, and Montenegro in the waning years of
the fifteenth century. Serbian artistry under the Turks was long
inspired by the life-giving resources taken from the great works of
the period of independence.
|
Warning: include(footer) [function.include]: failed to open stream: No such file or directory in /home2/serbian1/public_html/culture/history/Hist_Serb_Culture/chf/Middle_Ages_Art.html on line 1465
Warning: include() [function.include]: Failed opening 'footer' for inclusion (include_path='./:./include:/home2/serbian1/public_html/include:/home2/serbian1/public_html:/usr/lib/php:/usr/local/lib/php') in /home2/serbian1/public_html/culture/history/Hist_Serb_Culture/chf/Middle_Ages_Art.html on line 1465
|