The Christological Cycle in the Naos of the Prophet Elijah Church (1550) in Sofia: Non-traditional Elements and Athonite Influences
The Christological Cycle in the Naos of the Prophet Elijah Church (1550) in Sofia: Non-traditional Elements and Athonite Influences
Author(s): Ralitsa RoussevaSubject(s): Language and Literature Studies, Theoretical Linguistics, Applied Linguistics, Computational linguistics
Published by: Институт за литература - БАН
Keywords: Iliyantsi monastery; Post-byzantine art; Mount Athos; Cretan school; Passion cycle; St Pimen of Zograph
Summary/Abstract: The paper is a continuation of the article “The Last Judgment Scene in the Prophet Elijah Church (1550) in Sofia: Untraditional Elements and Athonite Influences” (Rousseva 2020) and analysed the frescoes in the naos of the church. There is a problem with the overall iconographic programme in the naos: the obligatory scenes illustrating the Annunciation, the Transfiguration and Pentecost are absent, but there are illustrations in separate scenes of secondary and rarely encountered episodes. The scenes in the naos provide a wide field for interpretation, as it is ‘mediate’ between the art of Macedonia of the 14th–15th century and the art of the Cretan school of the 1530s and the 1540s. Beyond the large monasteries of Mount Athos, the island in the Lake of Ioannina and the Meteora, the murals in the Iliyantsi are among the first where the “new” scenes and images are interpreted, and in some respects, the first monument, e. g the kneeling Virgin in the scene of the Nativity, the Flagellation, The Apostles at the Grave has been included. For the first time in a Bulgarian church are illustrated the Sundays of the Pentecostarion. Of the works published so far, the scene Christ expels seven demons from Mary Magdalene is the earliest example in Balkan art. There are visible similarities of the scenes in the naos with the later examples, the work of the atelier of St Pimen. His teacher, Tomas, could possibly have worked at the church in Iliyantsi.
Journal: Scripta & e-Scripta
- Issue Year: 2021
- Issue No: 21
- Page Range: 261-281
- Page Count: 21
- Language: English
- Content File-PDF