Marka Tomić Đurić
Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts, Institute for Balkan Studies, Belgrade, Serbia;
marka.tomic@gmail.com
Eucharistic Symbolism and the Passion Scenes
in the Prothesis Chamber at Markov Manastir
The closing scenes of the painted cycle dedicated to the Passion in the church of St Demetrios
in Markov Manastir (1376/77) are placed in the
prothesis
chamber. The north wall features the
Crucifixion, which is accompanied by the Deposition form the Cross and the Entombment of Christ,
on the east wall. The unusual placement of the scenes from Christ’s Passion will be analyzed in the
light of the liturgical symbolism of the northern pastophorion and its painted decoration, taking
into consideration similar examples in Byzantine art. The impetus for devising this form of thematic
programmes may be brought into relationship with an intensive development of the
prothesis
rite
(
proskomedia
) in the Eastern Christian world in the 14
th
century. The link established between
the narrative episode of Christ’s death on the cross and the liturgically symbolic representation of
the deceased adult Christ resting on a stone tomb in the niche – over whose body St Stephen the
Archdeacon and St Peter of Alexandria perform the
prothesis
rite, highlights the paschal symbolism
of the Eucharistic worship of the Eastern Church. The first part of the Eucharist, the
prothesis rite
,
evokes the equivalence and simultaneity of the crucificial and the Eucharistic sacrifice.
149
Tatiana Tsarevskaya
Ministry of Culture of Russian Federation, State Institut for Art Studies,
Moscow, Russian Federation;
tsarturie@yahoo.com
The Passion Cycle in the Program of the Altar Decoration
and the Problem of Its Roots in Novgorod Churches of the Late 14
th
Century
The narrative Passion cycles in altar space of the two Novgorod Churches of 1370
th
– The
Transfiguration on Il’ina Street and St.Theodore Stratelates – represent unusual parts of their
decorative programs. First of them, made by Theophanes de Greek, occupied originally the walls
of bema (only a few fragments is survived), the second, much more better preserved and made by
anonymous contemporary of Theophanes, besides that includes the upper zone of apse, unfolding
there counterclockwise and closing inside the alter space. Significantly that echoes of this system are
traced in altar paintings of some cathedrals of late Russian medieval period (16-17
th
century), thus
indicating its fairly long existence.
This bold innovation made to the stable structure of the Byzantine altar decoration is fully
correlated with the symbolism of the altar space and quite consistent with previous development of
the theme of Eucharistic sacrifice. However, this innovation suddenly finds common ground with
the Western tradition. Early announced in altar of Santa Maria Antiqua in Rome and later in some
Roman churches (Abbey Church of Saint-Savin-sur-Gartempe, Saint Martin in Nohant-Vic, etc.)
this tradition received a new impetus from the mid 13
th
century under the influence of spirituality
of the Franciscans and Dominicans, with their keen interest to the theme of human sufferings of
Christ, His holy blood and wounds. The Passion scenes in the pictorial triptychs and polyptychs
of Ducento and Trecento become a typical for the altar decorations of Italian churches, spreading
influence throughout the Catholic West and the Levant and, moreover, getting into some Orthodox
mural painting in the Balkans.
Since the first half of the 14
th
century the Passion cycle - brief or more developed – had acquired
a monumental quality as part of the apse fresco-decoration in some Franciscan churches belonged
to Genoese colonies of the Adriatic coast (the churches of St. Trifon and St. Mary Collegiate in
Kotor, the Church of Assumption in Savines), as well as in Cyprus (in the altar of the Royal chapel
in Pirga), in the painting of which the Greek artists were involved. There are a number of precedents
when the Orthodox Greek artists of the highest level worked in the Catholic churches. Keeping the
Byzantine style, they reworked more or less considerably the traditional Orthodox iconographic
formula with regard to the requirements of the Latin clergy. Undoubtedly, such cooperation did
not pass without a trace and enriched the thematic and iconographic repertoire of these artists and
inspired them to a more creative approach in using of the Byzantine canon.
It is known that before coming to Russia, Theophanes the Greek worked in Genoese colonies
- Galata (Pera) in Constantinople and Kaffa in the Crimea. Novgorod, where he arrived then, was
a large commercial center with an open atmosphere of cultural life, not constrained by the rigid
150
framework of Byzantine canons, as show the original altar frescoes of local 12
th
century churches.
Here the famous Greek master known as “advanced sage and philosopher” could realize his artistic
innovations within the Orthodox faith in accordance with the new aspirations of the time. So, he
could be involved in the transmission of tradition, Latin in its origin, on the Novgorod soil. A
new version of altar decoration with the Passion cycle presented by Theophanes in the Church of
Transfiguration seems to have found a lively response in a creative environment of Theophanes
worked that time in Novgorod, who resolutely followed it.
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