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Maria Vassilaki
University of Thessaly, Volos, Greece;
maria.vassilaki2@gmail.com
Passion
Cycles in Venetian Crete
This paper examines Passion cycles depicted in churches of Venetian held Crete in an effort to
understand what changes had occurred and why. It will focus on fourteenth-century churches and
will select examples in which Passion cycles with a strong Western influence appear as a result of
the presence of the Venetians and most probably of the activity of Mendicant
orders in the island of
Crete. At the same time it will look at Passion cycles which show how closely Cretan painters were
able to follow the developments of the Passion cycle in Late Byzantine churches. To make these
points clear two key monuments will be selected: the church of the Transfiguration of Christ in
Temenia, Selino in the prefecture of Chania and the monastery church of
the Virgin Gouverniotissa
in Potamies in the prefecture of Heraklion.
Michele Bacci
University of Fribourg, Fribourg, Switzerland;
michele.bacci@unifr.ch
Icons of Narratives:
Passion Cycles in Panel Painting
between Byzantium and Venice
In the 13
th
and 14
th
centuries, Passion cycles started being introduced not only in the decoration
of religious buildings, but also in a number of icons and diptychs, originally
associated with individual
forms of piety. Even if it is currently assumed that such developments were basically associated with
the spread of a new religious sensibility originating in the West and being especially fostered by the
Mendicant orders, it is a matter of fact that analogous objects became widespread enough even in
Greek
contexts, as is indicated by a number of meaningful objects, including a 13
th
century icon of
the
Assumption
encircled by Passion scenes, now in the
Byzantine Museum in Pedoulas, Cyprus, and
the fragment of a 14
th
century diptych now in the Museum of Vlatadon Monastery in Thessaloniki.
Moreover, the largest group of painted panels displaying a Passion cycle originating in the West date
from the earliest half of the 14
th
century and stands out for its distinctively Byzantinizing forms,
associated with contemporary Palaiologan painting.
The present paper aims at investigating the extant Byzantine and Venetian examples of icons
displaying a Passion cycle from a distinctively
comparative viewpoint, with a special focus on the
analysis of their shared compositional and iconographic features. These objects will be interpreted
as cross-cultural items intended to suit the devotional sensibility needs of individual believers,
regardless of their religious affiliation. Emphasis will be laid on their
diffusion in the Mediterranean,
in connection with the emergence of meditational practices associated with the Passion and Holy
Land pilgrimage.