Image for Maniera Greca in Europe's Catholic East

Maniera Greca in Europe's Catholic East : On Identities of Images in Lithuania and Poland (1380s–1720s)

Part of the Central European Medieval Studies series
See all formats and editions

How and why does vernacular art become foreign? What does ‘Greek manner’ mean in regions far beyond the Mediterranean?

What stories do images need? How do narratives shape pictures? The study addresses these questions in Byzantine paintings from the former Grand Duchy of Lithuania, contextualized with evidence from Poland, Serbia, Russia, and Italy.

The research follows developments in artistic practices and the reception of these images, as well as distinguishing between the Greek manner – based on visual qualities – and the style favoured by the devout, sustained by cults and altered through stories.

Following the reception of Byzantine and pseudo-Byzantine art in Lithuania and Poland from the late fourteenth through the early eighteenth centuries, Maniera Greca in Europe’s Catholic East argues that tradition is repetitive order achieved through reduction and oblivion, and concludes that the sole persistent understanding of the Greek image has been stereotyped as the icon of the Mother of God.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£90.95 Save 15.00%
RRP £107.00
Product Details
Amsterdam University Press
946298266X / 9789462982666
Hardback
14/02/2023
Netherlands
English
238 pages : illustrations (black and white, and colour)
24 cm