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Icon of St George slaying the dragon
‘Black George’
“On a recent visit to the British Museum I came across this beautiful icon.
It was found in 1959 in a small village in the district of Ilinsky on the Pinega river in Northern Russia by Maria Rozanova, wife of the prominent dissident author Andrei Sinyavsky. It was being used to shutter a barn window. When found all that was visible was an eighteenth century folk painting. Later in Moscow, under the hands of a professional restorer, various layers were stripped off to reveal this extraordinary image of St George slaying a dragon. Experts dated it to the end of the fourteenth century and attributed it to an artist from Pskov. St George sits astride a black rather than the usual white horse, hence Black George, cooly lancing a dragon in the mouth. The red cloak encircling and billowing behind his halo gives him flight.” -
“9-part icon with St. Nicholas in the center”
18th century. Old Believer painting. Volga river region.
Size: 31 x 27,5 x 4cm
Technique & Material: 17th century board with double ark, gesso, tempera, drying oil.
High Resolution Images: fragmentsPosted on May 6, 2010 via COULEURS with 36 notes
Source: yama-bato
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The Annunciation of Ustyug
Novgorod, 1110-30

