Subcarpathia is a unique region both for its scenic and historical value. When in 1340 AD Orthodox Red Ruthenia, also called Subcarpathia, was incorporated into the territory of The Polish Kingdom by Casimir the Great (Kazimierz Wielki), the area of Subcarpathia became a place of coexistence of two Christian rites – Eastern and Western. A tangible evidence of those remote times is the collection of the Orthodox and Greek Catholic art in the Historical Museum in Sanok comprising 700 icons as well as Orthodox and Greek Catholic church crucifixes, banners, robes, books and liturgical paraments.
Almost from its very beginnings the Church preached its doctrine both through the word and the image. Hence, in spite of the Old Testament ban on worshipping images, imagery has always been a potent and important force within Christianity. The icon (from the Greek ‘eikon’ – a picture, image) created ages ago – within a single, undivided Church yet – constitutes the main and integral element of Eastern spirituality today. That special status of sacred images being an intermediary between the earthly and heavenly worlds, which the Orthodox and Greek Catholic Church attributes to icons, is comparable to the way saintly relics are viewed in the Roman Catholic church. The difference consists in the fact that in the East icons are seen as having the possibility of attaining divine power whereas in the Western church relics are exclusively seen as providing divine protection. The painting in the Catholic Church has never achieved such a great sacral, dogmatic and liturgical significance as in the Eastern Churches but only devotional, aesthetic, illustrative and didactic. In the spirituality of the Eastern Churches the icon is an element which enables contemplation and approach to the Sacred. Therefore it will always remain a religious rather than artistic work. As a mystical image and the transmitter of grace the icon is the miraculous presence of that which is depicted on it.
The Union between the Catholic and the Orthodox Church in 1596 considerably contributed to such a situation. The Greek Catholic Church, which originated in result of the union, accepted the Pope’s supremacy and adopted the dogma of the Catholic Church with regards to the origin of the Holy Spirit from the Father God and the Son and the doctrine of church fetes and purgatory. However, the Greek Catholics retained the individuality of the liturgy (celebrated in the Old Church Slavonic language), secular priests’ right to marry, the Julian calendar (in the Catholic world the Gregorian calendar had been in force since 1582), their own hierarchy and significant autonomy in church administration. The Greek Catholic Church, in order to emphasize its distinctiveness from the Orthodox Church, had often introduced practices drawn from Roman Latin rite, both within the scope of ecclesiastical terminology and art. In that way the icon increasingly began to resemble Catholic religious paintings (decorative, architectural and sculptural elements of frames, perspective, movement and gesticulation of figures introducing action into image).
In the collection of the Historical Museum in Sanok there are a small number of icons painted on canvas and metal sheet, whereas the major part of the collected icons is painted on wooden panels and once formed part of iconostases. The oldest icons from the Sanok collection are painted on limewood boards whereas those made later in the 17th – 19th c. are painted on cheaper and more readily available fir and spruce boards. Painting wood supports had been usually made out of the two boards joined with ‘a groove and swell’ which means that at the edge of the first board a groove was cut whilst the other had a protruding ‘feather’ that would slot into the groove. In order to additionally protect the board against warping, on the back of the boards were placed so-called ’szpongi’ (lit. claws or talons, the technical term in English being cradces), which are strips running transversely to the join, usually from two opposite sides. Whereas in the middle of the surface of the boards was grooved a depression, a so-called ‘kowczeg’, for future representation. Apart from aesthetic and formal aspects, a groove of a few centimeters around the edge of the icon created a natural frame – that measure also has its symbolic meaning. Confusingly a type of small chest earmarked for storing relics was also known as a ‘kowczeg’. Additionally, linen stripes were stuck along the joints of the boards. This allowed the painting surface to remain flat and provided additional protection against warping. Once the base for the icon was prepared the artist could commence with the painting itself. First the base-layer, or primer, of a few thin coats of chalk-ground would be applied. Then a drawing was directly traced and the contour was painted or engraved on that surface. At that stage of the process a background was also prepared (usually with the aid of a stencil). After gilding a painter started painting less essential parts of an icon, the so-called environment (architecture, nature), then robes, the face and hands. Only paints of natural origin, mainly mineral, were employed, with egg yolk used as the emulsion medium. This technique of painting was called egg tempera. The underpainting, the first layer of paint, was the darkest. When the paint dried a few layers of the same tint but with brighter shadow were laid. Additionally the whole painting was brightened with stripes of white paint. The face of a figure was also painted in layers. At first, dark olive underpaint was laid, so-called ’sankir’, then the facial features were drawn using ever brighter layers. At the end of the process the inscriptions were made (the name of a figure or the theme of a described scene). Omission of its identifying inscription would cause an icon to be incomplete and therefore unable to fulfill its role as a transmitter of grace. For the inscription constitutes the ‘proper name’ of an icon, which allows one to correctly recognize it. But above all it is ‘confirmation of the everlasting character of a representation’. Dates of completion of icons, on the other hand, were never added since the icon was thought to have a timeless character. Finally, with the icon would be covered in an oil varnish called an ‘olifa’ (it was being prepared with linseed oil in Russia or resin or an egg white in Subcarpathia) to protect the icon against dust and smoke from candles and incense.
Icons depict portraits of the saints, episodes of their life (hagiographical icons) as well as scenes illustrating the content of the Holy Bible, Apocrypha and legends. Obviously Christ is the most frequently presented figure in icons. Christ Pantokrator is the most common depiction (Almighty, or Ruler of All). Such images of Christ, in accordance with the dogma of the consubstantial nature of the Father and the Son, were simultaneously considered as a representation of the Father God in Byzantium. There exist several variants of the image of Christ Pantocrator: throning Christ, surrounded with three mandorlas (Christ in Majesty) or without them, and Christ standing in a full length or in half length. In all of these representations Christ is presented frontally, attired with the robes typical for the late antiquity; he has a stern, majestic facial expression and his head is surrounded with the golden cross halo, sometimes enriched with the letters ‘Ω’, ‘Ο’ and ‘Ν’ which are translated as ‘He, who is’. The Omnipotent Christ performs a gesture of blessing with His raised right hand (His fingers form His own monogram IC XC) whereas in the left hand He holds the Gospels opened to the text of John ‘I am the light of the world. He who follows Me shall not walk in darkness, but have the light of life’ (John, 8:12) or ‘I am the gate. Whoever enters through Me shall be saved – he shall come in and go out, and find pasture’ (John, 10:9). The representation of Christ ‘The Saviour in Majesty’, ‘The King of Glory’ (‘Spas w Silach’), made on the strength of the vision of Ezekiel (1:5-28) and Revelation of John (4:2 - 9), has especially developed the symbolic idea of domination over the universe. The divine ruler sits on the throne in glory, surrounded by the three mandorlas which have symbolic meaning. The first mandorla, situated just behind Christ, in the shape of a red rhombus is the reflection of His divine, fiery nature and glory. The second, a blue oval symbolizing the world of angelic hosts is the heavenly sphere which is ruled by Him. Finally, the last mandorla in the shape of a red square, since ancient times symbolizes everything that is associated with the earthly sphere. The four living beings which are the symbols of the four Evangelists, the preachers of Christ’s doctrine in every corner of the earth, are situated in the corners of the quadrangle: an angel, symbolizing the highest knowledge and the will of God, represents Matthew, an ox, symbolizing the almighty strength of God, represents Luke, a lion, symbolizing the power of God, represents Mark, and an eagle, symbolizing the omniscience of God represents John. Four icons, situated in the first chamber on the ground floor of the castle, present already discussed examples: Christ Pantocrator from Wujskie, 15th c., Christ Pantocrator (Christ in Majesty) from Nowosielce, 2nd half of the 15th c., Christ Pantocrator (Christ in Majesty) from Surowica, end of the 16th c. and Christ Pantocrator in the group of Deesis from Bartne, end of the 16th c.
A more complex narrative can be found in the icon painted on canvas which is situated in the 2nd chamber on the first floor. The picture is divided into three zones. In the middle one can see Christ depicted in the manner described above, below that one can see the Last Supper whilst at the top a pelican feeding its chicks with its own body, a clear reference to Christ’s sacrifice. A slightly different version of this theme is depicted in the icon of the Eucharistic Christ from Dołżyca from the 18th century in the 2nd chamber on the first floor. Christ is represented inside the goblet where his blood, oozing from his wounds, is drained. Under the goblet, identically as under the cross, stands the Virgin Mary, with heart pierced by a sword (Our Lady of Sorrows), beside John the Evangelist. These scenes, in symbolic way, connect the bloody sacrifice with a bloodless one.
The Union of the Churches led to the adoption of certain themes, earlier appearing only in Catholicism, via the art of the icon. One of these is an image of the Mother of God holding the tormented body of Christ on her knees with the cross in the background. The word ‘Pieta’ derives from the Italian and in the Middle Ages it was used to determine the virtue of mercy (pietas). The Virgin inducing by the virtue of mercy (’pietas’) sacrifices her own Son, participating in the process of the Redemption. There are icons from Dobra from the 2nd half of the 17th century, 3rd chamber on the ground floor and from Habkowce from the 2nd half of the 17th century, 2nd chamber on the first floor.
Our Lady of the Pokrov (Our Lady’s Mantle) – is a representation of the Mother of God as the most powerful advocate, an intermediary and protector of mankind. It was an extraordinarily popular image of the Virgin in the Subcarpathian region. The image illustrates a legend contained in the source of ‘The life of St. Andrew God’s Madman (’Jurodiwy’)’. According to legend the Mother of God appeared to him and his disciple Ephifanios during a service at the church in Blachernae in Constantinople. Since then the Virgin’s maphorium (wimple), which she spread out over the believers in sign of benefaction that night, has become the most important relic in the Blahernum Sanctuary.
The icon of The Elevation of the Cross (from Dobra village from the 2nd half of the 17th c., 3rd chamber on the ground floor) is situated in the tier of the festive icons in the iconostasis. The icon illustrates the miraculous finding of the Lord’s cross by the mother of the emperor Constantine the Great, the empress Helen, during her trip to the Holy Land in 326 AD.
The Passion is an icon consisting of the scenes of the Passion and the events immediately following the death of Christ. The icons of the Passion were unusually popular in Subcarpathia. They were not fixed in iconostases but used to be hung on the southern wall of the church, so that they were clearly visible for the mainly illiterate crowd of believers. The image of the Passion situated in Sanok castle (from Lipie village from the 1st half of the 17th c., 4th chamber on the ground floor) is composed with the central, bigger scene of the Crucifixion surrounded by 22 smaller scenes arranged chronologically. Starting from the upper left corner the scenes are as follows: 1. Christ Raises Lazarus from the Dead 2. Christ Rides into the Jerusalem on a Donkey 3. The Last Supper 4. Christ Washes His Disciples’ Feet 5. The Prayer in the Garden of Gethsemane 6. The Arrest of Christ 7. Christ before Annas 8. Christ before Caiaphas 9. The Denial of Peter and Derision 10. Christ before Herod 11. The Crowning with Thorns and Christ before Pilate 12. The Flagellation of Christ 13. Ecce Homo (’This is a man’ – the image of Christ after the flagellation) 14. The Washing of Hands by Pilate 15. Leading to the Golgotha 16. Christ is Nailed to the Cross 17. The Main scene – The Crucifixion 18. The Descent from the Cross 19. The Entombment 20. The Resurrection 21. The Descent into Limbo 22. The Holy Women at the Tomb 23. Unfaithful Thomas.
Temples, from the beginnings of Christianity, were divided into two parts: the sanctuary and the nave. The reasons were both liturgical and symbolic, drawing on the dualist view of Creation. According to this conception the nave symbolizes the earthly sphere and everything that is connected with it, whereas the sanctuary represents the heavenly, transcendental sphere. Such division resulted in the need of establishing a border that would simultaneously separate and join these two worlds. This border is a wall made of icons – the iconostasis (from the Greek ‘eikon’ – picture, image; and ’stasis’ – placing, position, location). The iconostasis, having been already known in the early Christian basilicas, had been permanently accepted and become the most significant internal division of the church in every country which had applied the Byzantine liturgy. The iconostasis presented in the castle on the first floor in the first chamber does not come from a single church, but is a reconstruction consisting of selected icons from various iconostases. The tier structure of the iconostasis symbolizes the hierarchical structure of the world. The icons which are called ‘megalai eikones’, that is ‘the local icons’ (‘namiestne’), are placed in this lowest tier. They are usually greater in size than the rest. The double door called by the Greeks ‘horeia pyle’ (the beautiful, clean gate) or ‘hiera pyle’ (the Holy Gate), and by the Slavonic nations the sacred or holy gate or the royal, tsarist, imperial gate are located in the middle of this tier. They also mark out the axis of the entire iconostasis. The gate is holy because during procession of the Great Entrance (’megale eisodos’) a priest enters through it carrying the symbols of the Eucharist onto the altar. It is royal as that moment symbolizes the Entry of Christ as a king (a priest is His deputy on earth) into Jerusalem as well as the descent to earth and the voluntary sacrifice. Thus, it symbolizes the entrance into the kingdom of God, to salvation. The Christ-Gate leads into the interior of His being which is symbolized by the sanctuary. In the course of the liturgy the Evangel is carried in and taken out to believers through the gate. God’s Word (the Gospel) has been revealed through the Good News, hence the proper and the symbolic scenes of the Annunciation (Archangel Gabriel announcing the Good News to the Virgin Mary and the four Evangelists who announce the teaching of Christ to the people) are depicted twice on the Royal Gate. In later versions of the Royal Gate the Tree of Jesse is often present too. On both sides of the Royal Gate are situated smaller, deacon, gates leading to the sided parts of the sanctuary, to the prothesis where the proskomidia is celebrated, and to the diaconicon where the robes and liturgical utensils are located. The archangels who symbolize the service of a priest, or the first martyrs Stephen and Lawrence, usually adorn on deacon gates. On the right side of the Royal Gate (between the Royal Gate and the southern deacon gate) is located an icon of Christ Pantocrator, being a call to join the path of salvation that is Jesus Christ “I am the way and the truth and the life. No-one comes to the Father except through Me” (John 14:6) and “I am the gate for the sheep” (John 10:7). On the left of the Royal Gate one finds the icon of the Guide (the Hodegetria Virgin) (between the Royal Gate and the northern deacon gate). An icon located on the right edge of the tier represents the patron saint of the given church and is called the ‘chramowa’. Whereas the one on the left edge represents the most popular saint enjoying special worship in the given church. The tier of the ‘namiestne’ icons might consist of a greater or lesser number of icons, depending on size of the church. Over the Holy Gate is placed the Mandilion which is an image of the dogma of the Incarnation of God. This icon began to be replaced by that of the Last Supper (’The Communion of the Apostles’) following the union of the churches, since the Eucharist established in the course of it, is the heart of the liturgy and a visible sign of Christ’s presence. This composition made the believers, in some way separated from the ceremony of the Eucharist (celebrated in the sanctuary behind the closed Royal Gate), familiar with the events happening on the other side of an iconostasis. The introduction of a composition of the Last Supper to the scheme of the iconostasis also had an ideological message as it justifies the need of the unity of the Churches. It was during the Last Supper when Christ expressed the hope that all believers would be unified. The second tier consists of the icons of the twelve festivals of the Church. The icons which represent those festivals are called ‘the icons of the feasts’ (Greek ‘dodekaorton’ and Ruthenian ‘prazdniki’) and are located in the order of the liturgical year(they are sometimes shown in chronological order, but this is rare). They can be taken out and placed on a lectern (‘proskynetarion’) in front of an iconostasis in order to
be adored by believers. The festival icons depict important events of the New Testament, which prove that Christ’s entire life was for the redemption of mankind. The scenes of the festival icons are as follows: The Nativity of Our Lady, The Presentation of the Theotokos, The Annunciation, The Nativity of Christ, The Baptism of Jesus (the ‘Theophany’), The Transfiguration, The Raising of Lazarus, The Entry into Jerusalem, The Crucifixion, The Resurrection (The Descent into Limbo), The Ascension, The Pentecost, or The Descent of the Holy Spirit (sometimes an icon of The Holy Trinity takes its place), and The Dormition of Our Lady. Icons of The Elevation of the Cross and Our Lady of the Pokrov (Our Lady’s Mantle), as well as icons of other festivals, can often be found in the festive tier.
Apart from icons Sanok exhibition presents liturgical utensils used by churches of the eastern rite. Amongst them the wooden, carved or painted, Eastern crosses deserve special mention. They include small, hand-held crosses, used for blessing (usually containing a scene of the Crucifixion on the obverse side and an image of the Mother of God with Child on the reverse), altar crosses and processional crosses (with a depiction of the Crucified Christ on the obverse and the Baptism of Christ on the reverse). The wooden candlesticks imitating metal candlesticks, richly ornamented Gospels, goblets, patens and liturgical spoons are exhibited in display cases. The richly embroidered funerary phelonion is particularly representative. The phelonion forms part of a priest’s liturgical garments. It has a form of a sleeveless, outer cover of shoulders, symbolizing the purple coat which was put on Jesus at the course of the judgement before Pilate. There are also ‘epimanikion’ cuffs (from the Greek ‘epi’ – on, and ‘maniki’ – sleeve) and an ‘epitrachelion’ (from the Greek ‘trachelion’ – neck), a belt with seven crosses
embroidered on it, symbolizing the seven sacraments and playing the same role as a stole in the Catholic Church. Among the display cases, in recreated sanctuary, is situated an imitation of a sacrificial table called a ‘prestol’ or ‘a throne’ (the sole altar in the church), covered with a linen tablecloth. On the altar is a wooden ‘syjon’ (Zion) which is the equivalent of a tabernacle symbolizing the Holy Sepulchre. Inside the syjon, which resembles an Orthodox and Greek Catholic church, is stored a special box (’kowczeg’) with the Holy Gifts. On the altar lies a small cloth, made of linen or silk, called an ‘antymins’ (from the Greek ‘antiminsion’ – instead of the altar). On its upper side are usually depicted scenes of The Deposition from the Cross or the Entombment of Christ, whereas on the other side are placed the relics. The antymins can replace the altar during liturgy and is one of the most important objects in the whole church. Thus, for instance, in case of a fire, a priest must save the antymins from destruction, even at the risk of his own life.
A substantial part of the Orthodox and Greek Catholic art collection is made up of a group of approximately 150 banners, painted on canvas by means of tempera or oil technique. They contain a huge set of freely interpreted themes and rich ornamentation, and play an essential role during liturgy and numerous processions. The 19th century ‘plaszczenice’ in the second chamber on the first floor, deserves special attention. This sizable painting on a canvas or a board with a presentation of dead Christ, plays the same function as a spatial imitation of the Holy Sepulchre installed in a Catholic church on Good Friday. The exhibition of the Orthodox and Greek Catholic art in the Historical Museum in Sanok ends with the presentation of the 19th century icons painted on canvas. They are very often painted with oil paints instead of egg tempera. These icons are differ greatly from the oldest and the most canonical depictions. They take new themes, in past centuries quite unknown, in icon art. They imitate iconographical patterns and compositions existing in the sacred art of the West (the icon of The Deposition from the Cross according to the painting of Rembrandt, 19th century, 2nd chamber on the first floor) and depict the saints typical for the Catholic Church (e.g. icons of the St. Florian and St. Julian, 18 – 19th c., 2nd chamber on the first floor). The icon, for the faithful of the Eastern churches, is something more than just a religious painting. It is a doorway for entering into transcendence. This specific contact between the icon and the believer is celebrated through the ceremony of ‘proskinia’. This ceremony is exercised immediately after entering into the church and consists in lighting a candle, making a sign of the cross and touching or kissing the icon. Although, of course, “in a museum an icon loses its religious role and only exists like a dried flower in a herbarium or a butterfly pinned to a card in a collector’s box; artificially taken from its environment an icon becomes mute.” Nevertheless this is how nowadays museum exhibitions allow people to know the nature of the icon, a distant echo of a great art which might have not survived if museums have not preserved them. For today’s man, in his secular world, the icon is mainly defined by its aesthetic value, it allows him to discover endless symbolic information which, this way and that, may guide him towards transcendence.
(1) Jazykowa, Światt ikony, Warsaw 1998, pages 41-42