A Portrait as an Identity: An Essay on Belorussian Portrait Painting of the 16th ̶ 17th centuries

 
PIIS023620070006453-5-1
DOI10.31857/S023620070006453-5
Publication type Article
Status Published
Authors
Occupation: Professor of the Department of Arts and Environmental Design
Affiliation: Belarusian State University
Address: 96 Mayakovsky Str., Minsk 220006, Republic of Belarus
Journal nameChelovek
EditionVolume 30 Issue №5
Pages118-135
Abstract

The article explores the identifying capabilities of the Belarusian (Grand Lithuanian) portrait of the veristic style, which presents exactly physiognomy and sometimes turns the image into a mask, an icon, unlike the traditional European portrait showing the artist’s interpretation of a person’s inner spiritual world. The genesis of the Belarusian portrait as well as the West European portrait is associated with a reconsideration of Roman cultural traditions in the 16th century. The culture of the Italian Renaissance theoretically and practically managed to connect Christianity with the Greek and Roman Antiquity, creating a triune artistic system of artist — work — viewer. For the Grand Duchy of Lithuania the orientation towards the Ancient culture (Ancient Rome) from the 16th century grew into a culture-forming factor. According to the Roman ancient models, the main rituals were arranged, accompanying the birth and baptism of children, church weddings and marriages, table meetings and feasts, exequial and funeral ceremonies; mummification of the departed and arrangement of crypts with sarcophagi of certain aristocratic families were allowed. The ceremonial side of culture was reinforced by the historical mythologization of the origin of the nobility-knighthood from the Roman patricians. In the portrait of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, the veristic style was widely used. First of all, such portraits performed identification tasks depicted, and were an important element of everyday culture rather than art. They were displayed in the halls of family portrait galleries in magnates’ palaces, as well as in the modest houses of middle and small gentry, thery were set up in temples, used in funeral ceremonies as coffin portraits attached to a coffin end wall. During the 16th –17th centuries this tradition influenced the development of the complex composition of a portrait containing attributes of different kind of a character’s social status. The purposes of identification and communication were to correlate the relationship in the portraits of the image and space, representing a system of signs and code formulas, the understanding of which organized a two-level communication identification — the author of the portrait with the depicted face, the viewer with a portrait work.

Keywordsрortrait, veristic style, Roman traditions, Grand Duchy of Lithuania, anthropology, attributes, space of power, fame, portrait galleries, gentry
Received19.11.2019
Publication date20.11.2019
Number of characters25194
Cite  
100 rub.
When subscribing to an article or issue, the user can download PDF, evaluate the publication or contact the author. Need to register.

Number of purchasers: 0, views: 1284

Readers community rating: votes 0

1. Baxandall M. Uzory intencii: Ob istoricheskom tolkovanii kartin [Patterns of Intention: On the Historical Interpretation of Pictures], transl. from Engl. by M.N. Sokolova. Мoscow: YuniPrint Publ., 2003.

2. Bart R. Izbrannye raboty: Semiotika: Poetika: per. s frants. [Selected Works: Semiotics: Poetics: transl. from French], select., total ed., introduct. article by G.K. Kosikova. Мoscow: Progress Publ., 1989. Р. 147–148.

3. Baudrillard J. Soblazn [The Temptation], transl. from French by A. Garadzhi. Мoscow: Ad marginem Publ., 2000. Р. 124–126.

4. Britova N.N., Loseva N.M, Sidorova N.A. Rimskii skul'pturnyi portret [The Roman Sculptural Portrait]. Мoscow: Iskusstvo Publ., 1975.

5. Damisch H. Teoriya oblaka: Nabrosok istorii zhivopisi [Theory of the Cloud: A Sketch of the History of Painting], transl. from French by A. Shestakova. St. Petersburg: Nauka Publ., 2003. Р. 222–230.

6. Leskinen M.V. Mify i obrazy sarmatizma: Istoki nacional'noi ideologii Rechi Pospolitoi [Myths and Images of Sarmatianism: The Origins of the National Ideology of the Commonwealth]. Мoscow: Institute for Slavic Studies of the RAS Publ., 2002.

7. McCorquodale С. Ubranstvo zhilogo inter'era ot antichnosti do nashikh dnei: per. s angl. [The History of Interior Decoration: transl. from Engl.]. Moscow: Iskusstvo Publ., 1990. Р. 71.

8. Tananaeva L.I. Sarmatskii portret: Iz istorii pol'skogo portreta epohi barokko [Sarmatian Portrait: From the History of the Polish Baroque Portrait]. Мoscow: Nauka Publ., 1979. Р. 71–73.

9. Ulashchik N.N. Vvedenie v izuchenie belorussko-litovskogo letopisaniya [Introduction to the Study of the Belarusian-Lithuanian Chronicle]. Мoscow: Nauka Publ., 1985.

10. Chikalova I.R. “Pogranich'e” kak sociokul'turnaya real'nost': konceptual'nye podhody k ego izucheniyu [“Borderlands” as a Sociocultural Reality: Conceptual Approaches to its Study]. Tsennostnye orientatsii i istoricheskoe soznanie naseleniya belorussko-rossiiskogo Prigranich'ya [Value Orientations and Historical Consciousness of the Population of the Belarusian-Russian Border], editorial board: I.M. Prishchepa et al. Vitebsk: VGU Publ., 2017.

11. Shchaveleva N.I. Drevnyaya Rus' v “Pol'skoi istorii” Yana Dlugosha (knigi 1–6): tekst, perevod i kommentariy [Ancient Russia in the Polish History by Jan Długosh (Books 1–6): Text, Translation, and Commentary], ed. and with add. by A.V. Nazarenko. Мoscow: Pamyatniki istoricheskoi mysli Publ., 2004. Р. 128–131.

12. Angyał E. Ṡwiat słowiańskiego Baroku. Przełozył J. Prokopik. Warszawa: Państwowy Instytut Wydawniczy, 1972.

13. Chrościcki J. Pompa funebris: z dziejów kultury staropolskiej. Warszawa: Państwowe Wydaw. Naukowe, 1974. S. 255.

14. Elias N. Przemiany obyczajów w cywilizacji Zachodu. Warszawa: Państwowy Instytut Wydawniczy, 1980.

15. Mańkowski T. Genealogia sarmatyzmu. Warszawa: Tow. Wydawnicze “Łuk”, 1946.

Система Orphus

Loading...
Up