On view

European Art

The Archangel Gabriel, from an Annunciation scene on the king's door of an iconostasis,

second half of the 15th century

Greek, Late Byzantine

Late Byzantine, 1261–1453
2006-482

Icons

During the Byzantine Empire, icons—images of holy figures or biblical episodes—helped adherents of Christianity understand religious doctrines and focused their devotion during prayer and liturgical rituals. Icons most often adorned church altars or screens called iconostases, which separated the clergy performing the ritual from the laity and demarcated the most sacred part of the church. Often painted on a shimmering ground of gold leaf, icons were understood not only to represent holy figures but also to embody their sacred presence, and thus could intercede on behalf of worshippers. As a result, icons were often touched, even kissed and ingested.

Icons produced in Greece circulated across Europe as the Byzantine Empire lost power and receded following violent schisms with the Latin Church, driven by disputes over interpretations of Christian doctrine, and later by incursions into Byzantine territory by the Ottomans. Many European artists copied the style of Byzantine icons, with their hieratic, frontal figures set against gold grounds. However, in Europe, Byzantine icons were identified as “Greek” to distinguish them from the devotional panels that increasingly adorned Latin Churches, which portrayed religious figures as three-dimensional and in more naturalistic settings.

Information

Title
The Archangel Gabriel, from an Annunciation scene on the king's door of an iconostasis
Dates

second half of the 15th century

Medium
Tempera and gold ground on wood panel
Dimensions
76 x 38.8 x 2.7 cm (29 15/16 x 15 1/4 x 1 1/16 in.)
Credit Line
Museum purchase, Fowler McCormick, Class of 1921, Fund, and matching funds provided by the Program in Hellenic Studies with the support of the Stanley J. Seeger Hellenic Fund
Object Number
2006-482
Culture
Materials

Purchased from the estate of Henry A. Hill, Princeton, NJ, who acquired it by descent from Edward Capps, Professor of Classics at Princeton from 1907 to 1935.