Iconography
began on the day our Lord Jesus Christ pressed a cloth to His face and
imprinted His divine-human image thereon. According to tradition, Luke the
Evangelist painted the image of the Mother of God; and, also according to
tradition, there still exist today many Icons which were painted by him. An
artist, he painted not only the first Icons of the Mother of God, but also
those of the holy Apostles Peter and Paul and, possibly, others which have not
come down to us.
Thus did
Iconography begin. Then it came to a halt for a time. Christianity was cruelly
persecuted: all that was reminiscent of Christ was destroyed and subjected to
ridicule. Thus, during the course of the persecutions, Iconography did not
develop, but Christians attempted to express in symbols what they wished to
convey. Christ was portrayed as the Good Shepherd, and also in the guise of
various personalities from pagan mythology. He was also depicted in the form of
a vine, an image hearkening back to the Lord's words: "I am the true
Vine.... ye are the branches" (St. John 15:1, 5). It was also accepted
practice to depict Christ in the form of a fish, because if one writes in Greek
"Jesus Christ, Son of God, Savior" (Iesous Christos, Theou Hios,
Zoter) and then groups together the first letter of each word, one discovers
that one has written the Greek word Ichthys, "fish." And so,
Christians depicted a fish, thereby calling to mind these words which were
known to those who believed in the Savior. This also became known to the
pagans, and consequently the image of the fish was also held suspect.
When,
following the victory of Emperor Constantine the Great over Maxentius, freedom
was given to Christians, Christianity quickly transformed the Roman Empire and
replaced paganism. Then Iconography flourished with full force. We already see
directives concerning Iconography at the first ecumenical councils. In some
church hymns, which today are still frequently used, mention is also made of
Iconography.
Now what
are Icons? Icons are precisely the union between painting and those symbols and
works of art which replaced Icons during the time of persecution. The Icon is
not simply a representation, a portrait. In later times only has the bodily
been represented, but an Icon is still supposed to remind people of the
spiritual aspect of the person depicted.
Christianity
is the inspiration of the world. Christ founded His Church in order to inspire,
to transfigure the world, to cleanse it from sin and bring it to that state in
which it will exist in the age to come. Christianity was founded upon the earth
and operates upon the earth, but it reaches to Heaven in its structure;
Christianity is that bridge and ladder whereby men ascend from the earthly
Church to the Heavenly. Therefore, a simple representation which recalls the
earthly characteristics of some face is not an Icon. Even an accurate
depiction, in the sense of physical build, still signifies nothing. A person
may be very beautiful externally, yet at the same time be very evil. On the
other hand, he may be ugly, and at the same time a model of righteousness.
Thus, we see that an Icon must indeed depict that which we see with our eyes,
preserving the characteristics of the body's form, for in this world the soul
acts through the body; yet at the same time it must point towards the inner,
spiritual essence. The task of the Iconographer is precisely to render, as far
as possible and to as great an extent as possible, those spiritual qualities
whereby the person depicted acquired the Kingdom of Heaven, whereby he won an
imperishable crown from the Lord, for the Church's true significance is the
salvation of man's soul. That which is on the earth perishes when we bring the
body to the grave; but the soul passes on to another place. When the world
comes to an end, consumed by fire, there will be a new earth and a new Heaven,
as the Apostle John the Theologian says, for with the eyes of his soul he
already foresaw the New Jerusalem, so clearly described in his sacred
Revelation. The Lord came to prepare the whole world for this spiritual
rebirth. To prepare oneself for this new Kingdom, one must uproot from within
oneself those seeds of sin which entered mankind with our ancestors' fall into
sin, distorting our pristine, grace-endowed nature; and one must plant within
oneself those virtues which they lost in the fall. The Christian's goal is to
change daily, to improve daily, and it is of this that our Icons speak.
In
calling to mind the saints and their struggles, an Icon does not simply
represent the saint as he appeared upon the earth. No, the Icon depicts his inner
spiritual struggle; it portrays how he attained to that state where he is now
considered an angel on earth, a heavenly man. This is precisely the manner in
which the Mother of God and Jesus Christ are portrayed. Icons should depict
that transcendent sanctity which permeated the saints. The Lord Jesus Christ is
the union of all that is human and all that is divine; and when depicted in an
Icon, the Savior must be painted so that we sense that He is a man, a real man,
yet at the same time something more exalted than a man, that we not simply
approach Him as we app. roach a visitor or an acquaintance. No, we should feel
that He is One Who is close to us, our Lord Who is merciful to us, and at the
same time an awe-inspiring Judge Who wants us to follow Him and wishes to lead
us to the Kingdom of Heaven. Therefore, we must not turn away to one side or
the other. We should not depict only the spiritual aspect of the saint,
completely disregarding how he looked while alive on earth. This would also be
an extreme. All saints should be depicted so as to convey their individual
characteristics as much as possible—soldiers should be portrayed arrayed for
battle; holy hierarchs in their episcopal vestments... It is incorrect to
depict bishops of the first centuries vested in the sakkos, for at that time
bishops wore the phelonion, not the sakkas, and yet this is not such a great
error, for it is far better to make a mistake in what is physical than in what
is spiritual, to ignore, as it were, the spiritual aspect.
This is
what our Iconographers were zealous about—those ancient Iconographers of the
time before the conversion of Russia, of whom there were many, and our Russian
Iconographers, too, beginning with the Venerable Alypius of the Kiev Caves, who
painted a number of Icons of the Mother of God, some of which still survive.
These wondrous Icons, which continued the Byzantine tradition of the painting
of Icons which inspire compunction, were not necessarily painted in dark
colors; frequently they were done in bright hues; but these colors evoked a
desire to pray before such Icons. The holy hierarch Peter, a native of Galicia
who later became Metropolitan of Kiev and All Russia, painted Icons, some of
which were until recently to be found in the Cathedral of the Dormition in
Moscow. An entire school of Iconography was established in Novgorod under the
direction of the holy hierarch Alexis of Novgorod, a whole series of whose
Icons have been preserved. The Venerable Andrew Rublev painted an Icon of the
Holy Trinity which is now famous not only in the Christian world, but
throughout the half-Christian world as well.
Unfortunately,
this Orthodox movement as a whole started to collapse when Russia began to be
infiltrated by Western influence. In certain respects, Russia's acquaintance
with the European West was very beneficial. Many technical sciences and much
other useful knowledge came from the West. We know that Christianity has never
had any aversion to knowledge of that which originates outside itself. Basil
the Great, Gregory the Theologian and John Chrysostom studied in pagan
universities, and many writers, among whom were our spiritual authors and many
of the best theologians, were well acquainted with pagan writers. The Apostle
Paul himself cited quotations from pagan poets even in the Holy Scriptures.
Nevertheless, not all that was Western was good for Russia. It also wrought
horrible moral damage at that time, for the Russians began to accept, along
with useful knowledge, that which was alien to our Orthodox way of life, to our
Orthodox faith. The educated portion of society soon sundered themselves from
the life of the people and from the Orthodox Church, in which all was regulated
by ecclesiastical norms. Later, alien influence touched Iconography as well.
Images of the Western type began to appear, perhaps beautiful from an artistic
point of view, but completely lacking in sanctity, beautiful in the sense of
earthly beauty, but even scandalous at times, and devoid of spirituality. Such
were not Icons. They were distortions of Icons, exhibiting a lack of
comprehension of what an Icon actually is.
By St. John of Shanghai and San Francisco
CONVERSATION