St Nicholas is shown as a bishop wearing the traditional stole with crosses. The classic image shows him attended by Christ and the Virgin and seated on a magnificent stone...
St Nicholas is shown as a bishop wearing the traditional
stole with crosses. The classic image
shows him attended by Christ and the Virgin and seated on a magnificent stone
bench blessing the onlooker with his right hand and holding the gospels in his
left. He is among the most widely revered saints in Orthodoxy and
legend attributes many miracles to him. According
to one tradition he was present at the Council of Nicaea (325) where he
violently attacked the heretic Arius. That night, in a dream, St Nicholas saw
Christ handing him the gospels and the Mother of God holding out to him his
bishop's stole thus endorsing his actions. The two miniature figures illustrate
this vision. The Gospel excerpt is from John 10:9: ΕΙΠΕΝ Ο ΚC. ΕΓΩ ΕΙΜΙ Η ΘΥΡΑ … ( I am the gate.
Whoever enters through me will be saved).
The small panel gives Nicholas the same presence and dignity
as in a monumental icon, an effect achieved by the proportions of figures in
relation to each other and in the space. The crisp linearity of the brushwork
is typical of how the later Palaiologan style was developed by Cretan painters.
We note the face delicately modelled with olive green shadows and warm ochre
for the skin and parallel white strokes on the hair and beard.
The icon closely resembles an icon in the ‘Masterpieces of
Byzantine Art’ exhibition shown recently at the Tretyakov Gallery in Moscow,
loaned by the Benaki Museum in Athens, Emilios Velimesis and Christos
Margaritis collections.