![]() ![]() Only one icon of the cathedral can be undeniably attributed to Andrei Rublev himself, namely a replica of the wonderworking Our Lady of Vladimir, which had been permanently stored in Moscow since 1395, and a full-size copy of which Vladimir needed. The year 1408 saw him paint frescoes and icons in the Assumption Cathedral in Vladimir together with Daniil Cherny. He painted the Annunciation Cathedral of the Moscow Kremlin together with artists Theophanes the Greek and Prokhor from Gorodets in 1405. He took the vows with the name Andrew in 1405 and lived in the Andronikov Monastery of the Savior near Moscow. He studied and worked in a team of Moscow artists between 13s. He was born ca. 1360 in the central region of Russia. There is very little data about Saint Andrei Rublev: The 15 th-century icon painting combines the Russian tradition already established by that time with the themes of the wider Orthodox world, and the icons depict the ideal heavenly world, the heavenly bliss of the righteous, the kingdom of Grace. The Russian religiosity of the 15 th century sought to find an ideal, to see the images of heavenly beauty, to have the reminder that each person bears in himself the Image of God. ![]() The children described their impressions in different ways but they were unanimous in one thing: that the picture in front of them was an icon and that “when you look at it, you feel that it is looking back at you.”Īndrew Rublev lived and worked in a difficult period for Russia: on the one hand, it was a time of destruction and devastation after the foreign yoke, and on the other hand, Russia was having an unprecedented spiritual revival. There is an opinion – I do not remember who expressed it – that people in the 15 th century had such a thirst and need for God and that Andrei Rublev was able to write such an icon of the Holy Trinity, that a 15 th-century Church synod issued a decree ordering all icon painters to portray the Holy Trinity the way Andrei Rublev had done.Īt one point, children of Spanish Gypsies (who had no church or school education) were shown a reproduction of a Rublev icon and were asked to describe what they saw on it.
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