

Kievan
School icons
First row, from left to right: Christ Acheiropoietos (Made without
hands), The Virgin Orans Great Panagia, and The (Arch)angel
with the Golden Hair (all 12th c.).
Second row, from left to right: The Dormition of the Virgin (end
of the 12th-beginning of the 13th c.), The Virgin of White Lake
(Belozerskaia) (13th c.), St. George the Warrior (11th-12th c.),
The Virgin of the Caves (Pecherskaia), also known as The Virgin
of Svena (Svenskaia) (ca. 1288).
You'll find some of these icons attributed to the Novgorodian, Yaroslav,
or Rostov-Suzdal School of icon painting. The confusion stems from mixing
two approaches, chronological and geographical, in placing the works
within a specific school. If one assumes a purely chronological approach,
as we do here, then the earliest Russian icons, no matter in what city
they were created, should be attributed to the Kievan School. This school
was active from the end of the 10th century, the time of Christianization
of Russia, until Kiev was sacked and burned by the Mongols in 1240.
And even though there might have been some icon painting in Kiev after
the fall of the capital, the center of icon painting moved to the
north, to Novgorod.
The first icons were brought to Russia from the Byzantine Empire and
from Bulgaria, which became an intermediary between Constantinople and
Kiev, supplying the newly Christianized state with books, icons, and
liturgical objects necessary for the celebration of the mass. We may
suspect that the first painters in Kiev were also Greeks or Byzantinized
South Slavs. They became teachers of the first Russian painters and
gave them a sound training in the Byzantine style and tradition. Since
Russians were always exceedingly adept not only at blind mimicking but
at taking a step forward, they quickly learned how to extend the Byzantine
style and tradition and make it their own. The early Russian (Kievan)
style was still quite dependent on the Byzantine. The compositions were
monumental, uncluttered, and simple. Some icons exhibited close affinities
with the art of classical antiquity. Most Kievan School icons were painted
in darker, more somber tones and were often large in dimensions because
they were hand hewn with an axe from a large piece of wood. However,
the Russians very quickly abandoned the Byzantine tradition of portraying
Christ Pantokrator as a severe and strict judge and started developing
a more "humane," understanding, and forgiving image of Christ, the Savior
and the Redeemer. This tendency led later, in the Novgorodian and Moscow
traditions to the development of a Savior type best known from the work
of Andrei
Rublev, and to the appearance of the "Russian" variants of
many saints, particularly St. Nicholas and St. George.