Icon
From Christianity Knowledge Base
An icon is a flat panel painting of a sacred person or thing, such as Jesus, the Saints or the cross. Iconography (from Greek εικονογραφία) refers to the making and liturgical use of icons. Icons are more common in Eastern Christianity than in Western Christianity. However, some denominations consider icons to be a form of graven image.
Images have always been a vital part of the Eastern Christianity, but their place was the subject of the Iconoclast Controversy in the 8th and 9th centuries, especially in the East. The Sunday of Orthodoxy, the first Sunday of the Great Fast (Lent) every year celebrates the reestablishment of the Orthodox veneration of icons. The use of iconography is considered one of the most distinctive elements of the Byzantine rite.
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[edit] Theology
[edit] History
According to Orthodox tradition, Luke painted the first icon, and the subject was the Virgin Mary.
[edit] "Written" or "painted"?
The most literal translation of the word εικονογραφία (eikonographia) is "image writing," leading many English-speaking Orthodox Christians to insist that icons are not "painted" but rather "written." From there, further explanations are given that icons are to be understood in a manner similar to Holy Scripture—that is, they are not simply artistic compositions but rather are witnesses to the truth the way Scripture is. Far from being imaginitive creations of the iconographer, they are more like scribal copies of the Bible.
While the explanation of the purpose and nature of icons is certainly true and consistent with the Church's Holy Tradition, there is a linguistic problem with the insistence on the word written rather than painted. In Greek, a painted portrait of anyone is also a 'γραφή' (graphi), and the art of painting itself is called ζωγραφιά (zographia). Ancient Greek literally uses the same root word to refer to the making of portraits and the making of icons, but distinguishes whether it is "painting from life" 'ζωγραφιά' or "painting icons" 'εικονογραφία'. Thus, from a linguistic point of view, either all paintings—whether icons or simple portraits—are "written" or (more likely) "painted" is a perfectly usable English translation, simply making a distinction between the painting appropriate for icons and that appropriate for other kinds of painting, just as Greek does.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
[edit] General Information
[edit] Online Icon Galleries
- Icons of the Saris Museum at Bardejov - Slovakia
- Russian Icons Index
- Coptic icons
- Byzantine Sacred Art, Orthodox Icons and Iconography
[edit] Audio
From Our Life in Christ:
- Icons in the Orthodox Faith - Part 1
- Icons in the Orthodox Faith - Part 2
- History of Icons
- Icons and the Theology of Light, the Orthodox View of Salvation- Part 1
- Icons and the Theology of Light, the Orthodox View of Salvation- Part 2
- Icons and Veneration
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