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3 - Translations

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 June 2023

Giedré Mickunaite
Affiliation:
Vilniaus Universitetas, Lithuania
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Summary

Abstract: Focusing on the altarpiece of Our Lady of Trakai, the research localizes post-Tridentine notions of sacred images through intertextual dialogue between the panel's initial outlook of the Beautiful Madonna and its remake into a pseudo-icon. The image's transformation is interpreted as an associative translation loaded with visual and narrative allusions ranging from Marian icons in Rome to Greek murals in the church of Trakai, destined to become a religious centre of Catholic Europe. The chapter demonstrates how the once fluid notion of the Greek manner having a single stable connotation of difference entered the mode of Catholic sameness and became stereotyped as an ancient icon of the Mother of God.

Keywords: post-Tridentine Catholicism, pastiche, facial identity, multiple temporalities, intertextual theory, cultural memory

Debates around the Greek image had narrowed its positive meanings to true testimony of the Christian past, pushing negative associations into oblivion. The solution to the conflict between good pictures and erroneous people was reached by ignoring the schism as far as it concerned images. The authority of the authorless Greek images stemmed from their antiquity, yet this past had to be updated to maintain its relevance for the concerns of the present. Stories, remakes, processions, and their combinations were undertaken to make the past present, display the antiquity of images, assure their identity, and strengthen prestige. All this required effort as well as determination until faith and miracles sustained the tradition. This third part of the book focuses on how the tradition of up-to-date antiquity was maintained through the transformations of the architecture and interior of the Trakai church and how narratives assisted in this project. The centuries-long process of making the past current is seen herein as a set of consecutive visual translations that joined together iconoclast and iconodule strategies to preserve the Greek identity of paintings. The transformations across visual and verbal media also translocated stories from Europe's south to receptive northern minds that found them apt to explain the sameness of visually alien images.

Church turned eastwards, minds directed westwards

Around 1500, murals in the Byzantine style were still extant in Poland and Lithuania; however, the demand for Greek paintings in Catholic churches expired with the last Jagiellonian commission from 1470. Apparently, skilful painters were available and Orthodox churches continued being decorated;1 however, wall paintings seized a traversal of the confessional divide.

Type
Chapter
Information
Maniera Greca in Europe's Catholic East
On Identities of Images in Lithuania and Poland (1380s-1720s)
, pp. 161 - 222
Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
Print publication year: 2023

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  • Translations
  • Giedré Mickunaite, Vilniaus Universitetas, Lithuania
  • Book: Maniera Greca in Europe's Catholic East
  • Online publication: 17 June 2023
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9789048532704.004
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  • Translations
  • Giedré Mickunaite, Vilniaus Universitetas, Lithuania
  • Book: Maniera Greca in Europe's Catholic East
  • Online publication: 17 June 2023
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9789048532704.004
Available formats
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Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • Translations
  • Giedré Mickunaite, Vilniaus Universitetas, Lithuania
  • Book: Maniera Greca in Europe's Catholic East
  • Online publication: 17 June 2023
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9789048532704.004
Available formats
×