Newly discovered portraits of rulers and the dating of the oldest frescoes in Lipljan
Abstract
On the facade of the church of the Presentation of the Virgin, in Lipljan, the damaged depictions of two rulers were discovered under a more recent layer of fresco mortar. The depictions can be identified as portraits of the Serbian king and the emperor Stefan Dusan (1331-1355) and his wife Jelena. That provides the basis for the more reliable dating of the original wall painting in the interior of the church. For their part, the stylistic characteristics of that expressionistic painting suggest that the original Lipljan frescoes came into being around the mid-fourteenth century. Probably, they were executed by the same workshop that did the frescoes in the Church of St. Peter near Unjemir in Metohia, not very far from Lipljan.
Keywords:
wall paintings / stylistic trends in the Late Byzantine painting / Stefan Dusan / Serbia / rulers' portraits / LipljanSource:
Zograf, 2012, 36, 143-155Publisher:
- Univerzitet u Beogradu - Filozofski fakultet - Institut za istoriju umetnosti, Beograd
Funding / projects:
- Tradition, Innovation and Identity in the Byzantine World (RS-177032)
- Serbian Medieval Art and its European Context (RS-177036)
DOI: 10.2298/ZOG1236143D
ISSN: 0350-1361
WoS: 000327679600012
Scopus: 2-s2.0-84894795285
Institution/Community
Istorija umetnosti / History of ArtTY - JOUR AU - Vojvodić, Dragan PY - 2012 UR - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1461 AB - On the facade of the church of the Presentation of the Virgin, in Lipljan, the damaged depictions of two rulers were discovered under a more recent layer of fresco mortar. The depictions can be identified as portraits of the Serbian king and the emperor Stefan Dusan (1331-1355) and his wife Jelena. That provides the basis for the more reliable dating of the original wall painting in the interior of the church. For their part, the stylistic characteristics of that expressionistic painting suggest that the original Lipljan frescoes came into being around the mid-fourteenth century. Probably, they were executed by the same workshop that did the frescoes in the Church of St. Peter near Unjemir in Metohia, not very far from Lipljan. PB - Univerzitet u Beogradu - Filozofski fakultet - Institut za istoriju umetnosti, Beograd T2 - Zograf T1 - Newly discovered portraits of rulers and the dating of the oldest frescoes in Lipljan EP - 155 SP - 143 VL - 36 DO - 10.2298/ZOG1236143D ER -
@article{ author = "Vojvodić, Dragan", year = "2012", abstract = "On the facade of the church of the Presentation of the Virgin, in Lipljan, the damaged depictions of two rulers were discovered under a more recent layer of fresco mortar. The depictions can be identified as portraits of the Serbian king and the emperor Stefan Dusan (1331-1355) and his wife Jelena. That provides the basis for the more reliable dating of the original wall painting in the interior of the church. For their part, the stylistic characteristics of that expressionistic painting suggest that the original Lipljan frescoes came into being around the mid-fourteenth century. Probably, they were executed by the same workshop that did the frescoes in the Church of St. Peter near Unjemir in Metohia, not very far from Lipljan.", publisher = "Univerzitet u Beogradu - Filozofski fakultet - Institut za istoriju umetnosti, Beograd", journal = "Zograf", title = "Newly discovered portraits of rulers and the dating of the oldest frescoes in Lipljan", pages = "155-143", volume = "36", doi = "10.2298/ZOG1236143D" }
Vojvodić, D.. (2012). Newly discovered portraits of rulers and the dating of the oldest frescoes in Lipljan. in Zograf Univerzitet u Beogradu - Filozofski fakultet - Institut za istoriju umetnosti, Beograd., 36, 143-155. https://doi.org/10.2298/ZOG1236143D
Vojvodić D. Newly discovered portraits of rulers and the dating of the oldest frescoes in Lipljan. in Zograf. 2012;36:143-155. doi:10.2298/ZOG1236143D .
Vojvodić, Dragan, "Newly discovered portraits of rulers and the dating of the oldest frescoes in Lipljan" in Zograf, 36 (2012):143-155, https://doi.org/10.2298/ZOG1236143D . .