Two Greek painters’ signatures

I publish two neglected painters’ signatures found in illustrated Greek manuscripts. By coincidence, both accompany an image of the evangelist John preceding the text of his gospel, and the respective codices are both kept in German libraries, in Wolfenbuttel and in Gotha. In one case, the words χηρ...

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Main Author: Parpulov Georgi
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Faculty of Philosophy, Belgrade 2023-01-01
Series:Zograf
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doiserbia.nb.rs/img/doi/0350-1361/2023/0350-13612347187P.pdf
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author Parpulov Georgi
author_facet Parpulov Georgi
author_sort Parpulov Georgi
collection DOAJ
description I publish two neglected painters’ signatures found in illustrated Greek manuscripts. By coincidence, both accompany an image of the evangelist John preceding the text of his gospel, and the respective codices are both kept in German libraries, in Wolfenbuttel and in Gotha. In one case, the words χηρ νικιτα (“hand of Nicetas”) are written below John’s image in large capitals. The image is datable on stylistic grounds to ca. 1300. Its painter is otherwise unattested, but the unusually prominent placing of his name is worthy of note. The second signature is less prominent but even more curious, for it reads Δομήνικος Κρής, i.e. “Dominic, a Cretan”. This is none other than the famous El Greco. The miniature’s style is comparable to works from his Venetian period (1567-1570).
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institution Kabale University
issn 0350-1361
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language deu
publishDate 2023-01-01
publisher Faculty of Philosophy, Belgrade
record_format Article
series Zograf
spelling doaj-art-068e0402e9534e6ea883fe3fdd39539f2025-01-30T06:36:53ZdeuFaculty of Philosophy, BelgradeZograf0350-13612406-07552023-01-0120234718720210.2298/ZOG2347187P0350-13612347187PTwo Greek painters’ signaturesParpulov Georgi0nemaI publish two neglected painters’ signatures found in illustrated Greek manuscripts. By coincidence, both accompany an image of the evangelist John preceding the text of his gospel, and the respective codices are both kept in German libraries, in Wolfenbuttel and in Gotha. In one case, the words χηρ νικιτα (“hand of Nicetas”) are written below John’s image in large capitals. The image is datable on stylistic grounds to ca. 1300. Its painter is otherwise unattested, but the unusually prominent placing of his name is worthy of note. The second signature is less prominent but even more curious, for it reads Δομήνικος Κρής, i.e. “Dominic, a Cretan”. This is none other than the famous El Greco. The miniature’s style is comparable to works from his Venetian period (1567-1570).https://doiserbia.nb.rs/img/doi/0350-1361/2023/0350-13612347187P.pdfbyzantine paintingel greco
spellingShingle Parpulov Georgi
Two Greek painters’ signatures
Zograf
byzantine painting
el greco
title Two Greek painters’ signatures
title_full Two Greek painters’ signatures
title_fullStr Two Greek painters’ signatures
title_full_unstemmed Two Greek painters’ signatures
title_short Two Greek painters’ signatures
title_sort two greek painters signatures
topic byzantine painting
el greco
url https://doiserbia.nb.rs/img/doi/0350-1361/2023/0350-13612347187P.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT parpulovgeorgi twogreekpainterssignatures