Radoslav (Serbian: Радослав) was a miniaturist painter and manuscript illuminator[1] who lived in the first part of the 15th century Serbia.[2] Today in Serbia he is referred to as Slikar (Painter) Radoslav. Very little information is known about him, except for his five surviving, signed pieces.[3] The fresco decorations of Kalenić Monastery is his masterpiece.[4]
It is said that the merit of this fifteenth-century art in Serbia which was both lordly and monastic and which was the product of luxury and asceticism alike, reconciled the outer with the inner beauty.[5] The two miniatures, one of St. Luke with a bull and the other of St. Mark with a lion are perhaps the finest examples of this complex, traditional culture, which found its most perfect expression in the art of painting.[6] The two miniatures come from a New Testament, done at Kalenić Monastery, dating from 1429. It is now part of a collection in the National Library of Russia (since 1932 named after Mikhail Saltykov-Shchedrin).[7]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Manuscript illuminator".
- ^ Janićijević, Jovan (1998). The cultural treasury of Serbia. ISBN 9788675470397.
- ^ Janićijević, Jovan (1996). Kulturna riznica Srbije. ISBN 9788675470397.
- ^ Strezova, Anita (September 2014). Hesychasm and Art: The Appearance of New Iconographic Trends in Byzantine and Slavic Lands in the 14th and 15th Centuries. ISBN 9781925021851.
- ^ Unesco (1978). "The Unesco Courier".
- ^ Jevtović, Jevta; Sorić, Ante; Milošević, Desanka; Skovran, Anika (1985). "Srednjovjekovna umjetnost Srba: Iz muzeja, riznica, manastira i crkava : [katalog".
- ^ "Istorija srpskog naroda: Doba borbi za očuvanje i obnovu države 1371-1537". 1892.