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Trinity
Many scholars consider Rublev's Trinity the most perfect of all Russian
icons and perhaps the most perfect of all the icons ever painted. The
work was created for the abbot of the Trinity Monastery, Nikon of Radonezh,
a disciple of the famous Sergius, one of the leaders of the monastic revival
in the 14th-century Russia. Asking Rublev to paint the icon of the Holy
Trinity, Nikon wanted to commemorate Sergius as a man whose life and deeds
embodied the most progressive processes in the late 14th-century Russia.
From the earliest times, the idea of the Trinity was controversial and
difficult to understand, especially for the uneducated masses. Even though
Christianity replaced the pagan polytheism, it gave the believers a monotheistic
religion with a difficult concept of one God in three hypostases -- God
the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit. Not only the uneducated
population but many theologians had difficulties with the concept of the
triune God; from time to time, a heretical movement, like Arianism, questioned
the doctrine, causing long debates, violent persecutions, and even greater
general confusion. Trying to portray the Trinity, but always aware of
the Biblical prohibition against depicting God, icon painters turned to
the story of the hospitality of Abraham who was visited by three wanderers.
In their compositions, icon painters included many details -- the figures
of Abraham and Sarah, a servant killing a calf in preparation for the
feast, the rock, the tree of Mamre, and the house (tent)
Very few artists before Rublev dared to eliminate all the narrative elements
from the story, leaving only the three angels; usually those who did so
had to deal with limited space. The results of their efforts did not find
general acceptance or many copyists. Rublev was the first to make a conscious
decision not to include in his composition the figures of Abraham and
Sarah because he did not set out to illustrate the story of the hospitality
of Abraham, as did many painters before him, but to convey through his
image the idea of the unity and indivisibility of the three persons of
the Trinity.
The doctrine of the Trinity, difficult to explain logically, found various
interpretations. Some thought that the Trinity consisted of God the Father,
God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit. Others believed that it was just
God and two angels. In the 14th and 15th-century Russia, in the period
of many heretical movements, the idea of the Trinity was often questioned.
The heretics in Novgorod claimed that it is not permissible to paint the
Trinity on icons because Abraham did not see the Trinity but only God
and two angels. Other heretics rejected the idea of the three hypostases
of God altogether. The church fought the heresies with all the means it
had -- usually with polemical treaties, but also with force, if necessary.
Russian icon painters before Rublev subscribed to the same point of view
that Abraham was visited by God (in Christ's image) and two angels. Hence,
Christ was represented in icons of the Trinity as the middle angel and
was symbolically set apart either by a halo with a cross, by a considerable
enlargement of his figure, by widely spread wings or by a scroll in His
hand.
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