Color Comparison: Byzantine in Serbia, Modern in Stockholm

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Pure color resonance from the Byzantine mosaics of the Fruska Gora monasteries of northern Serbia and Yves Klien’s monochromatic canvases at the Moderna Museet in Stockholm.

These frescoes at the Velika Remeta monastery are the newest I saw of the three monasteries I visited that day. They were all Serbian Orthodox churches that had moved to these lush rolling hills to escape the Ottoman invasions. The old churches were later surrounded, quite close up, by newer cloisters, where monks, nuns, or sometimes both together, always led by a male priest, cared for the church and community. In the first one the bright, bold frescoes were relatively new, but still in the flat Byzantine style and surrounding a valuable icon of the three-handed Virgin Mary. I saw copies of this icon in the next two monasteries as well,  all after from the same original that is apparently very special and located in present-day Ukraine. The continuity of tradition was striking.

When I was in Stockholm a few weeks later, the blues and golds reminded me forcefully of the Orthodox church decoration I had seen, particularly this first one.

Greetings from the rainy state of Georgia

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I wouldn’t have believed the unseasonably rainy weather unless I was sitting on the back porch now, watching it pour as I try to catch up on things. I had a fantastic trip through the Balkans, and a quick visit to Sweden and New York City, before coming home to Georgia, where I will be living for the next two years, as I complete a Masters program  in Art History. But before school starts next week, I want to catch up on my travel notes, the 2,500+ photographs I took, and start sharing some of the awesome things I’ve seen. (Last but not least was Thomas Hirschhorn’s Gramsci Monument in New York.)