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The Presentation in the Temple

Icon
18th century or possibly early 20th century (painted)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Tempera painting

Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleThe Presentation in the Temple
Materials and techniques
Tempera on panel
Brief description
Icon, 'The Presentation in the Temple', Greek School, 18th century or possibly early 20th century
Physical description
Tempera painting
Dimensions
  • Approx. height: 13.25in
  • Approx. width: 11in
Dimensions taken from departmental object file
Style
Object history
Purchased, 1927
Bought for £10. Received from J. Stuart Hay Esq, 9 Chester Place, W.2.

This icon is one of four panels which were purchased from Stuart Hay and Leonard Bower for £10 each in 1927. The transactions are well recorded in the Registred Papers of the V&A and are interesting because of the great deal of information regarding the place of origin of the icons. The panels are known to have come from the town of Gumulgina in Macedonia, (present day Komotini in Greece), and while they are often described as a set, they were purchased in two separate transactions. The first transaction consisted of three icons (The Presentation in the Temple W.4-1927, The Entry into Jerusalem W.5-1927, and The Anastasis W.6-1927) which appeared to have come from the festival tier of an iconostasis, while the second transaction included a single panel (The Baptism of Christ W.13-1927) described as coming from the same set as the first three icons, but which is of slightly larger proportions and of a different style.

Tests have been done to ascertain the chemical structure of the gesso used as the base layer for two of these icons with interesting results. This icon (W.4-1927) was one of those tested revealing that the gesso bases of the icons of the first group from Komotini are unusual in their structures and contain a layered composition not commonly seen in other icons. The resulting finish of the base layer for the pigment is therefore very thin and appears almost like parchment. Additionally, the overall design of the icon appears incised into the top layer of the gesso so that scoring is visible which creates the outlines for the composition of the figures. The surface of the panels also appears to have been heated and the pigment layer has blistered in a manner uncommon in traditional icon painting, perhaps indicating forgery in the early twentieth century. However, the pigments employed were identified in the Raman Microscopy scan and are in keeping with the materials used in the eighteenth century.

N.B. An article by J. Stuart Hay and Leonard Bower, "Greek Icon Painting", was published in The Burlington Magazine for Connoisseurs, Vol. 51, No.292 (July 1927), pages 8-14.

Historical significance: This scene depicts the presentation of Christ in the Temple in Jerusalem and is one of the twelve Great Feasts of the Orthodox liturgical calendar or dodekaorton. The Christ child is held in the arms of the high Priest Simeon, who does not touch Christ directly, but rather covers his hands with a cloth denoting the sanctity of the Christ child. The Virgin wears a red maphorion over a blue tunic and has her arms outstretched. Behind the Virgin stand her mother, Anna, who holds a scroll and wears a patterned head cloth, and Joseph who holds a dish containing two doves as a sacrificial offering. The buildings in the background create the architectural space of the Temple, and denote a sacred place, although it employs Christian iconography in this construction of the Jewish Temple. The icon probably comes from the ‘festival tier’ of an iconostasis, or icon screen which separates the sanctuary of an orthodox church from the nave in which the people stand. The festival tier would have held twelve icons of the same dimensions which depict the dodekaorton.
Subject depicted
Associated objects
Bibliographic references
  • This icon is included in a hard-bound, typed manuscript [copy from the "Department of Paintings", now located in Paintings section library, Word and Image Department]: List of Icons in the Victoria & Albert Museum with a List of Books and Articles on Icons Classified According to Languages (see List of Contents). 1931. This icon is noted on Page 3, entry as follows: "Regd. No: W.4-1927. Woodwork Dept. [Since transferred to Paintings.] School/Period: Italo-Greek. 16th cent. [Crossed out and manuscript note: "18c."]. Perhaps 1st half. Subject: The Presentation in the Temple. From the Church of Gumulgina, on the line between Salonika and the Serbian frontier. Remarks: Stated to be Italo-Greek, 16th century. [Manuscript addition: "'Macedonian' in Woodwork Register"]." [Manuscript note at the bottom of page 3. notes that all the icons listed on page 3 (W.4-1927, W.5-1927, W.6-1927 and W.13-1927) are "probably all Greek"].
  • Lucia Burgio (1-2), Robin J.H. Clark (2) and Krini Theodoraki (3),"Ramen microscopy of Greek icons: identification of unusual pigments", in Spectrochimica Acta Part A: Molecular and Biomolecular Spectroscopy, Volume 59, Issue 10, August 2003, Pages 2371-2389. Georaman 2002, Fifth International Conference on Raman Spectroscopy Applied to the Earth Sciences. (Article available online) 1. Victoria and Albert Museum, South Kensington, London SW7 2RL, UK. 2. Christopher Ingold Laboratories, University College London, 20 Gordon Street, London WC1H 0AJ, UK. 3. Courtauld Institute of Art, Somerset House, Strand, London WC2R 0RN, UK. Abstract Five Greek icons, made between the 15th and the 18th centuries and now belonging to the Victoria and Albert Museum collections, were analysed by energy-dispersive X-ray fluorescence (EDXRF), optical microscopy and Raman microscopy in order to determine the stratigraphy of the artworks and the identity of the pigments used. Together with common pigments, such as red lake, vermilion, red lead, red iron oxide, orpiment, yellow ochre, lead white, chalk, gypsum, anhydrite, Prussian blue, indigo and a copper-containing green, a few unusual materials were identified, specifically pararealgar (a yellow arsenic sulfide, As4S4), its precursor the c-phase, and lead tin yellow type II (PbSn1-xSixO3). Attention is drawn to the complementarity of the techniques used for the pigment identifications. Article Outline 1. Introduction 2. Experimental 2.1. Energy-dispersive X-ray fluorescence 2.2. Optical microscopy 2.3. Raman microscopy 3. The icons 3.1. The Ascension (W.15-1940) 3.2. The Annunciation (W.12-1942) and the Entry into Jerusalem (W.14-1942) 3.3. The Presentation to the Temple (W.4-1927) and the Entry into Jerusalem (W. 5-1927) 4. Results 4.1. Grounds 4.2. Paint layers 4.3. The Ascension (W.15-1940) 4.4. The Annunciation (W.12-1942) 4.5. The Entry into Jerusalem (W.14-1942) 4.6. The Presentation to the Temple (W.4-1927) 4.7. The Entry into Jerusalem (W.5-1927) 5. Discussion 6. Conclusion Acknowledgements References
Collection
Accession number
W.4-1927

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Record createdMay 21, 2007
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