Icon

From Wikimedia Commons, the free media repository
Jump to navigation Jump to search
For graphical computer icons see Category:Icons.

In art, the term Icon (from Greek εικων, eikon, "image") commonly refers to religious paintings in Eastern Orthodox, Oriental Orthodox, and Eastern-rite Catholic jurisdictions. In churches, icons are commonly displayed on an iconostasis.

In a broader sense, icons are artistic visual representations or symbols of anything considered holy and divine, such as God, saints or deities. An icon could be a painting (including relief painting), sculpture, or mosaic, but usually it is tempera on the wood plank.

The Iconostasis 17th/18th cent, Historic Museum in Sanok, Poland

Iconostasis

[edit]
Main gallery: Iconostasis.

Riza

[edit]
Main category: Riza

Types

[edit]

Сondition

[edit]

Encaustic icons

[edit]

Byzantine icons

[edit]
Main category: Byzantine icons

Bulgarian icons

[edit]

Greek icons

[edit]
Main category: Icons of Greece

Cretan school

[edit]

Russian icons

[edit]
Main category: Icons of Russia

Early Russian icons

[edit]

XIII century

[edit]

Classical russian icons

[edit]

Moscow school

[edit]

Novgorod school

[edit]

Pskov school

[edit]

Tver school

[edit]

Icons after XVII c.

[edit]

Icons of XVII c.

[edit]

Icons of XVIII c.

[edit]

Russian icons of XIX c.

[edit]

Russian icons of XX c.

[edit]

Ukrainian icons

[edit]
Main category: Icons of Ukraine

Icons of Poland

[edit]
Main category: Icons of Poland

Icons of Serbia

[edit]
Main category: Icons of Serbia

Coptic icons

[edit]
Main category: Coptic icons