The “Woman Clothed with the Sun” is an iconographic type of the Virgin that developed in German church art in the late 15th century. In the West, this image is used not only for icons, but also for stained glass windows, engravings, miniatures and sculptures.
This plot was borrowed from German masters by the Poles, and through Poland, Lithuania, Ukraine and Belarus, it came to Russia in the late 17th century, but it did not become popular. In the Russian iconographic heritage, it has been preserved in a somewhat revised form.
This iconographic type was inspired by a verse from the Apocalypse:
This plot was borrowed from German masters by the Poles, and through Poland, Lithuania, Ukraine and Belarus, it came to Russia in the late 17th century, but it did not become popular. In the Russian iconographic heritage, it has been preserved in a somewhat revised form.
This iconographic type was inspired by a verse from the Apocalypse: