A unique collection of Ethiopian icons will be put on display in the crypt of the St. Alexander Nevski cathedral to mark the 50th jubilee of the Museum of Christian Art next year. The exhibits, which are from the museum’s fund have never been shown before. Back in the 1980’s the Ministry of Foreign Affairs donated icons and scrolls which will now be open to visitors.
But is the Museum of Christian Art popular and how many people go to see it? Here is the answer from Ass. Prof. Ralitsa Rousseva – chief curator of the museum and member of the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences Institute of Art Studies.
“We offer the entire array of Bulgaria’s cultural heritage. No official delegation coming to the country – presidents, foremost writers and artists from all over the world – has ever given the crypt a miss. And not just Orthodox Christians but also people of all religious denominations come to see the exhibits here.”
As far as restoration goes, some of the exhibits used to be in a deplorable state. But with the help of the National Art Gallery laboratory and its icon restorers, now they are much improved.
“The oldest wooden icon is Jesus Pantocrator. Actually, it was divided into three icons because of the complexity of the restoration work,” says Ass. Prof. Rousseva further. “The exhibit dates back to the 11th century. The oldest artifact in the crypt is a fragment of a 5th century fresco, we also have a small ceramic icon from Preslav which is from the 9th-10th century. The exposition covers a period from the 5th to the end of the 19th century.”
What will the jubilee celebrations include?
“We are now working on the patronage but the celebrations open next year. The first exhibition will display masterpieces of religious art marking the individual medieval periods. They are not currently in the crypt. The next exposition will be of Ethiopian Christian art i.e. we will present a country entirely unknown to Bulgarians. Moreover, we are working on a designated website for the crypt. We will also publish a catalogue presenting the collection that has constantly been enriched for 50 years.”
English version: Milena Daynova
Photos: Deyana BorissovaThe fate of the Saints Peter and Paul church in Sofia has had its ups and downs, it has been through all kinds of uncertainties. It is perhaps one of the lesser known churches in the capital city, but it is also the only one named after the apostles –..
"It was in the Bulgarian lands that the disciples of Cyril and Methodius created literary centres that made Bulgaria a second centre of Orthodox civilisation after Byzantium. Here was the foundation and the root from which the pan-Slavic culture drew..
According to Ottoman documents around 500 dervishes once lived around what is today the village of Bivolyane in Momchilgrad municipality, trained at Elmala Baba Teke, a religious centre once famed as the biggest Dervish centre in this part of the..
+359 2 9336 661