The Discovery of Hierotopy

This paper outlines the genesis of hierotopy, a notion serving to conceptualize the creation of sacred spaces as a particular form of human art. The concept encompasses the entirety of the multifarious components employed in Byzantine sacred spaces and analyzes the ways in which their cooperative in...

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Main Author: Andrew Simsky
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Yaroslav-the-Wise Novgorod State University 2020-06-01
Series:Визуальная теология
Subjects:
Online Access:https://visualtheology.ru/index.php/journal/article/view/32/13
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spelling doaj-90f1bc339b4c4a46921d7a12214170312021-04-07T18:34:34ZdeuYaroslav-the-Wise Novgorod State UniversityВизуальная теология2713-16102713-19552020-06-01192810.34680/vistheo-2020-1-9-28The Discovery of HierotopyAndrew Simsky0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0902-3634Research Center for Eastern Christian CultureThis paper outlines the genesis of hierotopy, a notion serving to conceptualize the creation of sacred spaces as a particular form of human art. The concept encompasses the entirety of the multifarious components employed in Byzantine sacred spaces and analyzes the ways in which their cooperative interaction results in the formation of a 'spa-tial icon', or a kind of sacred ambiance. The very notion of a 'spatial icon' draws upon the central place of icons and iconicity in the Eastern Christian worldview. In Byzantium, icons were seen as windows opening out onto an otherworldly reality, or, rather, as doors opening up a two-way communication; in this way, the icon was understood as a means or a place, of immediate contact with the divine, or a sort of platonic chora, in which ideal divine forms assimilated material contours. Within the context of a sacred space, the icon appeared not only as a principal meaning-making agent, but also as a conceptual key for understanding the way in which other components, as well as the sacred space as a whole, effectively worked; each component was thus understood and experienced as being 'iconic', or icon-like, in the sense of providing other points (or, rather, spaces) of contact between the earthly and the divine. As this paper recounts, Alexei Lidov made his first steps towards forging the concept of hierotopy while studying the design, as well as the perception, of Byzantine iconographic programs; as his studies revealed, icons acted not simply as images, but also with the full deployment of their wonder-working potential evincing a powerful expression of religious meaning, particularly when purposefully employed together with wonder-working relics. Lidov's next step was to realize the fully performative nature of spatial icons by taking into account the crucial role played by the surrounding liturgical context, in which each beholder, or liturgical participant, played an active role in giving life to the spatial icon. Hierotopy was thus discovered (and formally defined) as a special form of art involving the performative creation of spatial icons. The paper also discusses the concept of 'image-paradigms' as multimodal units of meaning within sacred spaces, or as compound mental constructs combining together dogmatic ideas, imagery and holistic emotive components (so-called atmospheres).https://visualtheology.ru/index.php/journal/article/view/32/13hierotopyiconsacred spacebyzantiumlidovrelicperformativityatmosphereimage-paradigm
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language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Andrew Simsky
spellingShingle Andrew Simsky
The Discovery of Hierotopy
Визуальная теология
hierotopy
icon
sacred space
byzantium
lidov
relic
performativity
atmosphere
image-paradigm
author_facet Andrew Simsky
author_sort Andrew Simsky
title The Discovery of Hierotopy
title_short The Discovery of Hierotopy
title_full The Discovery of Hierotopy
title_fullStr The Discovery of Hierotopy
title_full_unstemmed The Discovery of Hierotopy
title_sort discovery of hierotopy
publisher Yaroslav-the-Wise Novgorod State University
series Визуальная теология
issn 2713-1610
2713-1955
publishDate 2020-06-01
description This paper outlines the genesis of hierotopy, a notion serving to conceptualize the creation of sacred spaces as a particular form of human art. The concept encompasses the entirety of the multifarious components employed in Byzantine sacred spaces and analyzes the ways in which their cooperative interaction results in the formation of a 'spa-tial icon', or a kind of sacred ambiance. The very notion of a 'spatial icon' draws upon the central place of icons and iconicity in the Eastern Christian worldview. In Byzantium, icons were seen as windows opening out onto an otherworldly reality, or, rather, as doors opening up a two-way communication; in this way, the icon was understood as a means or a place, of immediate contact with the divine, or a sort of platonic chora, in which ideal divine forms assimilated material contours. Within the context of a sacred space, the icon appeared not only as a principal meaning-making agent, but also as a conceptual key for understanding the way in which other components, as well as the sacred space as a whole, effectively worked; each component was thus understood and experienced as being 'iconic', or icon-like, in the sense of providing other points (or, rather, spaces) of contact between the earthly and the divine. As this paper recounts, Alexei Lidov made his first steps towards forging the concept of hierotopy while studying the design, as well as the perception, of Byzantine iconographic programs; as his studies revealed, icons acted not simply as images, but also with the full deployment of their wonder-working potential evincing a powerful expression of religious meaning, particularly when purposefully employed together with wonder-working relics. Lidov's next step was to realize the fully performative nature of spatial icons by taking into account the crucial role played by the surrounding liturgical context, in which each beholder, or liturgical participant, played an active role in giving life to the spatial icon. Hierotopy was thus discovered (and formally defined) as a special form of art involving the performative creation of spatial icons. The paper also discusses the concept of 'image-paradigms' as multimodal units of meaning within sacred spaces, or as compound mental constructs combining together dogmatic ideas, imagery and holistic emotive components (so-called atmospheres).
topic hierotopy
icon
sacred space
byzantium
lidov
relic
performativity
atmosphere
image-paradigm
url https://visualtheology.ru/index.php/journal/article/view/32/13
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