Lot 0258
Icon of the Mother of God Khtitorissa of Vatopedi with Saints John the Theologian and Parthenios, Mount Athos, late 18th–early 19th century
Estimate: 4000-6000€

ICON OF THE MOTHER OF GOD KHTITORISSA OF VATOPEDI WITH SAINTS JOHN THE THEOLOGIAN AND PARTHENIOS, BISHOP OF LAMPSAKOS
Greece, Mount Athos (?), late 18th to early 19th century. 
Wood, levkas, tempera
. Dimensions: 28.5 × 23 cm
Provenance: formerly in the possession of the Greek monk Parthenios.
This icon presents a refined and unusually elaborate variant of the Vatopedi Khtitorissa iconography. The Virgin enthroned with the Christ Child occupies the center of the composition, while two angels descending in cloud-borne segments place a crown upon her head. In the miraculous prototype of the Vatopedi monastery, the crown belongs to the revetment; here it has been fully integrated into the painted image, lending the composition greater ceremonial splendor. The Christ Child, instead of the customary scroll, holds a Gospel bound in a precious cover, a variant known in later painted replicas of revered miracle-working icons.
At either side of the central group stand two full-length saints, compressed into the narrow vertical spaces between the principal composition and the side margins. To the viewer’s right appears Saint John the Theologian, accompanied below by his symbolic eagle. To the left stands Saint Parthenios, Bishop of Lampsakos. Along the lower border runs a cursive owner’s inscription which may be translated: “Supplication of the servant of God, the monk Parthenios.” The icon was most likely ordered by an Athonite monk named Parthenios, probably a member of the Vatopedi monastery, who wished to possess an image of the monastery’s venerated wonderworking shrine, joined with the figure of his name saint, Saint Parthenios of Lampsakos, shown in prayerful intercession before the Mother of God.
The inclusion of Saint John the Theologian may also reflect the patron’s Greek devotional identity. The Evangelist’s close association with the island of Patmos, where according to tradition he received and wrote the Apocalypse, would have carried particular resonance for a Greek monk and pilgrim milieu. The icon thus unites personal piety, monastic devotion, and local sacred geography within a single, carefully conceived image.

Starting price: 3500€
Estimate: 4000-6000€
Hammer Price: €

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