Byzantine Icons and Sacred Mosaics: The Divine Image in Gold and Glass
In the theological imagination of the Byzantine world, an icon was not a painting. It was a window — a thinning of the membrane between the visible and the invisible, between time and eternity, between the created order and the divine reality that the created order both conceals and reveals. To stand before an icon and truly see it — not merely look at it but allow oneself to be seen by it, which is what the frontal, direct gaze of the iconic figure demands — was to participate in an act of mutual recognition across the threshold of death. The saint depicted in the icon was understood to be genuinely present in the image, not as a ghost or an echo but as a living spiritual reality mediated through the material of wood, gesso, egg, pigment, and gold. This is why icons were kissed, carried in processions, credited with miracles, and, during the great theological crises of the eighth and ninth centuries, worth dying for. The tradition we call Byzantine art emerged from the fusion of la...