リヴィウ近郊のボフダン・フメリニツキーとトゥガイ・ベイ

Jan Matejko · PD

リヴィウ近郊のボフダン・フメリニツキーとトゥガイ・ベイ


作品情報

アーティスト
ヤン・マテイコ
制作年
1885
技法
油彩
種類
絵画
寸法
130 × 79 cm

ストーリー

When Matejko painted this in 1885, Poland had not appeared on any map for 90 years, carved up among Russia, Prussia and Austria. That absence is the reason his history paintings mattered so much to Poles. He made the national past visible when the nation itself was not. Here he reaches back to 1648 and the great Cossack revolt led by Bohdan Khmelnytsky, shown beside his ally Tugay Bey, a Crimean Tatar commander, as their forces threaten Lviv. Above the two leaders Matejko sets a vision of Saint John of Dukla, the friar whom legend credited with saving the city. He worked on scenes like this near the end of his life, and he died in 1893, still Poland's uncrowned national painter.