MAKOVSKY Constantine – Bulgarian martyr 900 Classic russian paintings
MAKOVSKY Constantine - Bulgarian martyr
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A painting depicting drama is more of an exception in Vladimir Makovsky’s oeuvre than a trend. His paintings are usually light and kind, but the news of how the Turks brutally massacred the Bulgarian population by suppressing a rebellion could not leave his delicate artistic nature indifferent. The characters in The Bulgarian Martyrs are two young women, one of whom may already be dead, a baby who apparently will never know earthly life, and three Turkish executioners.
Description of Vladimir Makovsky’s painting The Bulgarian Martyrs
A painting depicting drama is more of an exception in Vladimir Makovsky’s oeuvre than a trend. His paintings are usually light and kind, but the news of how the Turks brutally massacred the Bulgarian population by suppressing a rebellion could not leave his delicate artistic nature indifferent.
The characters in The Bulgarian Martyrs are two young women, one of whom may already be dead, a baby who apparently will never know earthly life, and three Turkish executioners. They encircle the unhappy woman and tear off her clothes, and the woman tries to hold the sobbing baby in her arms, but her eyes are no longer fixed on the child, but on her tortured friend, lying on the floor. Around her are puddles of blood. These are signs of torture.
Judging by the surrounding objects and the setting, the action takes place in an Orthodox church, which emphasizes the blasphemousness of what is happening even more. The temple has been barbarically ravaged, and now it is the turn of the young mother and her child. It is tempting to say that these Turkish soldiers have nothing sacred.
Even if they have a different faith, they could have stopped in front of the little man who has just begun to live, in front of his mother, without whom the baby would not live a day, but the cruelty of these three Turks leaves no hope for the captured to stay alive.
Having immortalized such a dramatic subject, Vladimir Makovsky decided to sell his work and send the proceeds to Bulgaria - to help the victims, to help the people heal their spiritual wounds.
Thanks to this painting we now have a clearer idea of what inhumanity is, and how any war, even the smallest one, even a simple suppression of rebellion, can shred souls, but it should not be on Earth.
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In the center of the composition, a group of men are gathered. One holds a distressed woman, who appears to be alive but is in a state of shock or fear, cradling an infant. These figures are depicted with dark, imposing features, and their attire suggests a harsh, possibly oppressive context. The overall atmosphere is dark and somber, with elements of religious iconography, such as a candelabra or alter, suggesting a sacred space violated by violence.
The subtext of the painting likely refers to the brutal suppression of Bulgarian uprisings against Ottoman rule in the 19th century, also known as the Bulgarian Horrors. The fallen woman in the foreground could represent a martyred individual, a symbol of Bulgarian suffering and sacrifice. The woman being held and the infant might represent the surviving population, possibly being taken captive or facing further violence. The figures of the men and their attire could be interpreted as representing the Ottoman oppressors. The painting thus serves as a powerful visual elegy, a testament to the suffering and resistance of the Bulgarian people during a period of intense national struggle.