(pravmir.com) - An "Exhibition for the Blind" is not the Right Name. This is Rather an Exhibition of Icons for All to Touch and Approach the Sacred.
The exhibition that's currently in the "House of Icons" (Moscow, Russia) is for all. Regardless of the way they read information – by vision or by touch. The exhibits there may be touched. They SHOULD be touched.
The exhibition's aim is to familiarize visitors with the world of iconography, from the very beginning, the creation of paint, to the finished icon. This process starts from minerals – malachite, lazurite, hematite – out of which pigments are made.Our visitors can also see mortars, in which iconographers grind paints, brushes that they use, and boards, on which the icons are created. Moreover, represented boards illustrate the process of icon creation: there are boards with linen, boards with priming, and boards with imprints.
"The exhibition also shows materials used in iconography: wood, ceramics, plaster, smalt, and metal," explained Ekaterina Vasina, Head of PR-department of the House of Icons...
I am a consecrated Christian solitary brother, observant of the Rule of St. Albert (CCC 920-921). I serve the body of Christ in fraternal community with the Order of Preachers (Rom 11:17).
Please pray for us in our call and mission to serve God and His church. / The monks here depicted are of the eremitic Order of St. Jerome (Hieronymites) to whom I was introduced in Lisbon, Portugal through the 'Mosteiro dos Jeronimos' world heritage site.
The blog title page features an image of the Carmelite Martyrs of Compiègne who gave their lives for the peace of God's people during the French Revolution's reign of terror.
Holy Carmelite Saints & Martyrs please pray for us +
For (well intentioned) questions related to the teaching of the Church in the areas of faith and morals you are very welcome to email me at the following address and I will try to be of assistance or refer you to other resources - Peace in our Jesus :) hermitbrothersjmc@gmail.com