Antique 19th-century Russian Orthodox Old Believer brass icon depicting the four great Eastern Orthodox icons, "Black," "Our Lady of Smolensk, "Our Lady of Kazan," and "Our lady of Vladimir."

Measures 5 1/2" in height and 3 1/4" in width. This is an antique item, made in Russia. 

The use and making of icons entered into popularity in Kievan Rus, following the regime’s conversion to Orthodox Christianity in AD 988. As a general rule, these icons strictly followed models and formulas hallowed by Byzantine art and Constantinople. As time passed, Russians widened the vocabulary of types and styles far beyond anything found elsewhere in the Orthodox world.

Russian icon painting became strongly influenced by religious paintings and engravings from both Protestant and Catholic Europe in the 17th century. In the mid 17th-century, changes in liturgy and practice instituted by Patriarch Nikon resulted in a split in the Russian Orthodox Church. The traditionalists, the persecuted "Old Ritualists" or "Old Believers", continued the traditional stylization of icons, while the State Church modified its practice. From that time icons began to be painted not only in the traditional stylized and non-realistic mode, but also in a mixture of Russian stylization and Western European realism, and in a Western European manner very much like that of Catholic religious art of the time. These types of icons, while found in Russian Orthodox churches, are also sometimes found in various sui juris rites of the Catholic Church.

Russian icons are typically paintings on wood. They are often small, though some in churches and monasteries may be much larger, and embellished with precious metals and gemstones. Some Russian icons are made of copper. Many Russians have icons for personal use, and religious homes in Russia have icons hanging on the wall in the krasny ugol -- the "red" or "beautiful" corner.

Russians sometimes speak of an icon as having been "written," because in the Russian language (like Greek, but unlike English) the same word (pisat', писать in Russian) means both to paint and to write. Icons are considered to be the Gospel in paint, and therefore careful attention is paid to ensure that the Gospel is faithfully and accurately “written.”

Icons considered miraculous were said to "appear." The "appearance" of an icon is its supposedly miraculous discovery. "A true icon is one that has 'appeared', a gift from above, one opening the way to the Prototype and able to perform miracles.” Some of the most venerated icons, considered to be products of miraculous thaumaturge, are those known by the name of the town associated with them, such as the Vladimir, the Smolensk, the Kazan, and the Częstochowa images -- all of the Virgin Mary, usually referred to by Orthodox Christians as the Theotokos, the Birth-Giver of God. There is a rich history and elaborate religious symbolism associated with icons. In Russian churches, the nave is typically separated from the sanctuary by an iconostasis, or icon-screen, a wall of icons with double doors in the centre. 

The preeminent Russian icon painter was Andrei Rublev (1360 – early 15th century), who was "glorified" (officially recognized as a saint) by the Moscow Patriarchate in 1988. His most famous work is The Old Testament Trinity.

Because icons in Orthodoxy must follow traditional standards and are essentially copies, Orthodoxy never developed the reputation of the individual artist as Western Christianity did, and the names of even the finest icon painters are seldom recognized except by some Eastern Orthodox or art historians. Icon painting was and is a conservative art, in many cases considered a craft, in which the painter is essentially merely a tool for replication. The painter did not seek individual glory but considered himself a humble servant of God. That is why in the 19th and early 20th centuries, icon painting in Russia went into a great decline with the arrival of machine lithography on paper and tin, which could produce icons in great quantity and much more cheaply than the workshops of painters. Even today large numbers of paper icons are purchased by Orthodox rather than more expensive painted panels.

As the painter did not intend to glorify himself, it was not deemed necessary to sign an icon. Later icons were often the work of many hands, not of a single artisan. Nonetheless some later icons are signed with the name of a painter, as well as the date and place. A peculiarity of dates written on icons is that many are dated from the "Creation of the World," which in Eastern Orthodoxy was believed to have taken place on September 1 in the year 5,509 before the birth of Jesus.

During the Soviet era in Russia, former village icon painters in Palekh, Mstera, and Kholui transferred their techniques to lacquerware, which they decorated with ornate depictions of Russian fairy tales and other non-religious scenes. This transition from religious to secular subjects gave rise, in the mid-1920, to Russian lacquer art on papier-mâché. Most distinguished within this relatively new art form are the intricate Palekh miniature paintings on a black lacquer background.

Many Russian icons were destroyed, or sold abroad, by agents of the Soviet government; some were hidden to avoid destruction, or were smuggled out of the country. Since the fall of communism, numbers of icon painting studios have again opened and are painting in a variety of styles for the local and international market. Many older, hidden icons have also been retrieved from hiding, or brought back from overseas.