Robin Milner-Gulland is Emeritus Professor of Russian and East European Studies at the University of Sussex, and an eminent translator, author and editor of works on Russian topics. He is the author of Cultural Atlas of Russia and the Former Soviet Union (2nd edn, 2002) and The Russians: The Peoples of Europe (1997), and translator of Icon and Devotion (Reaktion, 2002).
In Andrey Rublev: The Artist and His World, Robin Milner-Gulland takes on the formidable task of synthesising centuries of debate around an artist who is a household name in Russia, yet about whom almost nothing is known. He richly illustrates his subject’s innovative process . . . [and] after a thorough exploration of Rublev’s most famous icon, the book devotes two chapters to the painter’s cultural context before diving into a discussion of other artworks variably attributed to him . . . Vibrant illustrations of his paintings and other medieval masterpieces appear throughout. -- Nick Mayhew * Times Literary Supplement * This is the first book in English about Russia's greatest medieval icon painter. Milner-Gulland makes extensive use of old Russian sources to stitch together the scant evidence about the artist's life - but his engaging overview wears its learning lightly. * Apollo * The fifteenth-century monk and iconographer Andrei Rublev’s handful of surviving paintings are arguably the most important items in Russia’s artistic patrimony. Yet only the meagerest scraps of information – copied from a lost grave marker, a burnt manuscript, and the like – have come down to us about their creator. Milner-Gulland has produced the first English monograph on Rublev, admirably sifting through those scraps, placing the artist’s work in the context of medieval Russia, and ruminating on Rublev’s outsized importance. That importance has extended to worshippers of all denominations and generations of Russian artists. * The New Criterion * this slim volume is the fruit of a lifetime’s wide-ranging enquiry – linguistic, ethnographical, religious, historical, artistic – into the dynamics of Russian cultural history and its origins, and is a remarkable achievement . . . It is written in Milner-Gulland’s characteristically lucid style, enhanced with personal anecdote, with the learning worn lightly and with an eye to reaching the widest possible readership. -- Rosamund Bartlett * Australian Slavonic and East European Studies Journal * Milner-Gulland’s volume is the first English language monograph on the artist who created what is arguably Russia’s most famous medieval icon, The Old Testament Trinity . . . Milner-Gulland deftly synthesizes scholarship from several fields including Russian political and Orthodox Church history and medieval Russian art, presenting a wealth of historic information in a style readily accessible to general readers. * ARLIS/NA * This wonderfully lucid and superbly illustrated book is a triumph of scholarship combined with sensitive interpretation. Andrey Rublev is a compendium of insight and information about icon painting, icon veneration, Russian monasticism and Russian culture. * Ann Shukman, writer, translator and Russian scholar * Informed by extensive scholarly research, keen aesthetic analysis and, most importantly, bold intuition, Robin Milner-Gulland has produced a magical account of the life and work of Andrey Rublev, whose icons and frescoes illuminated the dark ages of medieval Russia. Supported by colour reproductions of relevant icons, embroideries and ecclesiastical structures, the story, narrated in a sincere, engaging and unpretentious style, provides a broad and vivid context for understanding and evaluating the art of Rublev anew, from his masterpiece the Old Testament Trinity, to his manuscript illustrations and his frescoes for the Trinity Monastery. * John E. Bowlt, Professor Emeritus of Slavic Languages and Literatures, University of Southern California * Robin Milner-Gulland is just the author to introduce us to Rublev and his world – both little known and much misrepresented . . . Comparing and contrasting his work with that of contemporaries and colleagues, gliding lightly over differences of scholarly opinion without getting bogged down in the detail, [Milner-Gulland] evokes the man and the artist as a living presence. * Avril Pyman, Reader Emeritus in Russian, University of Durham *