Description
Passage into the modern world left the Russian icon profoundly altered. It fell into new hands, migrated to new homes, and acquired new forms and meanings. Icons were made in the factories of foreign industrialists and destroyed by iconoclasts of the proletariat. Even the icon&;s traditional functions&;whether in the feast days of the church or the pageantry of state power&;were susceptible to the transformative forces of modernization. In
![Alter Icons: The Russian Icon and Modernity (Studies of the Harriman Institute, Columbia University) [Hardcover] Gatrall, Jefferson J. A. and Greenfield, Douglas](https://artwheelshop.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/91CgpsuEWaL._SY342_-1.jpg)
![The Invention of Glory: Afonso V and the Pastrana Tapestries [Hardcover] de Bunes Ibarra, Miguel Angel & Donald J. La Rocca](https://artwheelshop.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/91SIWYsxV6L._SY425_-1-300x425.jpg)
![The Horse in Ancient Greek Art [Hardcover] Stribling, Nicole; Schertz, Peter; Hemingway, Seán; Mattusch, Carol C.; Oakley, John and Pevnick, Seth](https://artwheelshop.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/81966PCS1hL._SY425_-1-300x425.jpg)




![Shai Kremer: Fallen Empires [Hardcover] Kremer, Shai; Benvenisti, Meron; Tucker, Anne Wilkes; Sason, Talya; Oren, Amiram and Azoulay, Ariella](https://artwheelshop.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/31KXF9oPQRL._SY342_-1-300x342.jpg)
![Byzantine Things in the World [Hardcover] Peers, Glenn; Barber, Charles; Caffey, Stephen; Franses, Henri Rico and Shiff, Richard](https://artwheelshop.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/41Z0cRailNL._SY425_-1-300x425.jpg)

