![]() LITHUANIAN
QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF ARTS
AND SCIENCES
|
ISSN
0024-5089
Copyright © 2019 LITUANUS Foundation, Inc. |
Volume
65,
No.2 - Summer 2019
Editor of this issue: Almantas Samalavičius |
Abstract:
Rūpintojėlis: Evocation of Indigenous Lithuanian Soulfulness
Aušra Maslauskaitė
Abstract
This article explores ways in which the soulfulness of Lithuanian
culture, rooted in pagan beliefs and practices, survives most particularly
in folk art carvings called rūpintojėlis, the worried man
associated with the Christian image of the Pensive Christ or Man
of Sorrows. This soulfulness, perceived as inherent in the land, is
expressed traditionally through an architecture of natural objects
such as trees and in folk carving, especially figures carved in wood.
Lithuanian folk art is oriented towards the landscape; the connection
of the Lithuanian people to the landscape is fundamentally
spiritual and links the souls of the dead with the natural world.