Painted panels assumed a new importance in the last phase of Byzantine art. The most sophisticated work was done at Constantinople, some of it for patrons from elsewhere (notably Russia), and a number of icons survive that can be associated with Constantinople on the basis of literary evidence or inscriptions. A particularly fine double-sided icon, with the Virgin on one face and the Annunciation on the other, now in the museum at Skopje in Macedonia, was brought from Constantinople about 1300. At this period the Russian school was the most important outgrowth of Byzantine icon painting; after the 13th century ...(100 of 73439 words)