Painting miniatures:
traditions and modern approaches
Automatic translate
The term "miniature" appeared in the Latin Middle Ages from the word minium - red lead, which copyists used to highlight initials. Gradually, the designation was assigned to any pictorial image of a small format and exceptional fineness of writing.
Initially, miniatures were created as illustrations for manuscripts: in Byzantium — liturgical codes, on the Persian plateau — poetry collections, in Europe — books of hours for the nobility. In the East, the schools of Baghdad, Tabriz and especially Herat were developing brightly, where by the end of the 15th century Kamoliddin Behzod worked — an artist whom manuscript treatises called the "Raphael of the East". In the Armenian lands of the Cilician Kingdom, the pinnacle of book illustration was Toros Roslin. In a parallel European process, the Flemings Limbourg brothers, the German Hans Holbein the Younger and the French Jean and François Clouet stood out.

Technologies and materials of tradition
The miniaturist of any region relied on a relatively similar set of tools. Parchment or a thin cotton sheet was leveled with pumice, then a ground of white or lead was applied, after which the drawing was transferred with a graphite brush over tracing paper. Colors were ground from minerals, plants and resins on a glass plate with a wooden courant; the binder was egg yolk for tempera or gum arabic for watercolour. The Persian school supplemented tempera with dissolved saffron, and the Indian school with “mango” yellow, obtained by evaporating the urine of bulls on a diet of mango leaves. Gold was used in three tones: pure yellow, reddish with copper and “green” with silver admixture - the finest sheets or in the form of assista powder.
Eastern schools: style and subjects
Herat in the late 15th and early 16th centuries became a laboratory for the synthesis of Turkic-Persian aesthetics. Behzod refined the plasticity of figures, rejected flat ornamental backgrounds, introducing diagonal compositions and deep blue-emerald landscapes. Later, the Tabriz workshop under the Safavids developed contrast lighting techniques, and the Mughal artists of India, beginning with the Persians Abdus Samad and Mir Sayyid Ali, incorporated European perspective and portrait likeness. At the court of Akbar, the “book-album” muraqqa became a fashionable artifact, where miniatures accompanied calligraphic suras, zoological studies, and scenes of hunting trips.
In the Ottoman capital of the 17th century, the so-called "Istanbul Saray School" flourished; its master Osman Nakkash paid attention to cartography - miniatures accompanied the atlases of Kemal Reis Pasha with drawings of the fortresses of the Mediterranean. The Turkish tradition emphasized documentary, preserving the flat ornamentation of the background.
European Shifts: From Sheet to Medallion
In the Northern Renaissance, the miniature went beyond the page: the Flemings began to transfer the small format directly onto a panel, a crossbow shield or ivory. A special genre is the medallion portrait with a diameter of 3-6 cm, worn on the chest or in a casket. The Englishman Nicholas Hilliard set the standards at the court of Elizabeth I: an oval window, a black background and the finest painting with squirrel hair in three layers of watercolor on parchment. Holbein brought to this the techniques of oil glazing and backlighting of the "stained glass" type. In Russia, a similar genre came into fashion under Catherine II - first on mother-of-pearl, later on ivory: Ivan Argunov painted court musicians with a diameter of only 5 cm.
Russian lacquer line
By the end of the 18th century, merchant Pyotr Korobov organized a papier-mâché factory for snuffboxes in the village of Fedoskino near Moscow. Oil painting over black varnish absorbed the techniques of miniature detailing, and the mirrored asphalt background enhanced the depth. In the 1920s, with the decline of icon painting, the Palekh, Mstera and Kholuy artels transferred tempera to varnished boxes - this is how four centers of Russian miniature were formed: Fedoskino, Palekh, Kholuy, Mstera. The Palekh artists preserved the ancient Russian cinnabar range and elongated figures, the Mstera artists supplemented the composition with a "carpet" filling of the field, the Kholuy artists brought out a lyrical landscape, and the Fedoskino artists gave preference to realistic chiaroscuro.
Instrumental evolution of the 20th - 21st centuries
The classic pen and brush have received digital competitors. Multispectral photography is used to restore manuscripts: sensors record traces of faded lines, and the algorithm restores the outline without physical impact on the parchment. In miniature papier-mâché, laser cutting forms boxes, allowing the artist to save from rough filing and reduce the cycle by two. Paints were supplemented with ultraviolet stabilizers; Fedoskino craftsmen switched to a universal alkyd-urethane varnish, which retains pigment and prevents yellowing for more than 60 years.
In parallel, microminiature under a microscope is developing. Micro artist Vladimir Aniskine places a caravan of camels in the eye of a needle, using a 0.5 micron laser cutter and cyanoacrylate glue. Such works hold world records in the Guinness Book, expanding the boundaries of the genre.
Contemporary Artistic Practices
Author’s schools of the 21st century combine traditional materials with ultra-modern ones. In Uzbekistan, the Behzod Museum exhibits the "Neuro-mirage" series: a classic composition of the Shiraz school is generated by the GAN algorithm, after which the miniaturist paints the facial details manually, ennobling technical inaccuracies. In Turkey, Taner Alakush replaces the usual gouache with acrylic-helium, thanks to which the background acquires a glassy depth, and the calligraphy line remains embossed.
Russian artist Sergei Dmitriev in Kholui produces a line of lacquered panels “Russia and Space”: the characters of “Vostok-1” are applied with tempera on gold, and the reflections of illusory light are enhanced by a thin base of stabilized phosphor.
In the field of board games, painting miniatures has become a separate creative direction. Large communities, such as the PokraStinatsiya festival in Moscow, gather more than 250 masters demonstrating zenithal-highlight, OSL-glow and NMM-metal techniques.
Education and knowledge transfer
In Russia, miniature artists are trained by branches of the Higher School of Folk Arts: the Fedoskino Institute in the Moscow Region and the Mstera Institute in the Vladimir Region. The curricula include pigment chemistry, iconography, digital interpretation of sketches, and courses on promoting products in online galleries. Private centers for professional retraining offer distance programs of 320–720 hours, culminating in the issuance of a certificate of the fifth or sixth category. Museums — Petrovskaya Akvatoria and Grand Maket Rossiya — hold master classes on painting brooches and dioramas, involving a wide audience.
Market and collecting
Miniature painting remains in demand in several niches.
- Corporate gifts to government agencies: The Fedoskinskaya factory annually fulfills orders from the Federation Council and protocol services.
- Limited editions of jewelry houses: Swiss master Andre Martinez produces watch dials with an acrylic miniature, where one hair of the brush signs the shade of mother-of-pearl.
- NFT miniatures by the author: calligrapher Sarah Abdullah codes an animated tahlil inscription measuring 800x800 pixels and sells the lot for 12 eth , providing the buyer with a physical copy in a 4x4 cm stretcher.
The antiques segment is managed by museums and private foundations. In 2025, the Tsar-Maket diorama museum created a depository for micromodels of the Leningrad period; the insurance valuation of the collection exceeded $4 million, which is comparable to the lot of Jean Clouet’s portrait miniature of Louis XIII sold at Christieʼs.
Exhibition spaces and museum projects
Permanent exhibitions of miniatures are in operation:
- The Book Museum of the Russian State Library contains manuscripts from the 14th to 20th centuries, including sheets of the Beautiful Book of Hours of the Duke of Berry.
- The Russian Lefty Museum in St. Petersburg - microminiatures under a microscope and scrap-art sculptures.
- The Military Chamber in Tsarskoye Selo - dioramas from tin miniatures by Vladimir Nuzhdin, reconstructing the 1914 campaign.
Travelling forums such as “All Scales” in St. Petersburg and “History in Miniature” in Pushkin bring together modellers, restorers and historians, creating a platform for the exchange of knowledge between artists of lacquer, tin and digital miniatures.
Modern challenges
Eco-friendliness. The production of solvent-based varnishes is gradually being replaced by water-acrylic mixtures, which requires adjustments to the old formula and retraining of craftsmen.
Copyright protection. Digital editions of miniatures are easily copied; artists are implementing steganographic signatures and NFT certification.
Preservation. Ivory as a traditional support is banned in a number of countries; museum curators are experimenting with synthetic polymer plates that provide similar light refraction without the ethical concerns.
Revival of the genre
Miniature painting is undergoing a renewal: the availability of inexpensive microscopic brushes, 3D printers for prototyping, and marketplaces allows artists to work from anywhere in the world and find an audience. At the same time, fundamental skills - a precise hand, knowledge of pigment and the color culture of tradition - remain the defining qualities that connect the latest formats with the thousand-year history of small painting.
- An exhibition of author’s dolls from the collection of St. Petersburg collector Marina Mironyuk and an exhibition of microminiatures by V. Aniskin "Marvel under the microscope"
- Events of the week at the Irkutsk Art Museum
- Thematic tour of the exhibition "Revolution and art: on the 100th anniversary of the events of October 1917"
- Thematic tour of the exhibition "Master and Workshop"
- Excursion "Acquaintance with the Museum"
- Author’s tour of the exhibition "Master and Workshop"