Milyo Baltov. The Romantic Image of Faith
150th Anniversary of the Artist’s Birth

Artist and community leader Milyo Baltov has remained an indelible part of the cultural history of the city of Strelcha through the icons and murals at the St. Michael the Archangel Cathedral, as well as through the museum collection of the Strelcha Museum of History featuring some thirty works by the artist. Plenty of decorative and iconographic works kept at temples throughout the Pazardzhik region also bear his signature. His voluminous work as an artist and decorator matches the rise in temple-building activity after the Liberation of Bulgaria prompted by the attempt to make each of the newly-built churches look as presentable as possible. Many of the chapels and churches decorated by Milyo Baltov are dedicated to Archangel Michael commemorating to this day the fallen of wars. Many of the icons painted by the artist feature the images of historical figures, while others have attained the status of miracle-working icons.
Milyo Baltov studied at the State the School of Drawing, in the latter’s second class, under Prof. Yaroslav Veshin. Lessons learned from the professor can be traced in the portraits and icons by the artist who stuck to them regardless of the twists of fate and his social responsibilities: attention to line expressiveness, building three-dimensionality, interest in plasticity and volume, search for befitting lighting, effort for sophisticated classical composition and pose, attempt to attain solid compelling colourfulness, efficient use of chiaroscuro and tonal values, etc.
Today we may add the name of artist Milyo Baltov to the list of prominent representatives of an intriguing period of transition in the history of Bulgarian art due to research done by the institutions and private persons. A prospective study of his life will seek to collect and systematize as large a part of Milyo Baltov’s work as it is possible by tracking down icons, murals and decorations completed outside his home region, as well as by making a clearer outline of the complex turns taken by ideas in visual art.
This exhibition was brought to life in cooperation with the Strelcha Museum of History, the Stanislav Dospevski Pazardzhik City Art Gallery, the SS. Cyril and Methodius National Library, and private collectors.

Portrait of Dena Baltova (daughter of the artist), early twentieth century, oil on canvas, 30 x 23.5 cm, Strelcha Museum of History

Landscape, 1913, oil on canvas, 22 x 77 cm, Strelcha Museum of History

St. Michael the Archangel, 170 x 71 cm, St. Michael the Archangel Cathedral, Strelcha.

Marin Drinov, early 20th century, print, 38.5 x 31.5 cm., Museum of History – Strelcha

Portrait of a child, early 20th century, m. B., Canvas, 29.5 x 23.5 cm, Strelcha Museum of History