"Bride's wedding preparations"
The painting "Bride's wedding preparations" depicts the pre–wedding preparations of the bride in the boyar family of the XVI-XVII centuries. The scene is the upper floor of the rich chambers of the terem. These rooms were intended for women and children of both sexes up to 7 years old. The bride's braid is combed as a sign of her farewell to her girlhood. In Ancient Russia, one braid was the hairstyle of girls, and "married wives" wore two braids. At the feet of the bride sits a girl who is mesmerized by her face, their intertwined hands symbolize girlhood and marriage. The women around are dressed in formal headdresses — kokoshniks. A man with a white towel tied over his left shoulder stands in the doorway — this is a friend, a representative of the groom, who brought a chest with his gifts. Its most important ceremonial function was to protect the newlyweds from corruption and the evil eye.
Makovsky carefully reproduced the details of the historical setting, but also added everyday realities familiar to the public of the 19th century. The pre-Petrine way of life did not yet know either a floor carpet or window curtains. In a rich Old Russian house, carpets were considered too beautiful and valuable to put under your feet. But the most shocking thing would be a bride in white, the color adopted for a mortal shroud. In the past, the betrothed was dressed in a red sundress. The overall pictorial structure of the painting is a bright but fragmented combination of colorful spots. Konstantin Makovsky overcame this diversity in his subsequent works.