Re: The Fool
2From Cesare Ripa's Iconologia (first published in 1593, not illustrated). The previous page displays the text.
http://emblem.libraries.psu.edu/Ripa/Im ... pa059b.htm
http://emblem.libraries.psu.edu/Ripa/Im ... pa059b.htm
He's not the Messiah, he's a very naughty boy...
Re: The Fool
3That's a wonderful image. I love the hobby horse, which still has associations in England; but especially the pinwheel, which makes me think of the Mitelli from the mid-1600s. You'll notice the same image in the forum banner.
Re: The Fool
4The text from the previous page is interesting too - imagine every 's' written in the old way, like a long 'f'.
from Ripa's Iconologia:
from Ripa's Iconologia:
The Mitelli Fool is rather beautiful, with only concentration and delight in his expression.A person at Man's Estate, in a long black garment; laughing; riding upon a Hobby-horse; holding, in one Hand, a Whirligig of Past-board; and plays the Fool with Children, who make him twirl it by the Wind.
Folly is only acting contrary to true Decorum, and the common Custom of Men, delighting in childish Toys, and things of little Moment.
He's not the Messiah, he's a very naughty boy...
Re: The Fool
5This old etching reminds me so strongly of Tarocco Neoclassico's Il Matto, that I can't help wondering if there could be any connection. The text reads:
Unidentified. Wie gewonnen, so zerronnen [ex-soldier with arm in sling walking with walking stick, small dog behind him, battle scene in background; printed on sheet with German letterpress text]. 1632
1 print (etching), 36.8 x 26 cm.
https://imgur.com/wB6Iakn
Here's the Neoclassico card
https://imgur.com/d01V3c7
Pen
Unidentified. Wie gewonnen, so zerronnen [ex-soldier with arm in sling walking with walking stick, small dog behind him, battle scene in background; printed on sheet with German letterpress text]. 1632
1 print (etching), 36.8 x 26 cm.
https://imgur.com/wB6Iakn
Here's the Neoclassico card
https://imgur.com/d01V3c7
Pen
Last edited by Pen on 19 Dec 2017, 17:51, edited 1 time in total.
He's not the Messiah, he's a very naughty boy...
Re: The Fool
6The soldier picture expresses a bad mood in a bad time - 30-years war in Germany, in 1632 14 years have passed and 16 are still to come. After it the population had decreased to 2/3 of the original state.
Re: The Fool
8And this one. I wonder which deck was the first to show the figure on the edge of a precipice?
http://emblem.libraries.psu.edu/Ripa/Im ... pa060b.htm
Ripa's Iconologia: Danger
http://emblem.libraries.psu.edu/Ripa/Im ... pa060b.htm
Ripa's Iconologia: Danger
PenA Stripling walks in the Fields; treads upon a Snake which bites his Leg; on his right Side there is a Precipice, and a Torrent on the other; he leans only upon a weak Reed; and is surrounded with Lightning from Heaven.
His youth shows the Danger he is in. His walking shows that men walking through the flow'ry Fields of Prosperity fall into some Calamity unawares. The Reed shows the Fraility of our Life, in continual Danger: The Lightning that we are subject, besides, to Danger from Heaven.
He's not the Messiah, he's a very naughty boy...
Re: The Fool
9An interesting and rather doleful Fool I hadn't seen before, from Manners, Customs, and Dress During the Middle Ages, and During the Renaissance Period by Paul Lacroix from: http://www.gutenberg.org/files/10940/10 ... 0940-h.htm
Here's the image - I couldn't change the png file even in Photoshop, and it seems that the site won't display png files
http://www.gutenberg.org/files/10940/10 ... fig175.png
There's some interesting text about jugglers and fools, also card games, but no mention of tarot.
Pen
Here's the image - I couldn't change the png file even in Photoshop, and it seems that the site won't display png files
http://www.gutenberg.org/files/10940/10 ... fig175.png
There's some interesting text about jugglers and fools, also card games, but no mention of tarot.
Pen
He's not the Messiah, he's a very naughty boy...
Re: The Fool
10Hmmmm. .png seems to work for me.Pen wrote:An interesting and rather doleful Fool I hadn't seen before, from Manners, Customs, and Dress During the Middle Ages, and During the Renaissance Period by Paul Lacroix from: http://www.gutenberg.org/files/10940/10 ... 0940-h.htm
Here's the image - I couldn't change the png file even in Photoshop, and it seems that the site won't display png files
http://www.gutenberg.org/files/10940/10 ... fig175.png
There's some interesting text about jugglers and fools, also card games, but no mention of tarot.
Pen
and scaled using the
I think we have to be careful that the tags don't have any spaces or returns after the URL. I'm guessing that might have been the problem?? But, yeah, I checked the settings and .png is supposedly allowed.
Thanks again Pen for all the time you have been putting into these threads, they're wonderful, and your contribution is much appreciated.