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Iconology of the Wayfarer Triptych – Detail

Location of Visual Attribute
Interior Panels of the Wayfarer Triptych
#627
Old man in green and chest from Death and the Miser

…the treasure chest into which a gaunt, housebound old man, leaning on his stick and smiling a wornout smile, drops the guilder he has managed to save. This touching figure might have stepped straight from the pages of Jacob Grimm’s Rede über das Alter where Grimm, then an old man of seventy-five himself expatiates soberly on the vexations of avaritia senilis, the avarice of old age [Grimm, 1911, 137]. Despite its austere economy the figure is boldly drawn; all the signs of decrepitude have been intimately experienced: the sunken temples, the toothless mouth and the already Hippocratic nose the exaggeratedly careful movement of the hand, and the shuffling, crooked stance. This old man is a pictorial rendering of the “vain show” of the Psalmist: “Surely every man walketh in a vain show; surely they are disquieted in vain: he heapeth up riches, and knoweth not who shall gather them” [English Standard Version Bible, 2001, Psalm, 39:6]. (pp. 298-299)

Fraenger, 1999
Hieronymus Bosch

Keywords
Category
Reasoning, judgement and intelligence,Morality and immorality,Human being and life
Interpretation Type
InfoSensorium Facet
(Sum, 2022)
Layer of meaning
(van Straten, 1994)
Conception of Information
(Furner, 2004)
Level of knowledge
(Nanetti, 2018)
View of reality
(Popper, 1972, 1979; Gnoli, 2018)
Iconological interpretation Relevance (Iconological) Interpretations,Narratives Third world (Culture)
Reference Source(s)
English Standard Version Bible, 2001; Grimm, 1911
Symbolic Text

Surely a man goes about as a shadow! Surely for nothing they are in turmoil; man heaps up wealth and does not know who will gather! [English Standard Version Bible, 2001, Psalm, 39:6]

#666
Old man in green and chest from Death and the Miser

The elderly man we see there leans on a walking stick as he drops money into a sack. The moneybag and the chest in which it is kept are surrounded by three demons. Although the man wears a rosary, his money is not blessed. We cannot say for certain whether this is the same man who is also shown dying in his bed; he might also be a more emblematic image of avarice, intended to emphasize that too strong a desire for earthly goods helps pave the road to hell. Whatever the case, the figure in green serves to amplify the tension evoked by the dilemma facing the man in the bed. We find a similar composition in an amusing illuminated page in the Hours of Catherine of Cleves, in the margin of which a young man is depicted rummaging in a money-chest [”Deathbed, from The Hours of Catherine of Cleves”, ca. 1440]. The same youth appears in the main miniature at the deathbed of what is probably his father. He seems to be allowing his finely-dressed friend to talk him into taking an advance on his inheritance. The combination of the money-chest in the margin and its relationship to the principal scene has a striking, though somewhat enigmatic similarity to Bosch’s Death and the Miser; it is hardly likely, after all, that Bosch ever saw this exclusive manuscript, which was made for the Duchess of Guelders, probably in Utrecht, over half a century before he produced his painting. On the other hand, this is not a common juxtaposition of motifs [Koldeweij, vandenbroeck & Vermet, 2001, 137]. (pp. 328-330)

Ilsink et al., 2016
Hieronymus Bosch. Painter and Draughtsman