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Iconology of the Wayfarer Triptych – Detail

Location of Visual Attribute
Interior Panels of the Wayfarer Triptych
#637
Vaulted ceiling from Death and the Miser

This geometric construction is grounded in sciences more exalted than the late Gothic theory of perspective. The two sets of fourteen parallel axes involve the same divinely perfect numbers, four times seven, through which, according to the speculation of Philo of Alexandria already quoted, the moon returns again and again to fullness in a cycle of four-times-seven days. And indeed at the heart of that dark recess to which the four-section vault leads is a disk, symbol of the full moon, marking the transition from earthly transitoriness to eternity. The use of Philo’s law of numbers to express the Mosaic “as long as the earth remaineth” [English Standard Version Bible, 2001, Genesis, 8:22] gives evidence that Jacob van Almaengien commissioned and designed the program for The Hour of Death, which once served as a didactic painting for meditational use but never was what it has hitherto been assumed to be: the left panel of a medium-size triptych. (p. 300)

Fraenger, 1999
Hieronymus Bosch

Keywords
Category
Planets and zodiacal signs,Scientific perspectives and methods
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
Symbolic Text

While the earth remains, seedtime and harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, day and night, shall not cease. [English Standard Version Bible, 2001, Genesis, 8:22]