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Iconology of the Wayfarer Triptych – Detail
The Louvre Ship [Bosch, ca. 1475-1500], decked with greenery, filled with tipplers and barrels, and trailed by thirsty swimmers, is matched in the Rabinowitz panel by a burly trumpeter astride a barrel. He holds a branch of the same greenery and is escorted by swimmers who resemble those who follow the Louvre bark. Moreover, the hint of amorous relations between the two central figures in the Ship, a lute-playing nun and a monk bobbing for a pancake on either side of a board that bears a plate of cherries, is made more explicit in the Rabinowitz painting by a couple drinking within a tent [Cuttler, 1969, 272-276]. Previous scholars had remarked the striking stylistic similarities between the two paintings [Hannema, 1936, 32f. de Tolnay, 1937, 90; Baldass, 1938, 68-69; Baldass, 1943, 235; Venturi, 1945, 63-64; Combe, 1946, 82; Eisler, 1961, 46], and after the Rabinowitz panel was given to Yale in 1959, Charles Seymour advanced a concrete reconstruction [”Reconstruction of Ship of Fools after Seymour”, 1984]. He suggested that the Yale panel had originally formed the lower part of the Ship of Fools, and that since the dimensions resulting from such a combination matched almost exactly those of Bosch’s Death and the Miser in the National Gallery in Washington [Bosch, ca. 1485-1490], this panel was probably originally a pendant to it [Seymour, 1961, 36].(p. 295) (p. 295)
| 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) |
| Pre-iconographical description | Situations | Definitions | First world (Life, matter & form) |
- Bosch, J. (ca. 1485-1490). Death and the Miser [Oil on panel]. D.C.: National Gallery of Art. 1952.5.33.
- Bosch, J. (ca. 1475). The Conjurer [Oil on panel]. Musée Municipal, St.-Germain-en-Laye, Paris.
- “Reconstruction of Ship of Fools after Seymour” (1984). In A. M. Monganstern. The Rest of Bosch’s Ship of Fools (p. 296:fig. 3).




