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Iconology of the Wayfarer Triptych – Detail
The Baroncelli Poverty [Workshop of Taddeo Gaddi, 14th century], however, is both male and wingless and therefore most similar to the figure in… the Rotterdam tondo. This correspondence is significant because another scene from the Baroncelli fresco cycle – the Presentation of the Virgin – had appeared about a century earlier in the Limbourgs’ Tres Riches Heures, suggesting that a model book illustrating the Baroncelli frescoes may have reached the Netherlands at an early date and become part of the vocabulary of early Dutch imagery from which Bosch drew some of his motifs [Gibson, 1973 (Hieronymus Bosch and the Dutch tradition); Meiss, 1974 (French painting in the time of Jean de Berry), pl. 573, pl. 668; Meiss, 1974 (The Limbourgs and their contemporaries), pl. 573, pl. 668]. (p. 92)
| 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) | 
- Workshop of Taddeo Gaddi (14th century), Allegory of Poverty at Santa Croce, Baroncelli Chapel. Retrived from Bosch’s Image of Poverty (p. 91), by V. G. Tuttle (1981)


