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Iconology of the Wayfarer Triptych – Detail
#834
Man on his deathbed with a chest from Death and the Miser
…the Paris-New Haven wing [Bosch, ca. 1475-1500; Bosch, ca. 1495–1500] presents a consistent enactment of another deadly sin: luxuria, sensuous self-indulgence featuring lust and gluttony in combination. In some respects, this fleshly weakness can be seen as the same kind of product of prosperity that provoked the image of Death and the Usurer. Yet instead of the middle-class money economy of the cities that shapes the Washington panel, this imagery emerges from a court culture, whose private pleasures remained potentially unchecked. (p. 245)
Hieronymus Bosch
Keywords
Category
Morality and immorality
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) |
| Iconographical description | Informativeness | Notions,Concepts | Second world (Mind) |
Reference Source(s)
Bosch, ca. 1475-1500; Bosch, ca. 1495–1500
Symbolic Images
- Bosch, J. (ca. 1475-1500). La Nef des fous [Oil on panel]. Musée du Louvre, Paris.
- Bosch, J. (ca. 1495–1500). An Allegory of Intemperance [Oil on panel]. Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven, Connecticut. 1959.15.22



