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~~ Gallery 5 ~~ The Tarot and other Early Cards · page VI · THE VISCONTI TAROTS BRERA-BRAMBILLA VISCONTI CARY-YALE VISCONTI PIERPONT-MORGAN BERGAMO VISCONTI-SFORZA |
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page I classic tarots |
page II regional tarots |
page III trump card arrangements |
page IV modern & non-standard |
page V theMulûk wa-Nuwwâb |
page VII the tarot of Marseille |
page VIII the Tarot de Paris |
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page IX Viéville's Tarot |
page X the Minchiate |
page XI Mitelli's Tarocchino |
page XII Mantegna's Tarot |
page XIII the Hofämsterspiel |
page XIV the deck by Jost Amman |
page XV the Italy 2 Moorish deck |
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PART 1 · PART 3 · PART 4
· part 2 ·
THE FAMILIES AND THE CARDS
the imperial eagle |
the ducal crown |
the family motto |
the sun |
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The most famous one, though, was the winding snake devouring a human figure, shown in part I, a feature still today appearing in Milan's civic crest and, obviously, in the playing card pattern used in this area, the Lombarde (see the Italian gallery for further details).
the three rings Belonging to the lower nobility, the Sforzas had a fewer number of devices: three interlaced rings and a hexagonal fountain are the ones more commonly found in the Pierpont-Morgan deck, either as details or as textures. In fewer cards, also the Venetian lion of St.Mark appears (a reminiscence of the days when Francesco fought on Venice's side).
After gaining Milan's duchy, though, the Sforzas were entitled to use some of the Visconti crests, such as the imperial eagle and the snake.
Among the "minor" Visconti tarot decks, some have an additional card, featuring the family's coat of arms as a main subject: probably this card was not used in play, but it simply honoured the owner of the deck.
Venice's lion
WHO PAINTED THE DECKS?
interesting similarities between the allegory of Faith from the CYV deck, and a drawing by the Zavattari family (left) Since the name of the painter (or painters) who decorated these tarots does not appear in any written record, and no signature or initials were left on any of the cards, attributions have been made on the grounds of similarities between the illustrations and other works of the same period, such as drawings, etchings, paintings, frescoes, etc., whose author is surely known.
The list of potential names includes Bonifacio Bembo, Antonio Cicognara, Marziano da Tortona, the Zavattari family (more specifically, Francesco Zavattari), who were active in Lombardy in the 15th century.
Presently, most scholars believe that Bonifacio Bembo painted all three decks.
This artist was born in Brescia around 1420, and was active in several Lombard cities through 1477, the year in which he steadily entered the Sforza court as a painter. Among his other works, in a church in Cremona (Lombardy) he portrayed Francesco Sforza and his wife Bianca Maria Visconti in a fresco dated c.1450: the noble couple was indeed among the artist's subjects.
illustration by Bonifacio Bembo from Launcelot of the Lake
The pictures on the right show a comparison between a drawing by Bembo and two details taken respectively from the Cary-Yale Visconti deck (the close-up of the Lovers) and from the the Pierpont-Morgan deck (the pattern of the garments worn by the Coins suit courts).
Besides the personages, also the flower texture with round petals used in the drawing as a background appears very similar to the one found in the cards.
CYV ~ the Lovers (above), and
PMVS ~ queen of Coins (left)
detail from B.Bembo's triptych
The Coronation of the Virgin Mary;
notice the goblets, similar to those
featured in some BBV and CYV subjects These and other similarities account for the attribution of the Visconti decks to Bembo, although there are some scholars who still disagree.
The faces and bodies portrayed by this other unknown painter appear definitively "fuller" and more muscular, less delicate than Bembo's thin, late Gothic figures.
Six trumps of the Pierpont-Morgan deck, namely Fortitude, Temperance, the Star, the Moon, the Sun and the World, appear slightly different from the rest of the cards: probably needed as a replacement for the original ones (lost or damamged), they were repainted in a similar style, yet the hand of a different author can be easily told.
PMVS
detail from the WorldS.Kaplan has suggested that the second artist might have been Antonio Cicognara, whose name is linked to other tarots made in the second half of the 15th century, belonging to the "Visconti group".
THE READINGS
Several cards of the three decks (especially the Pierpont-Morgan tarot) feature some words. In most cases, they are the Visconti family's motto, a bon droyt, "by legitimate right", which frequently appears in many suit cards, on a ribbon in the center (the relevant picture is shown at the top of this page, among the Visconti devices). The same words also appear in a few more cards, though as a different detail.
The ace of Swords of the Brera-Brambilla deck, has another motto of the Visconti above a bon droyt, which reads phote mante(n) (a corruption of the French il faut mantenir, "it has to be maintained").
BBV ~ detail from the ace of Swords
PMVS ~ detail from the 2 of Cups CYV ~ detail from the Lovers |
The 2 of Cups of the Pierpont-Morgan deck, instead, features the text
amor myo ("my love"). A similar one, reading
amor in golden letters, now very faint due to the card's wear, can be barely seen
on the canopy of the afore-said Lovers trump of the Cary-Yale tarot, just above the
series of shields; in this case, the second part myo was
likely to follow the first word, but it is now no longer readable. Both these cards
seem to agree with the hypothesis according to which the tarot might have been a gift for
a wedding or for an anniversary. On the cloak worn by a female page standing by the Cary-Yale's queen of Swords, the vertical word lialmente (shown on the right) can be easily read. This is very likely to be a corruption of lealmente ("loyally, faithfully"), which might refer either to the Visconti family or to any of their allies by the time the deck was made. |
CYV ~ detail from the queen of Swords |
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PMVS ~ the Wheel of Fortune
Two more cards bear a text, although evidently related to the featured subject rather than to the owner of the tarot: on trump number 10 of the Pierpont-Morgan deck, all four figures in the picture "speak" by means of a ribbon or scroll by their mouth, almost as today's cartoons: the figure on the top of the wheel says regno ("I reign"), the one coming upwards says regnabo ("I will reign"), the one going downwards says regnavi ("I reigned"), while the old man on his fours says sum sine regno ("I am without a reign"), remarking how fate may deeply affect man's condition.
Instead, on trump number 20 of the Cary-Yale deck, Judgement, above the two angels calling the dead from their tombs, we find a text reading surgite ad iudicium ("rise for judgement"), see detail below.
Other mottos might have been featured by different subjects, but they have disappeared or are now unreadable due to the cards' wear.
CYV ~ detail from Judgement
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PART 1 PART 3 PART 4
further reference to tarot decks can be found in Tom Tadfor Little's The Hermitage
page I classic tarots |
page II regional tarots |
page III trump card arrangements |
page IV modern & non-standard |
page V theMulûk wa-Nuwwâb |
page VII the tarot of Marseille |
page VIII the Tarot de Paris |
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page IX Viéville's Tarot |
page X the Minchiate |
page XI Mitelli's Tarocchino |
page XII Mantegna's Tarot |
page XIII the Hofämsterspiel |
page XIV the deck by Jost Amman |
page XV the Italy 2 Moorish deck |
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INTRODUCTION AND HISTORY |
MULTI-LANGUAGE GLOSSARY |
THE FOOL & THE JOKER |
INDEX TABLE |
REGIONAL GAMES |
PLAYING CARD LINKS |
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