Sola Busca tarot

The Queen of Batons ("PALAS") from the Sola-Busca Tarot Deck, now in the Brera Museum

The Sola Busca tarot is the earliest completely extant example of a 78-card tarot deck. It is also the earliest tarot deck in which all the plain suit cards are illustrated[1][2] and it is also the earliest tarot deck in which the trump card illustrations deviate from the classic tarot iconography. Unlike the earlier Visconti-Sforza tarot decks, the cards of the Sola Busca are numbered. The trump cards have Roman numerals while the pips of the plain suits have Hindu Arabic numerals.The deck was created by an unknown artist and engraved onto metal in the late 15th century. A single complete hand-painted deck is known to exist, along with 35 uncolored cards held by various museums.[3] The deck is notable not only for its age, but also for the quality of its artwork, which is characterized by expressive figures engraved with precise contours and shading.[4] Various theories have been suggested about who created the deck, but its authorship remains uncertain.[3][5]

Composition

The Sola-Busca deck comprises 78 cards including 21 trumps (trionfi) plus the Fool (Matte) and 56 suit cards. There had been many previous decks structured in this way.[6] The names and illustrations on the trump cards in the Sola Busca are somewhat idiosyncratic for its time.The departure from classic trump iconography in the Sola Busca is a trait shared by later French suited tarot decks such as the Bourgeois Tarot and the Industrie und Glück Tarock decks.

The characters depicted in the Sola-Busca cards include Nebuchadnezzar and Gaius Marius, the uncle of Julius Caesar. Trump cards loosely follow the rise and fall of the Roman Empire but also include members of the Roman Pantheon such as Bacchus. All the characters can be easily linked to their equivalents in the earlier and later, more standard, decks.

Painted deck

The complete painted deck is currently housed at the Brera Museum in Milan. It can trace its provenance to the noble Busca-Serbelloni family. In the early 19th century the deck was owned by Marchioness Busca (born Duchess Serbelloni) of Milan.[1] In 1907, the Busca-Serbelloni family donated black-and-white photographs of all 78 cards to the British Museum, where they were likely seen by A. E. Waite and Pamela Colman Smith, inspiring the subsequent Waite-Smith tarot deck.[7] From 1948, the deck was owned by the Sola-Busca family, from which it received its name.[1] In 2009, the deck was purchased for €800,000 by the Italian Ministry of Cultural Heritage and Activities and delivered to the Brera Museum.[1][8]

Unpainted cards

Thirty-five unpainted cards are also known. The Albertina museum in Vienna owns 23, including all of the trumps except the first and last, Mato and Nabuchodenasor.[9] The 20 trump cards originally belonged to Count Moritz von Fries, while the other three came from the Imperial Court Library.[10]

The British Museum owns four unpainted cards, which it purchased from William and George Smith in 1845.[3] Four unpainted cards are also housed in Hamburg and Paris.[3]

Impact

The similarities between the artwork of the Minor Arcana of the Waite-Smith deck and Sola-Busca's plain suits has led some scholars to suggest that artist Pamela Colman Smith drew inspiration from the earlier work.[2] Smith created the art for her deck two years after the acquisition of photographs of the Sola-Busca deck by the British Museum, and likely saw the cards on display there. Notable similarities include the Three of Swords card and the Ten of Wands card in the Rider deck, which is very similar to the Ten of Swords card in the Sola-Busca deck.[7]

Research

In 1938, Arthur Mayger Hind described the Sola Busca Tarot in his Early Italian Engravings and supposed that the deck was engraved around 1490 and then hand-painted in 1491, as a result of reading some of the inscriptions on the cards. He also supposed that the deck was created for a Venetian client by Mattia Serrati da Cosandola, a miniaturist operating in Ferrara (the center of Tarot card production at the time). In fact, many inscriptions on the cards refer without any doubt to the Republic of Venice.[11]

In 1987, in the catalogue of a great Tarot exhibition realized at the Estense Castle of Ferrara, Italian historian Giordano Berti wrote a summary of all the research made up to that point by various scholars.[12]

In 1995 the Italian scholar Sofia Di Vincenzo, in her book titled Antichi Tarocchi illuminati. L’alchimia nei Tarocchi Sola-Busca (Turin, 1995 and Stamford, 1998), argued that many images of the Sola Busca deck are related to themes of European alchemy as practised during the Renaissance.[13]

In 1998, the German publisher Wolfgang Mayer printed, for the first time, a faithful version of the 78 cards in a limited edition of 700 numbered copies.

In 2012 the Pinacoteca di Brera organized the exhibition Il Segreto dei Segreti - I Tarocchi Sola Busca e la cultura ermetico-alchemica. In the catalog, the possible author of the engravings, Nicola di Maestro Antonio, the possible inspirer, the hermeticist Ludovico Lazzarelli, the year and place of execution of the color version, Venice in 1491, are suggested. Furthermore, it has been established in an irrefutable way that the Sola Busca Tarot is linked to the hermetic-alchemical tradition. The key figure is the King of Swords, titled Alecxandro M. (Alexander the Great), who according to a legend, reported in the medieval book entitled Secretum secretorum, was initiated into alchemy by his master, the philosopher Aristotle. In addition to Alexander the Great there are other characters linked to the hermetic-alchemical tradition. The Knight of Swords, Amone, refers to Zeus Ammon, the mythical putative father of Alexander who welcomed him in the Siwah Oasis. The Queen of Swords, Olympias, Alexander's mother, was known as a sorceress. The Knight of Cups, Natanabo, (Nectanebo), was an Egyptian priest and magician. Prof. Gnaccolini, inspired by the study of Sofia Di Vincenzo, cites many other explicit alchemical allegories. [14]

Trump suit

  • 0 – Mato
    0 – Mato
  • I – Panfilio
    I – Panfilio
  • II – Postumio
    II – Postumio
  • III – Lenpio
    III – Lenpio
  • IV – Mario
    IV – Mario
  • V – Catulo
    V – Catulo
  • VI – Sesto
    VI – Sesto
  • VII – Deo Tauro
    VII – Deo Tauro
  • VIII – Nerone
    VIII – Nerone
  • IX – Falco
    IX – Falco
  • X – Venturio
    X – Venturio
  • XI – Tulio
    XI – Tulio
  • XII – Carbone
    XII – Carbone
  • XIII – Catone
    XIII – Catone
  • XIIII – Bocho
    XIIII – Bocho
  • XV – Metelo
    XV – Metelo
  • XVI – Olivo
    XVI – Olivo
  • XVII – Ipeo
    XVII – Ipeo
  • XVIII – Lentulo
    XVIII – Lentulo
  • XIX – Sabino
    XIX – Sabino
  • XX – Nenbroto
    XX – Nenbroto
  • XXI – Nabuchodenasor
    XXI – Nabuchodenasor

Plain suits

Cups

  • Ace of Cups
    Ace of Cups
  • Two of Cups
    Two of Cups
  • Three of Cups
    Three of Cups
  • Four of Cups
    Four of Cups
  • Five of Cups
    Five of Cups
  • Six of Cups
    Six of Cups
  • Seven of Cups
    Seven of Cups
  • Eight of Cups
    Eight of Cups
  • Nine of Cups
    Nine of Cups
  • Ten of Cups
    Ten of Cups
  • Knave of Cups
    Knave of Cups
  • Knight of Cups
    Knight of Cups
  • Queen of Cups
    Queen of Cups
  • King of Cups
    King of Cups

Coins

  • Ace of Coins
    Ace of Coins
  • Two of Coins
    Two of Coins
  • Three of Coins
    Three of Coins
  • Four of Coins
    Four of Coins
  • Five of Coins
    Five of Coins
  • Six of Coins
    Six of Coins
  • Seven of Coins
    Seven of Coins
  • Eight of Coins
    Eight of Coins
  • Nine of Coins
    Nine of Coins
  • Ten of Coins
    Ten of Coins
  • Knave of Coins
    Knave of Coins
  • Knight of Coins
    Knight of Coins
  • Queen of Coins
    Queen of Coins
  • King of Coins
    King of Coins

Batons

  • Ace of Batons
    Ace of Batons
  • Two of Batons
    Two of Batons
  • Three of Batons
    Three of Batons
  • Four of Batons
    Four of Batons
  • Five of Batons
    Five of Batons
  • Six of Batons
    Six of Batons
  • Seven of Batons
    Seven of Batons
  • Eight of Batons
    Eight of Batons
  • Nine of Batons
    Nine of Batons
  • Ten of Batons
    Ten of Batons
  • Knave of Batons
    Knave of Batons
  • Knight of Batons
    Knight of Batons
  • Queen of Batons
    Queen of Batons
  • King of Batons
    King of Batons

Swords

  • Ace of Swords
    Ace of Swords
  • Two of Swords
    Two of Swords
  • Three of Swords
    Three of Swords
  • Four of Swords
    Four of Swords
  • Five of Swords
    Five of Swords
  • Six of Swords
    Six of Swords
  • Seven of Swords
    Seven of Swords
  • Eight of Swords
    Eight of Swords
  • Nine of Swords
    Nine of Swords
  • Ten of Swords
    Ten of Swords
  • Knave of Swords
    Knave of Swords
  • Knight of Swords
    Knight of Swords
  • Queen of Swords
    Queen of Swords
  • King of Swords
    King of Swords

References

  1. ^ a b c d Berti, Giordano (2013). "History of Sola-Busca Tarot". Sola-Busca Tarot Mayer 1998. Retrieved 10 April 2020.
  2. ^ a b Kaplan, Stuart (1990). Encyclopedia of Tarot. Vol. 3. U.S. Games Systems. p. 30. ISBN 0880791225.
  3. ^ a b c d "Collection online". British Museum. Retrieved 23 March 2020.
  4. ^ Zucker, Mark J. (1997). "The Master of the 'Sola-Busca Tarocchi' and the Rediscovery of Some Ferrarese Engravings of the Fifteenth Century". Artibus et Historiae. 18 (35): 181–194. doi:10.2307/1483546.
  5. ^ Bezzone, Francesca (5 April 2019). "Mystery and history of art merge together in the Sola Busca tarots". L'Italo-Americano. Retrieved 11 April 2020.
  6. ^ Dummett, Michael (1980). The Game of Tarot: From Ferrara to Salt Lake City. University of California: Duckworth.
  7. ^ a b Berti, Giordano (2013). "Sola-Busca & Waite-Smith Tarot". Sola-Busca Tarot Mayer 1998. Retrieved 10 April 2020.
  8. ^ Panza, Pierluigi (16 February 2010). "I tarocchi per rilanciare Brera". Corriere della Sera (in Italian). p. 39. Archived from the original on 15 June 2015.
  9. ^ Kaplan, Stuart (1990). Encyclopedia of Tarot. Vol. 2. U.S. Games Systems. p. 297. ISBN 0880791225.
  10. ^ Willshire, William Hughes (1876). A Descriptive Catalogue of Playing and Other Cards in the British Museum. Chiswick Press. pp. 77–78.
  11. ^ Hind, Arthur (1938). Early Italian Engravings. pp. 241–247, 370–393.
  12. ^ Berti, Giordano (1987). Le Carte di Corte. Gioco e Magia alla Corte degli Estensi. Bologna: Nuova Alfa Editoriale. pp. 88–91. ISBN 88-7779-016-4.
  13. ^ Di Vincenzo, Sofia (1998). Sola Busca Tarot. Stamford: U.S.Games Systems. pp. 25–33. ISBN 1-57281-130-7.
  14. ^ Various, authors (2012). Il Segreto dei Segreti - I Tarocchi Sola Busca e la cultura ermetico-alchemica tra Marche e Veneto alla fine del Quattrocento. Milan: Skira. ISBN 978-88-572-1764-2.

External links

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