
Diego Velázquez · PD
梅尼普斯
作品信息
故事
Velázquez painted this around 1639 for the Torre de la Parada, King Philip IV's hunting lodge in the hills outside Madrid. The lodge was being filled with pictures: Rubens supplied gods and mythologies, Velázquez supplied philosophers, dwarfs and jesters. Here is the philosopher, and he looks like a beggar. This is Menippus, an ancient Greek Cynic and satirist who mocked wealth and pretension, wrapped in a worn cloak, glancing sideways at us with a faint sneer. On the floor by his feet lie books and a jug, the whole worldly kit he claimed to despise. He was made as a partner to another ragged old sage, Aesop the fable-teller, and for centuries the two have hung as a pair.




