A CARVED OAK RELIEF TYMPANUM OF SHOEING THE GOOSE

Details
A CARVED OAK RELIEF TYMPANUM OF SHOEING THE GOOSE
PROBABLY ENGLISH, 15TH CENTURY

One of the goose's feet and part of the smith's hand lacking; other cracks, restorations and minor damages.
20¾in (52.7cm.) high
57in. (144.8cm.) wide
Literature
COMPARATIVE LITERATURE:
M. Laird, English Misericords, London, 1986

Lot Essay

The subject-matter of the present tympanum relates it to the robust wit and proverbial drollery of the carvings found on English misericords of the same period. 'To shoe the goose' is a traditional expression referring to any activity that is a waste of time: here the contrast of the fox playing dead and the goose-being shod appears to be emblematic of the opposition between wisdom and folly.

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