The Fortune Teller by Georges de La Tour - 1630 - 101.9 cm × 123.5 cm Metropolitan Museum of Art The Fortune Teller by Georges de La Tour - 1630 - 101.9 cm × 123.5 cm Metropolitan Museum of Art

The Fortune Teller

Oil on canvas • 101.9 cm × 123.5 cm
  • Georges de La Tour - March 13, 1593 - January 30, 1652 Georges de La Tour 1630

Georges de la Tour was a French Baroque painter and a careful follower of Caravaggio. De la Tour is better known for his chiaroscuro religious compositions, in which a single light source illuminates the figures.

The painting we present today is a bit different; we see beautiful rich costumes full of details. The painting catches a moment in which a young man of some wealth is having his fortune told by the old woman at right; she takes the coin from his hand, not only in payment, but as part of the ritual in which she will cross his hand with it. Most or all of the women portrayed are gypsies, and, furthering the stereotype of the time, they are depicted as thieves. As the young man is engrossed in the fortune-telling—an act which, if discovered, would have repercussions for both him and the gypsies—the leftmost woman is stealing the coin purse from his pocket, while her companion in profile has a hand ready to receive the loot. The pale-faced girl on the boy's left is less clearly a gypsy, but is also in on the act as she cuts a medal worn by the boy from its chain. The figures in the painting are close together, as if in a play, and the composition may have been influenced by a theatrical scene.

100% Baroque here! Have a great Saturday.  :)