Set of Twelve Laberinto Playing Cards
printer
Andrea Ghisi
(active Venice, 17th century)
Date17th century
MediumInk on paper
ClassificationsPrints
Credit LineIsabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston
Accession numberP18w99.1-12
eMuseum ID723583
TMS Source ID25437
Last Updated1/9/25
Status
Not on viewWeb Commentary
This set of twelve stamp-sized playing cards represents a small portion of the sixty card deck used for a 17th century pseudo-mind reading game called Laberinto. The creator of the game, Venetian playing card maker Andrea Ghisi, modeled the card designs after the so-called “Mantegna Tarocchi,” two sets of 15th century old master prints in engraving originally attributed to Andrea Mantegna.
Isabella likely picked these cards up during one of her many trips to Venice. A thirteenth card can be found pasted inside a guest book Isabella kept to record her visitors during an 1899 Venetian trip (v.1.b.4.16).
BibliographyNotesDeandra Duarte, “The Hand Isabella Dealt: A Selection of Playing Cards in the Collection,” Inside the Collection (blog), Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, 7 January 2025, www.gardnermuseum.org/blog/isabella-playing-cards-collection
ProvenanceNotesProbably created by playing-card maker Andrea Ghisi (active 17th century) in Venice between during the 17th century.
Probably purchased by Isabella Stewart Gardner in Venice around 1899.
Probably purchased by Isabella Stewart Gardner in Venice around 1899.