Whoever the artist of the above piece was, I’d say they had been most impressed with Hieronymus Bosch. The Egg Dance, from village revelry to romance to politics. This is a wonderful piece of history, which demonstrates several cultural shifts throughout the centuries.
The egg dance was a traditional Easter game involving the laying down of eggs on the ground and dancing among them whilst trying to break as few as possible. Another variation (depicted in many of the images featured here) involved tipping an egg from a bowl, and then trying to flip the bowl over on top of it, all with only using one’s feet and staying within a chalk circle drawn on the ground. Although, as shown in many of its depictions in art, the pastime is associated with peasant villages of the 16th and 17th century, one of the earliest references to egg-dancing relates to the marriage of Margaret of Austria and Philibert of Savoy on Easter Monday in 1498.
[…]
This blindfolded version of the egg dance features in Goethe’s novel Wilhelm Meister’s Apprenticeship (1795). … According to some scholars Goethe’s mention gave birth to the phrase “einen wahren Eiertanz aufführen” (to perform a true egg dance) which refers to moving carefully in a difficult situation. This particularly association of the egg dance with navigating danger was expressed time and time again in political cartoons of the 19th-century: various political figures, from Bismarck to Disraeli, precariously trying to make there way about a floor strewn with potential upsets.
You read and see much more at The Public Domain Review.
chigau (違う) says
Walking on eggs?
chigau (違う) says
ahem
to continue from #1
Thank you Caine.
I purely love to learn something totally new about something totally mundane.
I have always known the idiom “walking on eggs” or “walking on eggshells”.
It’s pretty obvious why that could be a problem.
This dancing whilst blinded is just wondrous.
Giliell, professional cynic -Ilk- says
By now the German idion “einen Eiertanz aufführen” has a pretty negative connotation. It usually means that somebody is talking around an issue or trying not to upset somebody when the thing that is clearly needed is for them to state clearly what they mean/need.