The Madonna with Saint Giovannino – UFO painting

Discussion in 'Gnosticism And The Bible' started by CULCULCAN, Feb 21, 2015.

  1. CULCULCAN

    CULCULCAN The Final Synthesis - isbn 978-0-9939480-0-8 Staff Member

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    55,226
    The Madonna with Saint Giovannino

    – UFO painting




    madonna_ufo.
    This painting is called “The Madonna with Saint Giovannino”.

    It was painted in the 15th century by Domenico Ghirlandaio (1449-1494) a
    nd hangs as part of the Loeser collection in the Palazzo Vecchio.


    Above Mary’s right shoulder is a disk shaped object.

    Below is a blow up of this section and a man and his dog can clearly be seen looking up at the object.

    Upon closer inspection, the man seems to be looking away from the UFO,
    behind him and over his shoulder.


    Or, more likely, the notably out of place object may be imagined floating above the ground between them.

    From either perspective, could Mary be seen as blocking the two babies from the flying saucer’s view?

    Perhaps the dog glimpses the hovering object ~ with it’s mouth open, it could even be barking at it.

    But what is that dark, sparkling, disassembled figure beside them ~ a dwarf, or an ethereal being?

    A body, legs, head, and tail can be made out. Could this represent a type of alien, or demon?

    Also, Mary’s halo seems a bit shadowy ~ more like a vaporous disc than a ring of light.


    The Crucifixion” and was painted in 1350.

    They are located above the altar at the Visoki Decani Monestary in Kosovo, Yugoslavia.
    madonna_ufo-150x150.
    crucifixion1350b-150x150.
    crucifixion1350c-150x150.
    http://coolinterestingstuff.com/the-madonna-with-saint-giovannino-ufo-painting
     
  2. CULCULCAN

    CULCULCAN The Final Synthesis - isbn 978-0-9939480-0-8 Staff Member

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    55,226
    5 Strange UFO Anomalies Spotted in Classic Paintings


    File this under: UFO mysteries. Sure, there's no real hard evidence of UFOs actually existing, but that's why they remain one of the most controversial topics today. Some of that mystery comes in the form of flying objects spotted in classic paintings. First up, we have "The Madonna with Saint Giovannino", which was painted in the 15th century by Domenico Ghirlandaio (1449-1494) and hangs as part of the Loeser collection in the Palazzo Vecchio. Continue reading for more.

    5. Beams

    This image is by Flemish artist Aert De Gelder, and named "The Baptism of Christ". This image was painted in 1710 and hangs in the Fitzwilliam Museum , Cambridge. A UFO-like object is shining beams of light down on John the Baptist and Jesus.


    4. Two

    The first picture above shows a fresco titled "The Crucifixion", and it was painted in 1350. The two objects enlarged below with figures inside can be seen in the top left and top right of the fresco. This painting is located above the altar at the Visoki Decani Monestary in Kosovo, Yugoslavia.


    3. Hat

    This tapestry, titled "The Magnificat", was painted in the 14th century and depicts the life of Mary. A hat shaped object can be clearly seen in the painting. It's located at the French basillica Notre-Dame in Beaune, Burgandy.


    2. Balloon

    This image is sourced from the French book "Le Livre Des Bonnes Moeurs" by Jacques Legrand. While some people may say that the spherical object in the painting is a balloon, there was no such thing as balloons in France during 1338.


    1. Ray

    This painting is by Carlo Crivelli (1430-1495), and named "The Annunciation with Saint Emidius" (1486). It hangs in the National Gallery of London. A bizarre disk-shaped object can be seen shining a pencil beam of light down onto the crown of Mary's head.

    Read more at http://www.techeblog.com/index.php/...tted-in-classic-paintings#i6ebOsGDL6aMQK6o.99

    http://www.techeblog.com/index.php/tech-gadget/5-strange-ufo-anomalies-spotted-in-classic-paintings
     
  3. CULCULCAN

    CULCULCAN The Final Synthesis - isbn 978-0-9939480-0-8 Staff Member

    Messages:
    55,226
    10 Famous Paintings with Hidden Codes


    1
    Mona Lisa: A Real Hidden Code in Her Eyes
    a98643_monalisa%202.
    Intrigue is usually focused on her enigmatic smile. However, when viewed under a microscope,
    historians in Italy have discovered that by magnifying the eyes of the "Mona Lisa" tiny numbers and letters can be seen.

    Experts say the barely distinguishable letters and numbers represent something of a real-life Da Vinci Code:
    in the right eye appear to be the letters LV which could well stand for his name, Leonardo Da Vinci,
    while in the left eye there are also symbols but they are not as defined.

    Of course, it's very difficult to make them out clearly but they appear to be the letters CE, or it could be the letter B.
    In the arch of the bridge in the background the number 72 can be seen, or it could be an L and the number 2.
    Also, the number 149, with a fourth number erased, appears behind the picture, which suggests that Da Vinci painted it
    when he was in Milan in the 1490s.

    You have to remember that the picture is almost 500 years old, so it is not as sharp and clear
    as when it was originally painted. (Source)



    2
    The Last Supper: A Mathematical & Astrological Puzzle, Plus a Secret Musical Score
    a98643_last%20supper.
    "The Last Supper" has also been the target of much speculation, usually centered around supposed hidden messages
    or hints found within the painting.

    Slavisa Pesci, an information technologist, created an interesting visual effect by overlaying a semitransparent,
    mirrored version of the painting on top of the original. The result is that two figures that look like Templar knights
    appear at both ends of the table, while someone who is possibly holding an infant stands to Jesus' left.

    Giovanni Maria Pala, an Italian musician, has also indicated that the positions of hands and loaves of bread
    can be interpreted as notes on a musical staff, and if read from right to left, as was characteristic of Leonardo's writing,
    they form a musical composition.

    Sabrina Sforza Galitzia, a Vatican researcher, claimed to have deciphered the "mathematical and astrological" puzzle
    in Leonardo's "The Last Supper." She said that he foresaw the end of the world in a "universal flood"
    which would begin on March 21, 4006 and end on November 1 that same year.

    She believed that this would mark "a new start for humanity."


    (Source)



    3
    The Creation of Adam: The Floating Brain Divinity
    a98643_Adan.
    Michelangelo's "The Creation of Adam" has endured not only as the most famous of the Sistine Chapel panels,
    but also as one of the single most iconic images of humanity.

    Michelangelo is recognized as one of the greatest painters and sculptors from the Italian Renaissance.

    What is not so widely known is that he was an avid student of anatomy who, at the age of 17,
    began dissecting corpses from the church graveyard.

    Now, a pair of American experts in neuroanatomy believe that Michelangelo did leave some anatomical illustrations
    behind in one of his most famous works - the Sistine Chapel.

    While some might dismiss this as a coincidence, experts suggest that it would be harder to explain that this was not Michelangelo's intention. Even complex components within the brain, such as the cerebellum, optic chiasm, and pituitary gland
    can all be found in the picture. As for that sassy green sash running down the pons/spinal column/dude
    who is holding God up, it follows the path of the vertebral artery perfectly. (Source)



    4
    Sistine Chapel: Another Human Brain Seen From Below
    a98643_sistine%20chapel.
    Similar to the masterpiece "The Creation of Adam," experts argue that the Sistine Chapel panels feature another figure of God
    with a hidden code.

    They noticed that God's throat and chest had anatomical irregularities, which were not present in any other figure in the fresco.
    Also, while the figures are illuminated diagonally from the lower left, God's neck is illuminated straight-on.

    They concluded that what looks like clumsiness must have been deliberate work by the genius.

    By superimposing God's odd-looking neck on the photograph of a human brain seen from below,
    they showed how the two matched precisely.

    They added that a strange roll of fabric that extends up the center of God's robe could represent the human spinal cord.

    The lumpy neck in the God figure (A) of the panel matches a photograph of the human brain when seen from below (B)
    while (C) shows the various parts of the brain apparently hidden in the painting.

    Nevertheless, Michelangelo also depicted other anatomical features elsewhere in the ceiling according to scholars,
    notably the kidney, which was familiar to Michelangelo and was of special interest to him as he suffered from kidney stones.

    (Source)



    5
    The Madonna with Saint Giovannino: Sightings Of UFOs
    a98643_madona.
    In addition to getting our attention with the rock hard Baby Jesus abs, Domenico Ghirlandaio's "Madonna
    with Saint Giovannino" also features an interesting little blob hovering in the sky over Mary's left shoulder.

    Above Mary's left shoulder we observe a disk-shaped object that appears to be shining. It is an object which the artist
    depicted in huge detail, making sure it would stand out in his work of art. To the right of the painting we can see a man
    who is holding his right arm above his eyes, signifying that this object was extremely bright, while in the upper left hand corner
    we can see an object that looks like the sun.

    Domenico Ghirlandaio's "Madonna with Saint Giovannino" is just one of numerous medieval paintings depicting bizarre,
    disturbing unidentified flying objects soaring around. (Source)



    6
    Prophet Zechariah: Flipping Off The Religious Authority
    a98643_ZACARIAS.
    The tension between Julius II and Michelangelo is well documented. Historians note that Michelangelo portrayed the pope
    in effigy as the prophet Zechariah, and that one of the Angels located behind him makes an extremely obscene gesture.

    What that adorable little baby is doing with his finger is called "the fig" and its meaning is not nearly as sweet.

    By sticking his thumb in between his index and middle fingers, he's making an old world gesture
    that basically means "f*ck you." (Source)



    7
    David and Goliath: Mystical Kabbalah Signs
    a98643_David%20and%20Goliath.
    Scanning through the arrangement of figures on the vast 14,000 square foot ceiling of the Sistine Chapel,
    authors have found shapes that correspond to Hebrew letters.

    For example, the figures of David and Goliath form the shape of the letter gimel, which symbolizes "strength"
    in the mystical Kabbalah tradition.

    The authors believe that Michelangelo picked up his knowledge of Judaism while at the court of Lorenzo de Medici in Florence,
    and the entire Sistine Chapel, which they say is built to the same proportions as the Holy Temple in Jerusalem,
    is a "lost mystical message of universal love" which was intended to be decoded. (Source)



    8
    Netherlandish Proverbs: 112 Netherlandish Idioms in the Scene
    a98643_Proverbs.
    "Netherlandish Proverbs" is a 1559 oil-on-oak-panel painting by Pieter Bruegel the Elder
    that depicts a land populated by literal renditions of Dutch proverbs of the day.

    There are approximately 112 identifiable idioms in the scene. Some are still in use today,
    such as "swimming against the tide," "the big fish eats the little fish," "banging one's head against a brick wall,"
    and "armed to the teeth."

    Other proverbs indicate human stupidity. Some of the figures seem to represent more than one figure of speech,
    such as the man shearing a sheep left of center at the bottom of the painting.

    He is sitting next to a man shearing a pig, which represents the expression "one shears sheep and one shears pigs,"
    meaning that one has the advantage over the other, but it may also represent the advice "shear them but don't skin them,"
    meaning make the most of your assets.

    (Source)



    9
    The Supper at Emmaus: A Code Of Silence Recognition For Christians
    a98643_Emmaus.
    "The Supper at Emmaus" is a painting by the Italian Baroque master Caravaggio.
    The painting depicts the moment when the resurrected but incognito Jesus reveals himself
    to two of his disciples in the town of Emmaus, only to vanish from their sight.

    The painting is unusual for the life-sized figures and the dark, blank background.
    The table features a basket of food which teeters perilously over the edge.
    There is also an astounding shadow which seems like the figure of a fish,
    which may indicate a code of silence recognition for Christians.



    10
    Young Mozart's Portrait: Mason Signs
    a98643_Mozart.
    Of course, works of art are not spared the subject of Freemasonry. Portraits of people who hide a hand may indicate
    a dedication to the cause or a level of hierarchy. Portraits such as this anonymous one of Mozart
    (possibly from Antonio Lorenzoni) may be examples. (Source)

    http://www.oddee.com/item_98643.aspx
     

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