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美国纽约大都会艺术博物馆展品查阅
美国纽约大都会艺术博物馆展品查阅
美国大都会艺术博物馆中的24万件展品,图片展示以及中文和英文双语介绍(中文翻译仅供参考)
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品名(中)麦当娜与天使的孩子
品名(英)Madonna and Child with Angels
入馆年号1914年,14.40.675
策展部门欧洲雕塑和装饰艺术European Sculpture and Decorative Arts
创作者Antonio Rossellino【1427 至 1479】【意大利人】
创作年份公元 1450 - 公元 1465
创作地区
分类雕塑(Sculpture)
尺寸整体 (confirmed): 高 28 7/8 x 宽 21 1/8 英寸, 90磅 (73.3 x 53.7 厘米, 40.8237kg); Framed: 高 55 5/8 x 宽 35 3/4 x 深 6 英寸, 145磅 (141.3 x 90.8 x 15.2 厘米)
介绍(中)意大利十五世纪的圣母和圣婴大理石浮雕在二十世纪上半叶受到纽约收藏家的高度重视,许多被送给了博物馆。其中,安东尼奥·罗塞利诺(Antonio Rossellino)的《奥特曼圣母》(Altman Madonna)可以说是最好的。强烈的构图、微妙的雕刻和部分镀金使其在美国收藏的罗塞利诺浮雕中脱颖而出。安东尼奥

那一代的佛罗伦萨雕塑家——包括他的哥哥贝尔纳多,以及与安东尼奥一起在贝尔纳多工作室训练的德西德里奥·达·塞蒂尼亚诺和米诺·达菲耶索莱——完善和多样化了这个受人尊敬和受欢迎的主题的形式。例如,麦当娜四分之三的姿势,坐在宝座上,左臂伸过面板,与安东尼奥可能更早在纽约摩根图书馆和博物馆的浮雕中圣母的姿势非常接近,但效果却大不相同。[1]在摩根博物馆的作品中,圣婴依偎在圣母的右臂上,面对着她的身体,一只脚放在她的左手腕上。在奥特曼浮雕中,孩子与母亲朝向同一方向,他的身体动态地扭动以跟随他的目光。幼儿的姿势很尴尬,但精力充沛且独立,需要约束他的母性和保护性手势。1970年,约翰·波普-轩尼诗(John Pope-Hennessy)指出了使这种浮雕如此成功的其他装置:椅扶手向前伸出,将圣母定位在太空中;摩根浮雕中三个基路伯头的不对称在这里解析为四个头的对称,这有效地发挥了主要人物的角度姿势;而圣母号的左手,在摩根浮雕中平展,是完全三维的,在空间中转动。[2] 罗西里诺在《奥特曼圣母》中的伟大成就之一是他对帷幔的处理:基督和他的母亲都穿着透明的衣服,外面是厚厚的衣服——通过他轻薄的束腰外衣可以看到孩子的紧襁褓,圣母的面纱从她的头饰上垂落到她的披风上。雕塑家扭动她的腰带,使其准确地将披风夹在人们期望的地方。复杂的褶皱图案反映了她身体的形状,躺在椅子栏杆上的帷幔将她置于空间中。她的衣服和光环上涂有金色的图案挑出边缘并活跃表面。

博物馆的浮雕归因于安东尼奥·罗塞利诺起源于1897年德国艺术史学家威廉·冯·博德(Wilhelm von Bode),并且几乎被普遍接受。3] 教皇-轩尼诗将浮雕的日期定为1455-60年,将其与有记录的作品或其日期推断有关。他认为罗塞利诺在伦敦维多利亚和阿尔伯特博物馆的乔瓦尼·切里尼半身像(日期为 1456 年)、恩波利学院博物馆的圣塞巴斯蒂安雕像(他认为其日期约为 1460 年)和现在的作品都是用同一块石头雕刻而成的;然而,似乎更有可能的是,它们斑驳的外观归因于现代用油清洁。[4]他关于博物馆麦当娜的肉和头发与切里尼的接近的论点并不是特别令人信服,但他看到圣婴和圣塞巴斯蒂安的模棱两可的立场之间的联系似乎是完全有效的。他自信地将博物馆的浮雕放在罗西利诺的早期,因为在艺术家完成他最著名的委托,佛罗伦萨圣米尼亚托阿尔蒙特教堂的葡萄牙红衣主教墓(1461-66)之后,他的作品采取了新的方向,他的发展得到了更好的规划。[5] 罗塞利诺雄心勃勃(如果不是完全解决的话)摆出孩子的姿势,暗示了在两个已知的早期浮雕中看到的探索态度。正如Pope-Hennessy所指出的那样,其他浮雕作品取决于这些早期作品中开发的公式。[6]

[伊恩·沃德罗珀。欧洲雕塑,1400-1900,大都会艺术博物馆。纽约,2011年,第2期,第13-15页。

脚注:

1.关于摩根博物馆的浮雕,麦当娜和孩子与基路伯,见海因茨·戈特沙尔克。安东尼奥·罗塞利诺。列格尼茨,1930年,第42页;利奥·普兰尼西格。贝尔纳多和安东尼奥·罗塞利诺。萨姆隆·施罗尔。维也纳,1942年,第54页。大都会博物馆中有罗塞利诺的摩根大理石的彩色灰泥复制品(乔治·布卢门撒尔的遗赠,编号41.190.40)。
2. 约翰·波普-轩尼诗。"安东尼奥·罗塞利诺的《奥特曼圣母》。"MMJ 3 (1970),第 133–48 页。

3. 威廉·冯·博德。萨姆隆·奥斯卡·海瑙尔。柏林,1897 年,第 9、61 页,第 6 期(雕塑),病态。第8页。

4. 参见约翰·波普-轩尼诗,与罗纳德·莱特鲍恩。维多利亚和阿尔伯特博物馆的意大利雕塑目录。3卷。伦敦,1964 年,第 1 卷,第 124–26 页,第 103 期,切里尼半身像。见教皇-轩尼诗1970年,第137-41页,关于圣塞巴斯蒂安的年代和以前的文献。教皇-轩尼诗对雕像的早期年代仍然存在争议;见雪莱·"罗塞利诺[甘布雷利]。2:安东尼奥·罗塞利诺。在简·特纳编辑的《艺术词典》中,第 27 卷,第 183-85 页。纽约,1996年,第184页。

5. 关于坟墓,参见弗雷德里克·哈特、吉诺·科尔蒂和克拉伦斯·肯尼迪。葡萄牙红衣主教教堂,1434-1459,位于佛罗伦萨的圣米尼亚托。费城,1964年。

6. 这些公式首先在维多利亚和阿尔伯特博物馆的灰泥浮雕中被发现(教皇-轩尼诗 1964 年,第 1 卷,第 132 – 33 页,第 110 期),以及以前在柏林凯撒-弗里德里希博物馆的一件被毁的作品(Planiscig 1942,第 54 页)。
介绍(英)Italian fifteenth-century marble reliefs of the madonna and Child were highly esteemed by New York collectors in the first half of the twentieth century, and many were given to the Museum. Of these, the Altman Madonna by Antonio Rossellino is arguably the finest. The strong composition, subtle carving, and partial gilding distinguish it among Rossellino reliefs in American collections.

Florentine sculptors of Antonio’s generation—including his older brother Bernardo, as well as Desiderio da Settignano and Mino da Fiesole, who trained alongside Antonio in Bernardo’s workshop—refined and varied the format of this revered and popular subject. For example, the Madonna’s three-quarters pose, seated in a throne with her left arm extended across the panel, is very close to the pose of the Virgin in Antonio’s probably earlier relief in the Morgan Library and Museum, New York, yet the effect is very different.[1] In the Morgan Museum’s work the Christ Child nestled in the Virgin’s right arm faces across her body, one foot resting on her left wrist. In the Altman relief the child faces in the same direction as his mother, and his body twists dynamically to follow his gaze. The toddler’s pose is awk­ward but energetic and independent, necessitating the maternal and protective gesture that restrains him. In 1970 John Pope-Hennessy noted other devices that make this relief so successful: the chair arm juts forward to position the Virgin in space; the asymmetry of three cherubim heads in the Morgan relief resolves here into the symmetry of four heads, which plays effectively off the angled poses of the principal figures; and the Virgin’s left hand, splayed flat in the Morgan relief, is fully three-dimensional and turns in space.[2] One of Rossellino’s great accomplishments in the Altman Madonna is his handling of drapery: both Christ and his mother are clothed in transparent garments over thick ones—the Child’s tight swaddling can be seen through his light tunic, and the Virgin’s veil trails down from her headdress over her mantle. The sculptor twisted her belt so that it pinches the mantle precisely where one would expect it to. The complex pattern of pleats reflects the shape of her body, and the drapery lying over the chair rail places her in space. Patterns painted in gold on her garments and halo pick out edges and enliven surfaces.

The attribution of the Museum’s relief to Antonio Rossellino originated in 1897 with the German art historian Wilhelm von Bode, and it has been nearly universally accepted.[3] Pope-Hennessy dated the relief to 1455–60 by relating it to works that are documented or whose date is inferred. He thought that Rossellino’s bust of Giovanni Chellini (dated 1456) in the Victoria and Albert Museum, London, his statue of Saint Sebastian in the Museum of the Collegiate, Empoli (whose date, he argues, is about 1460), and the present work were all carved from the same stone; however, it seems more likely that their mottled appearance is attributable to cleaning with oil in the modern era.[4]. His argument that the flesh and hair of the Museum’s Madonna are close to Chellini’s is not especially convincing, but the connection he saw between the ambiguous stance of the Christ Child and of Saint Sebastian seems entirely valid. He confidently placed the Museum’s relief in Rossellino’s early period because after the artist completed his most famous commission, the tomb of the cardinal of Portugal at the church of San Miniato al Monte in Florence (1461–66), his work took a new direction and his development is better charted.[5] Rossellino’s ambitious, if not completely resolved, posing of the child suggests the exploratory attitude seen in two known early reliefs. Other relief compositions, as Pope-Hennessy notes, depend on formulas developed in those early works.[6]

[Ian Wardropper. European Sculpture, 1400–1900, In the Metropolitan Museum of Art. New York, 2011, no. 2, pp. 13–15.]

Footnotes:

1. On the Morgan Museum relief, Madonna and Child with Cherubim, see Heinz Gottschalk. Antonio Rossellino. Liegnitz, 1930, p. 42; Leo Planiscig. Bernardo und Antonio Rossellino. Sammlung Schroll. Vienna, 1942, p. 54. There is a polychromed stucco copy by Rossellino of the Morgan marble in the Metropolitan Museum (Bequest of George Blumenthal, acc. no.41.190.40).
2. John Pope-Hennessy. "The Altman Madonna by Antonio Rossellino." MMJ 3 (1970), pp. 133–48.

3. Wilhelm von Bode. Die Sammlung Oscar Hainauer. Berlin, 1897, pp. 9, 61, no. 6 (sculpture), ill. p. 8.

4. See John Pope-Hennessy, with Ronald Lightbown. Catalogue of Italian Sculpture in the Victoria and Albert Museum. 3 vols. London, 1964, vol. 1, pp. 124–26, no. 103, for the Chellini bust. See Pope-Hennessy 1970, pp. 137–41, for the dating of Saint Sebastian and for previous literature. Pope-Hennessy’s early dating of the statue remains controversial; see Shelley E. Zuraw. "Rossellino [Gambrelli]. 2: Antonio Rossellino." In The Dictionary of Art, edited by Jane Turner, vol. 27, pp. 183–85. New York, 1996, p.184.

5. For the tomb, see Frederick Hartt, Gino Corti, and Clarence Kennedy. The Chapel of the Cardinal of Portugal, 1434–1459, at San Miniato in Florence. Philadelphia, 1964.

6. Those formulas were first detected in a stucco relief in the Victoria and Albert Museum (Pope-Hennessy 1964, vol. 1, pp.132 – 33, no.110) and a destroyed work formerly in the Kaiser-Friedrich-Museum, Berlin (Planiscig 1942, p. 54).
  大都会艺术博物馆,英文 Metropolitan Museum of Art,是美国最大的艺术博物馆,世界著名博物馆,位于美国纽约第五大道的82号大街。
  大都会博物馆回顾了人类自身的文明史的发展,与中国北京的故宫、英国伦敦的大英博物馆、法国巴黎的卢浮宫、俄罗斯圣彼得堡的艾尔米塔什博物馆并称为世界五大博物馆。