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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)福图纳
品名(英)Fortuna
入馆年号1924年,24.212.5
策展部门欧洲雕塑和装饰艺术European Sculpture and Decorative Arts
创作者Giambologna【1529 至 1608】【荷兰人】
创作年份公元 1600 - 公元 1615
创作地区
分类雕塑青铜(Sculpture-Bronze)
尺寸整体 (confirmed): 18 1/2 × 5 3/4 × 4 英寸 (47 × 14.6 × 10.2 厘米)
介绍(中)1924年,当这尊小雕像作为米尔斯遗产的一部分来到大都会博物馆时,策展人约瑟夫·布雷克将其描述为"约1550年的美丽青铜,代表维纳斯码头",并将其分配给了丹妮斯·卡塔尼奥。布雷克的观点将建立在德国学者威廉•冯•博德和利奥•普莱尼西格开创的先例之上。例如,后者将卡塔尼奥与维也纳的一幅类似的作品联系在一起:一个优雅的身影,手里拿着翻腾的船帆的末端,双脚平稳地站在波涛汹涌的海面上漂浮着泡沫的球体上(图122a)。[1] 对于采用这种方案或其元素的许多青铜器,包括现在的小雕像,随后的学术研究将归属和主题从卡塔尼奥和维纳斯·玛丽娜转移到詹布洛涅的追随者和福图纳

20世纪70年代发表的档案发现证实了詹布洛格纳的剧目中存在一个现已失传的福图纳模型。[2] 证据链始于1609年詹布洛格纳的遗嘱执行人贝内德托·贡迪的收藏清单,其中记录了大师手上的青铜福图纳。[3] 1612年,科西莫二世·德·美第奇送给威尔士亲王亨利的外交礼物中有15件青铜器,其中包括一件福图纳。1611年期间交换的信件详细说明了该委员会的条款,表明彼得罗·塔卡被指派铸造詹布洛涅最著名的模型,其中包括"La fortuna"。其中七个模型,包括fortuna,是从萨尔维亚蒂家族借来的,并在詹布洛涅的原型之后被指定为"安东尼奥·苏西尼之手"。Tacca和Susini都曾与Giambologna合作,可以合理地假设,Susini在自己的Fortuna版本中采用了这位年长雕塑家的primo pensiero。这份外交礼物中的所有模型都可以追溯到1639年查理一世收藏的清单中,该清单对福图纳进行了更全面的描述,将其描述为"一个站着的悲伤者,左手放在头上,另一只手垂下,戴着财富谷[面纱]"和"一个悲伤者举起左手,右手垂下,在其中,财富之井出租。"[4]

詹布洛涅通过安德里亚·阿尔西亚蒂的《纹章》(1551)等资料了解文艺复兴时期的福图纳肖像画,其中福图纳与水星一起出现在木刻画中,将人类的创造力(以水星的名义)与偶然的危险(福图纳)对立起来。[5] 在这张照片中,她轻盈的身体呈轻微的S形曲线,双臂高举,手指紧握着一张被风吹走的帆,一只脚平衡在一个球体上,球体位于风暴肆虐的大海旁边的岩石露头上。[6] 查尔斯·埃弗里指出,在福图纳青铜器的主体中,完整的图像元素是罕见的;特别是,飘动的船帆或面纱被"撕裂",变成了握在人物手中的截短的布卷。[7] 这些简短的模型包括现在的小雕像,另一个在大都会博物馆(cat.123),一个在斯坦福和卢浮宫,还有两个在2010年代的拍卖会上提供。[8] 所有这些作品中精心制作的小块布料显然是作品的独创之处。Avery推断詹布洛涅一生中存在一个完整的模型,其中包括拱形面纱。也许我们还应该根据1639年的清单推断,苏西尼创造了缩写变体,该清单将福图纳的面纱描述为"撕裂"。或者,塔卡在复制苏西尼的版本时去掉了面纱

在众多的复制品中,Watson和Avery认为大都会博物馆和斯坦福大学的青铜器是最接近Giambologna工作室制作的例子,并将两者都分配给了Susini;Bertrand Jestaz为卢浮宫的小雕像提出了同样的理由。[9] 在风格和处理上特别值得注意的是光泽的表面处理和细节的精致渲染,如卷发和虹膜的定义。这三个铸件,加上苏富比拍卖行出售的两个铸件,尺寸相似(约46–47厘米),超过了萨尔维亚蒂/苏西尼福图纳(Salviati/Susini Fortuna)文件中记录的braccio(约39厘米)的三分之二,这表明有可能在更大范围内单独制作一个系列。在詹布洛涅的签名作品中,使用薄圆盘作为底座是未知的,但在他签名作品之后的作品中可以找到

通过射线照相术发现的某些技术违规现象引发了人们对我们的青铜归属于苏西尼的质疑。詹博洛格纳的作坊实践中没有使用拉线穿透芯针和可倾倒的石膏芯,透明的棕色铜绿虽然更像佛罗伦萨青铜器,但似乎后来也被应用了。[10] 尽管如此,出于风格上的原因,特别是清晰的抛光和对装饰细节的细致渲染,苏西尼的作者身份是可以维持的,而不排除我们的《福图纳》是托斯卡纳雕塑家模型的后来衍生品的可能性,就像塔卡制作并送往英国的铸件一样
-TM

脚注
。Planiscig 1921,第412页,图432、433
2.下面的讨论要感谢1973年的Watson和Avery
3."Una Fortuna di bronzino";《博洛尼亚骑士歌剧》,科尔蒂1976年,第633页
]4.米勒1960年,第92211页
5.Watson和Avery 1973,图15
6.Watson和Avery 1973年,第502-3页,认为詹布洛涅创造了福图纳作为他的水星的伴侣,最早的一个可以追溯到1563-65年。在1609年的贡迪目录中,福图纳的条目直接跟随水星的条目;见Corti 1976,第633页
7.C.Avery和Radcliffe 1978年,第70页,猫。16.
8。斯坦福大学康托尔艺术中心,1962.235;Louv
介绍(英)When this statuette came to The Met in 1924 as part of the Mills bequest, curator Joseph Breck described it as a “beautiful bronze of about 1550, representing Venus Marina,” and assigned it to Danese Cattaneo. Breck’s opinion would have rested on precedents set by German scholars Wilhelm von Bode and Leo Planiscig. The latter, for example, associated Cattaneo with a similar composition in Vienna: a graceful figure holding in her hands the ends of a billowing sail, her feet poised on a sphere carried on the foamy waves of a choppy sea (fig. 122a).[1] For a number of bronzes adopting this scheme or elements of it, including the present statuette, subsequent scholarship shifted both attribution and subject, from Cattaneo and Venus Marina to Giambologna’s followers and Fortuna.

Archival discoveries published in the 1970s confirm the existence of a now-lost Fortuna model in Giambologna’s repertory.[2] The chain of evidence begins in 1609 in the collection inventory of Giambologna’s executor Benedetto Gondi, which records a bronze Fortuna by the master’s hand.[3] Then, in 1612, a Fortuna was among the fifteen bronzes comprising a diplomatic gift to Henry, prince of Wales, from Cosimo II de’ Medici. Correspondence exchanged throughout 1611 specifying the terms of this commission indicates that Pietro Tacca was assigned the task of casting copies of Giambologna’s most celebrated models, among these “La fortuna.” Seven of the models, including the Fortuna, were borrowed from the Salviati family and designated as “by the hand of [Antonio] Susini” after Giambologna’s prototypes. Both Tacca and Susini had collaborated with Giambologna, and it is reasonable to assume that Susini adopted the older sculptor’s primo pensiero for his own version of the Fortuna. All the casts in the diplomatic gift can be traced through the 1639 inventory of Charles I’s collection, which provides a fuller description of the Fortuna as “a standing woeman wth her left hand over her head, and the other [hand] downe to hould a fortune vale [veil]” and “A Woeman houlding upp her left hand, and her right hand downe, in them, The Vaile of Fortune rent.”[4]

The Renaissance iconography of Fortuna would have been known to Giambologna through sources such as Andrea Alciati’s Emblemata (1551), in which Fortuna appears with Mercury in a woodcut pitting human inventiveness (in the guise of Mercury) against the hazards of chance (Fortuna).[5] Here, her lithe body is posed in a slight S-curve, both arms raised with fingers clutching a wind-blown sail and one foot balanced on a sphere set on a rocky outcrop next to a storm-tossed sea.[6] Charles Avery notes that among the corpus of Fortuna bronzes, the full complement of iconographic elements is rare; in particular, the fluttering sail or veil is “torn away,” reduced to truncated rolls of cloth held in the figure’s hands.[7] These abbreviated casts include the present statuette, another in The Met (cat. 123), one at Stanford and in the Louvre, and two offered at auction in the 2010s.[8] The carefully finished nubs of cloth in all of these works are clearly original to the composition. Avery infers the existence of a complete model during Giambologna’s lifetime that included the arching veil. Perhaps we should also infer, based on the 1639 inventory, which describes Fortuna’s veil as “rent” (torn), that Susini created the abbreviated variant. Or, alternatively, that Tacca dispensed with the veil in his copy of Susini’s version.

Among the many replicas, Watson and Avery consider The Met and Stanford bronzes the closest examples to Giambologna’s workshop production, assigning both to Susini; Bertrand Jestaz makes the same case for the Louvre statuette.[9] Of particular note in style and treatment are the lustrous finish and the exquisite rendering of details such as the curly hair and definition of the irises. These three casts, plus the two sold at Sotheby’s, have similar dimensions (ca. 46–47 cm) that exceed by several centimeters the two-thirds of a braccio (ca. 39 cm) recorded in documents for the Salviati/Susini Fortuna (and thus for Tacca’s copy sent to Prince Henry), suggesting the possibility of a separate series executed on a larger scale. The use of a thin disk as a base is unknown in Giambologna’s autograph works, but can be found in compositions subsequent to his signed creations.

Certain technical irregularities, discovered through radiography, raise questions about the attribution of our bronze to Susini. The use of drawn-wire transfixing core pins and a pourable plaster core are not features of Giambologna’s workshop practice, and the transparent brown patina, although more typical of Florentine bronzes, appears to have been applied later.[10] Nonetheless, for stylistic reasons—in particular the lucid polish and the meticulous rendering of decorative details—Susini’s authorship can be sustained, without ruling out the possibility that our Fortuna is a later derivation of the Tuscan sculptor’s model, as is the case for the cast made by Tacca and sent to England.
-TM

Footnotes
(For key to shortened references see bibliography in Allen, Italian Renaissance and Baroque Bronzes in The Metropolitan Museum of Art. NY: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2022.)


1. Planiscig 1921, p. 412, figs. 432, 433.
2. The following discussion is indebted to Watson and Avery 1973.
3. “Una Fortuna di bronzo”; “opere . . . di mano . . . del Cavalier Giovanni Bologna.” Corti 1976, p. 633.
]4. Millar 1960, pp. 92, 211.
5. Watson and Avery 1973, fig. 15.
6. Watson and Avery 1973, pp. 502–3, suggest that Giambologna created the Fortuna as a companion to his Mercury, the earliest of which dates to about 1563–65. In the 1609 Gondi inventory, the entry for a Fortuna directly follows that for a Mercury; see Corti 1976, p. 633.
7. C. Avery and Radcliffe 1978, p. 70, cat. 16.
8. Cantor Arts Center, Stanford University, 1962.235; Louvre, OA 10598; ex-Michael Hall collection, Sotheby’s, London, December 7, 2010, lot 63; ex-French royal collection (inventory no. 236), Sotheby’s, Paris, December 11, 2019, lot 15.
9. Watson and Avery 1973, pp. 502–3; Jestaz 1978.
10. R. Stone/TR, March 11, 2011. Stones believes the bronze was cast in northern Italy; see his essay in this volume, p. 35.
  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。
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