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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)公牛
品名(英)Bull
入馆年号1940年,40.14.1
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 1700 - 公元 1899
创作地区
分类雕塑青铜(Sculpture-Bronze)
尺寸整体 (confirmed): 7 1/8 × 10 × 3 1/8 英寸 (18.1 × 25.4 × 7.9 厘米)
介绍(中)这幅未发表的踱步公牛青铜器是后来的,可能是北方模型的铸造,最终源于詹博洛尼亚的一项发明,该发明产生了大量的变体和复制品。文件证实,詹博洛尼亚和他的工作室以及他的合作者安东尼奥·苏西尼(Antonio Susini)在大师生前和1608年去世后的几年里,都存在多头青铜公牛。这些早期的青铜小雕像可以被认为是詹博洛尼亚第一部青铜笔的直接翻译。他的作品被铸造成青铜的最早证据可以追溯到1573年,当时吉罗拉莫·迪·扎诺比·波蒂吉亚尼显然是应詹博洛尼亚的赞助人佛罗伦萨贵族雅各布·迪·阿拉曼诺·萨尔维亚蒂的要求制作了一头公牛,正如迪米特里奥斯·齐科斯和帕特里夏·温格拉夫最近展示的那样。[1]另一头公牛记录在1588年弗朗切斯科一世·德·美第奇的遗产清单中,还有一匹詹博洛尼亚马和狮子。美第奇家族的演员现在在巴杰罗。[2]根据风格和事实,波蒂吉亚尼的演员阵容与希尔收藏中的公牛有关。[3]

我们的铜器于1940年进入大都会博物馆,与巴杰罗和希尔的典范不同,事实上,它来自不同的公牛模型,在奖学金中被确定为"B型"。[4]这种变体可以追溯到现在在罗马科隆纳美术馆的小雕像,该小雕像由乔瓦尼·弗朗切斯科·苏西尼的雅各布·迪·洛伦佐·萨尔维亚蒂于 1628 年委托,他基于他从叔叔安东尼奥那里继承的模型。[5]B型构图重新阐述了詹博洛尼亚的发明(A型巴杰罗和希尔小雕像),将其巨大的周长风格化为更光滑的解剖结构。更小巧的枪口直立,露珠更轻,肉质更少,角之间的皮革被赋予了精美的图形渲染,而不是 A 型公牛更具雕塑感的处理。此外,虽然巴杰罗和希尔小雕像矗立在金属椭圆形底座上,这是詹博洛尼亚早期小型雕塑的典型特征,但科隆纳和大都会青铜都没有这样的支撑。[6]

美丽的科隆纳青铜的质量远远超过我们的,其对体积和肌肉组织的定义相当敷衍,特别是在露瓣褶皱的网状图案以及腿和蹄的线性配置方面。理查德·斯通(Richard Stone)的技术分析揭示了铸造技术的特殊性——没有蜡对蜡的连接,使用一根沉重的纵线贯穿公牛的整个长度来支撑核心——与十八和十九世纪的可追溯性兼容。核心似乎是预制的并插入模具中,这种做法有助于大量生产。[7]此外,该合金是一种相对干净的含铅黄铜,锡和锑含量较低,表明其起源于北方。不伦瑞克赫尔佐格·安东·乌尔里希博物馆(Herzog Anton Ulrich Museum)中可比的公牛(归因于当地的一个作坊)和2009年拍卖的非佛罗伦萨铸件证明了苏西尼模型在阿尔卑斯山以北的受欢迎程度。[8]在这方面,有必要记住,1652年扬·范·默尔斯在安特卫普的收藏清单中记录了可能基于这种构图的青铜器。[9]
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脚注
(有关缩短参考文献的关键,请参阅大都会艺术博物馆的艾伦、意大利文艺复兴和巴洛克青铜器的参考书目。纽约:大都会艺术博物馆,2022。


1. 温格拉夫 2014,第 118–25 页,第 6 类;Utz 1973,第69页,第五号文件,第12项。这件青铜器经常与安东尼奥·苏西尼(Antonio Susini)的公牛小雕像混淆,该小雕像列在雅各布的儿子洛伦佐·萨尔维亚蒂(Lorenzo Salviati)1609年的收藏清单中。由于詹博洛尼亚和苏西尼直到1581年左右才开始合作,这头公牛不可能是1573年的小雕像,而是另一个早期的例子。苏西尼/萨尔维亚蒂公牛的副本由彼得罗·塔卡于 1611-12 年铸造,作为科西莫二世·德·美第奇送给威尔士亲王亨利的外交礼物的一部分。见Paolozzi Strozzi和Zikos 2006年,第242页,cat。45;齐科斯 2013;对于塔卡副本,沃森和艾弗里 1973 年,第 503、506 页。
2. 第 287 B、361 B 和 348 B 卷; 见Barocchi和Bertelà 2002-11,第1卷,第330页。美第奇公牛可能已经进入了大公的儿子唐安东尼奥的财产;在他1621年去世时,一头公牛被列入他的遗产清单,并归因于詹博洛尼亚。见温格拉夫2014年,第118页。
3. 温格拉夫 2014,第 118–25 页,猫。6.
4. 同上,第121-22页。
5. Inv. 1848 n. 32; 见赫伯特·库特纳在《卡林奇》1990年,第301页,第十六期。
6.温格拉夫 2014,第 121–22 页。
7.铁芯完好无损,尾部似乎被焊接在上面,这是对批量生产的又一次点头。 R. Stone/TR,2011 年 10 月 13 日。
8. 关于不伦瑞克公牛(Bro 158, 159),见Berger和Krahn 1994,第103页,第63、64号。另一件铸件于2009年6月19日在巴黎Néret-Minet Scp.拍卖,拍品编号00201。
9. 见库格尔2008年,第94页,第13页。
介绍(英)This unpublished bronze of a pacing bull is a later, possibly Northern cast of a model that ultimately derives from a Giambologna invention, which gave rise to a large corpus of variants and replicas. Documentation confirms the existence of multiple bronze bulls produced by Giambologna and his studio as well as his collaborator Antonio Susini during the master’s lifetime and in the years immediately following his death in 1608. These early bronze statuettes can be considered direct translations of Giambologna’s first pensiero. The earliest evidence of his composition being cast in bronze likely dates to 1573, when Girolamo di Zanobi Portigiani produced a bull apparently upon the request of Giambologna’s patron, the Florentine nobleman Jacopo di Alamanno Salviati, as recently shown by Dimitrios Zikos and Patricia Wengraf.[1] Another bull is recorded in the 1588 estate inventory of Francesco I de’ Medici along with a Giambologna horse and lion. The Medici casts are now in the Bargello.[2] Based on style and facture, the Portigiani cast has been associated with the bull in the Hill collection.[3]

Our bronze, which entered The Met in 1940, diverges from the Bargello and Hill exemplars and, in fact, derives from a different bull model, identified in the scholarship as “Type B.”[4] This variant can be traced back to a statuette, now in the Galleria Colonna, Rome, that was commissioned in 1628 by Jacopo di Lorenzo Salviati from Giovanni Francesco Susini, who based it on a model he inherited from his uncle Antonio.[5] The Type B composition reelaborates Giambologna’s invention (the Type A Bargello and Hill statuettes), stylizing its massive girth into a sleeker anatomy. The more diminutive muzzle is held erect, the dewlap is lighter and less fleshy, the hide between the horns is given an exquisite graphic rendering as opposed to the Type A bull’s more sculptural treatment. Moreover, while the Bargello and Hill statuettes stand on a metallic oval base, typical of Giambologna’s early small sculptures, neither the Colonna nor The Met bronze has such a support.[6]

The quality of the beautiful Colonna bronze far surpasses that of ours, with its rather perfunctory definition of volume and musculature, particularly in the reticular pattern of the dewlap folds and the linear configuration of the legs and hooves. Richard Stone’s technical analysis revealed peculiarities in the casting technique—the absence of wax-to-wax joins, the use of a single, heavy longitudinal wire running the entire length of the bull to support the core—compatible with a dating to the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The core appears to have been pre-cast and inserted in the mold, a practice facilitating production in larger numbers.[7] In addition, the alloy is a relatively clean leaded brass with only low levels of tin and antimony, pointing to a Northern provenance. Comparable bulls in the Herzog Anton Ulrich Museum, Braunschweig, attributed to a local workshop, and a non-Florentine cast auctioned in 2009 attest to the popularity of Susini’s model north of the Alps.[8] In this regard, it is useful to remember that a bronze likely based on this composition was recorded in the 1652 inventory of Jan van Meurs’s collection in Antwerp.[9]
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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. Wengraf 2014, pp. 118–25, cat. 6; Utz 1973, p. 69, doc. V, item 12. This bronze is often confused with a bull statuette by Antonio Susini listed in the 1609 inventory of the collection of Jacopo’s son Lorenzo Salviati. Since Giambologna and Susini did not begin collaborating until around 1581, this bull cannot be the 1573 statuette, but another early example. A copy of the Susini/Salviati bull was cast by Pietro Tacca in 1611–12 as part of a diplomatic gift from Cosimo II de’ Medici to Henry, prince of Wales. See Paolozzi Strozzi and Zikos 2006, p. 242, cat. 45; Zikos 2013; for the Tacca copy, Watson and Avery 1973, pp. 503, 506.
2. Inv. 287 B, 361 B, and 348 B; see Barocchi and Bertelà 2002–11, vol. 1, p. 330. The Medici bull may have passed into the property of Don Antonio, son of the grand duke; on his death in 1621, a bull is listed in his estate inventory with an attribution to Giambologna. See Wengraf 2014, p. 118.
3. Wengraf 2014, pp. 118–25, cat. 6.
4. Ibid., pp. 121–22.
5. Inv. 1848 n. 32; see Herbert Keutner in Carinci 1990, p. 301, no. XVI.
6. Wengraf 2014, pp. 121–22.
7. The core is intact and the tail appears to be soldered on, another nod toward mass production. R. Stone/TR, October 13, 2011.
8. For the Braunschweig bulls (Bro 158, 159), see Berger and Krahn 1994, p. 103, nos. 63, 64. The other cast was auctioned at Néret-Minet Scp., Paris, June 19, 2009, lot 00201.
9. See Kugel 2008, p. 94 n. 13.
  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。