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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)海王星与海豚
品名(英)Neptune with a dolphin
入馆年号1946年,46.183
策展部门欧洲雕塑和装饰艺术European Sculpture and Decorative Arts
创作者Gian Lorenzo Bernini【1598 至 1680】【意大利人】
创作年份公元 1600 - 公元 1699
创作地区
分类雕塑青铜(Sculpture-Bronze)
尺寸整体 (confirmed): 20 1/4 × 15 3/8 × 11 3/4 英寸 (51.4 × 39.1 × 29.8 厘米)
介绍(中)该组是Gian Lorenzo Bernini大理石海王星和海卫一的小规模变体,雕刻于1622年至1623年,曾安装在罗马蒙塔尔托别墅的鱼塘头,并一直在V&;A自1950年以来。[1]喷泉享有相当大的声誉,并以不同的媒介复制。[2] 伯尼尼尼的年轻团体在他有生之年被缩减为青铜和白银版本,而且经常未经他的许可。[3] 然而,带海豚的海王星是他早期大理石中唯一一个与原始大理石在成分上有明显差异的青铜浮雕:海王星站在一个岩石小岛上,而不是一个贝壳上,一只依偎在他两腿之间的旋转海豚取代了海卫一。海王星右大腿后面飘动的漩涡状窗帘的位置使其即使从正面也能看到更多

我们的海王星与海豚是四个已知的演员之一。其他的是科尔西尼收藏,被租借到罗马的博尔盖塞美术馆;V&;A.和盖蒂。[4] 它们的尺寸都很接近,可能是同一模型的不同阶段铸造的。当进行比较时,这四尊小雕像揭示了几个小的变化,可能是在蜡联运中引入的,以及制作上的显著差异。[5] 我们的版本缺少三叉戟。[6] 在盖蒂和博尔盖塞组中,海豚的尾巴碰到海王星的左腿;在我们的作品中,在鱼尾上增加了一个额外的鳍以产生类似的效果,而在V&;A的尾巴不与神的身体接触。在我们的团队中,海豚眼睛周围的处理比博尔盖塞和盖蒂雕像更具风格。学者们一致认为洛杉矶的版本是最好的演员阵容

Bernini关于青铜铸造小规模模型的作者一直存在争议。1998年,在讨论博尔盖塞版本时,Sebastian Schütze正确地否定了这一概念,相反,鉴于科尔西尼的起源和高度抛光的表面,他建议由一位与乔瓦尼·弗朗西斯科·苏西尼关系密切的佛罗伦萨艺术家。[7] 彼得·福斯科(Peter Fusco)主张伯尼尼自己动手,但菲利普·马尔古伊尔(Philippe Malgouyres)更令人信服地认为,青铜制的减少甚至可能不是在伯尼的圈子里产生的。[8] 这幅作品似乎是他作品中风格元素的奇怪组合:海王星是蒙塔尔托别墅的复制品;这种海豚与伯尼尼尼在1650年代后设计的海洋哺乳动物属于同一品种

这种早期和晚期元素的不一致组合可以通过与葡萄牙最近才研究的另一个海王星喷泉的比较来解释。[9] Dom Luís Menses,third conde de Ericeira,十七世纪末葡萄牙著名的政治和文化人物,通过葡萄牙驻罗马大使、布拉加大主教和灵长类动物Dom Lus de Sousa委托Bernini完成了这项工作。在1677年大主教给他的兄弟的一封信中,他讲述了伯尼尼尼提供了海王星的模型。在与Ercole Ferrata研究了不同的水力可能性后,他们一致认为海豚将被放置在海王星的双脚之间,而这群海豚将由Ferrata雕刻。1682年,这座喷泉被运到葡萄牙,并被安置在里斯本阿努西亚达宫的花园里,在那里,海王星雕像很快被伯尼尼称赞为作品,伯尼尼很可能在制定了基本设计后,将整个整体委托给了费拉塔。费拉塔的房地产库存参考了海王星的模型,包括粘土和蜡。人们很容易将Neptune with a Dolphin青铜浮雕模型放在费拉塔在罗马经营的勤奋作坊的背景下,这个模型后来被重新用于生产18世纪面向收藏家的商业青铜器
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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艾伦、意大利文艺复兴和巴洛克青铜器中的参考书目。纽约:大都会艺术馆,2022。)

1。V&;A、 A.18:1-1950。喷泉是由红衣主教亚历山德罗·佩雷蒂委托建造的,他在贝尔尼尼早期的职业生涯中发挥了重要作用。海王星和海卫一号一直留在蒙塔尔托别墅,直到1786年,它被卖给了英国艺术品经销商托马斯·詹金斯,随后被约书亚·雷诺兹爵士收购并运往英国。其历史在1922年的麦克拉根和1952年的维特科沃进行了详细的重建;更多参考文献,见教皇轩尼诗1964a,第2卷,第596-600页,第636号;Wittkower 1981,第28–29页,第177–78页,第9页;Sebastian Schütze,《科利瓦和舒茨》,1998年,第170–79页,目录。15.
2。一些十七世纪和十八世纪的版画显示了该团体的原始位置。V&;A有一个木制的缩小版(Pope Hennessy 1964a,第2卷,第609页;Weston Lewis 1998,第89-90页,第41类),Antonio Muñoz的收藏中提到了大理石缩小版,以及铅变体(Faldi 1954,第43页;另见Pope Hennetsy 1964a,第2册,第600页)。海王星躯干的一块陶制碎片,现在存放在埃尔米塔什,来自法塞蒂收藏;海王星和海卫一的全尺寸石膏复制品在同一收藏中,现藏于圣彼得堡美术学院:安德罗索夫1991年,第52页,猫。13;Wardropper 1998,第6页,猫。10.
3。马尔古伊尔,2013年,第74页
4.分别参见Schütze in Coliva和Schötze 1998,第170–79页,目录。15;教皇轩尼诗1964a,第2卷,第600页;Peter Fusco,Fogelman等人,2002年,第170-76页,第22号。18世纪,两件大理石海王星青铜铸件在伦敦拍卖:第一件是英国雕塑家伯德收藏的,于1731年4月售出(Esdaile 1938,第139页)。1783年5月26日至28日,伦敦Jean Bertels拍卖了第二件作品,"位于罗马内格罗尼别墅的海王星首都青铜"。81.1880年3月15日,佛罗伦萨圣多纳托宫拍卖了另一件带海豚的青铜海王星,拍品307
介绍(英)The group is a small-scale variant of Gian Lorenzo Bernini’s marble Neptune and Triton, carved between 1622 and 1623, which was once installed at the head of the fish pond at the Villa Montalto, Rome, and has been at the V&A since 1950.[1] The fountain enjoyed considerable fame and was reproduced in different mediums.[2] Bernini’s youthful groups were scaled down to bronze and silver versions during his lifetime, and often without his permission.[3] The Neptune with a Dolphin is, however, the only bronze reduction of one of his early marbles to show distinct compositional differences from the original: Neptune stands on a rocky islet instead of a shell, and a whirling dolphin, nestled between his legs, has replaced the Triton. The fluttering swirl of drapery behind Neptune’s proper right thigh is positioned so that more of it is visible even from the front.

Our Neptune with a Dolphin is one of four known casts. The others are in the Corsini collection, on loan to the Galleria Borghese, Rome; the V&A; and the Getty.[4] They are all quite close in size, and were probably cast from different stages of the same model. When compared, the four statuettes reveal several small variations, probably introduced in the wax intermodels, as well as notable differences in facture.[5] Our version is missing the trident.[6] In the Getty and Borghese groups, the dolphin’s tail touches Neptune’s proper left leg; in ours, an additional fin has been added to the fish tail to create a similar effect, while in the V&A’s the tail does not make contact with the god’s body. The treatment around the dolphin’s eyes is more stylized in our group than in the Borghese and Getty statuettes. Scholars agree the version in Los Angeles is the finest cast.

Bernini’s authorship of a small-scale model to be cast in bronze has long been disputed. In 1998, discussing the Borghese version, Sebastian Schütze rightly dismissed the notion, suggesting instead a Florentine artist close to Giovanni Francesco Susini, in view of the Corsini provenance and the highly polished surface.[7] Peter Fusco advocated Bernini’s own hand, but Philippe Malgouyres has more convincingly argued that the bronze reductions may not even have been produced in Bernini’s circle.[8] The composition seems a curious assemblage of stylistic elements from his works: the Neptune is a copy of the figure for the Villa Montalto; the dolphin belongs to the same breed as the marine mammals designed by Bernini after the 1650s.

This discrepant combination of early and late elements may be explained through a comparison with another Neptune fountain in Portugal that has been studied only recently.[9] Dom Luís Menses, third conde de Ericeira, a prominent political and cultural figure in late seventeenth-century Portugal, commissioned this work from Bernini through the Portuguese ambassador in Rome, Dom Luís de Sousa, archbishop and primate of Braga. In a letter of 1677 from the archbishop to his brother, he recounts that Bernini supplied a modello of the Neptune. After studying different hydraulic possibilities with Ercole Ferrata, they agreed that dolphins would be placed between Neptune’s feet, and the group would be carved by Ferrata. The fountain was shipped to Portugal in 1682 and placed in the gardens of the Anunciada Palace in Lisbon, where the Neptune figure was soon praised as a work by Bernini, who in all likelihood had entrusted the whole ensemble to Ferrata after setting the basic design. Ferrata’s estate inventory refers to models of Neptune, in both clay and wax. It is tempting to place the model for the bronze reductions of Neptune with a Dolphin in the context of the industrious workshop run by Ferrata in Rome, a model later reused to produce commercial bronzes destined for collectors in the eighteenth century.
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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. V&A, A.18:1-1950. The fountain was commissioned by Cardinal Alessandro Peretti, who played an important role in Bernini’s early career. The Neptune and Triton stayed in the Villa Montalto until 1786, when it was sold to the British art dealer Thomas Jenkins, then acquired by Sir Joshua Reynolds and shipped to England. Its history has been reconstructed in detail in Maclagan 1922 and Wittkower 1952; for further references, see Pope-Hennessy 1964a, vol. 2, pp. 596–600, no. 636; Wittkower 1981, pp. 28–29, 177–78, no. 9; Sebastian Schütze in Coliva and Schütze 1998, pp. 170–79, cat. 15.
2. Several seventeenth- and eighteenth-century engravings show the group in its original location. The V&A has a reduced copy in wood (Pope-Hennessy 1964a, vol. 2, p. 609; Weston-Lewis 1998, pp. 89–90, cat. 41), and a marble reduction is mentioned in the collection of Antonio Muñoz, together with a lead variant (Faldi 1954, p. 43; see also Pope-Hennessy 1964a, vol. 2, p. 600). A terracotta fragment of Neptune’s torso, now in the Hermitage, comes from the Farsetti collection; a full-size plaster copy of the Neptune and Triton was in the same collection, now in the Academy of Fine Arts, Saint Petersburg: Androsov 1991, p. 52, cat. 13; Wardropper 1998, p. 6, cat. 10.
3. Malgouyres 2013, p. 74.
4. See, respectively, Schütze in Coliva and Schütze 1998, pp. 170–79, cat. 15; Pope-Hennessy 1964a, vol. 2, p. 600; Peter Fusco in Fogelman et al. 2002, pp. 170–76, no. 22. Two bronze casts of the marble Neptune were auctioned in London in the eighteenth century: the first, in the collection of the British sculptor Bird, was sold in April 1731 (Esdaile 1938, p. 139). The second, “a capital bronze of the Neptune, in the villa Negroni in Rome,” was auctioned at Jean Bertels, London, May 26–28, 1783, lot. 81. Another bronze Neptune with a Dolphin was in the sale of the Palazzo San Donato, Florence, March 15, 1880, lot 307; looking at the illustration, this could be the version now at the V&A.
5. Our version was cast in ten sections joined with Roman-type joins, with one part telescoping into another then fixed with pins, suggesting it was part of a larger edition of sectional casts, possibly including the Corsini Neptune. There is minimal chasing and most details appear to be in the wax, with broader surfaces smoothed by filing. The core is plaster and core supports are randomly placed wires that were replaced with screw plugs. R. Stone/TR, April 21, 2010.
6. The trident of the Borghese version is a modern replacement after the original was stolen in 1947 (Faldi 1954, p. 43).
7. Coliva and Schütze 1998, p. 176.
8. Fogelman et al. 2002, p. 172; Malgouyres 2013, p. 74.
9. Delaforce et al. 1998, to which the following discussion in indebted (pp. 807–8).
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