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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)沉睡的丘比特
品名(英)Sleeping Cupid
入馆年号1951年,51.175
策展部门欧洲雕塑和装饰艺术European Sculpture and Decorative Arts
创作者
创作年份公元 1500 - 公元 1515
创作地区
分类雕塑青铜(Sculpture-Bronze)
尺寸整体 (confirmed): 8 7/8 × 7 3/4 × 7 1/2 英寸 (22.5 × 19.7 × 19.1 厘米)
介绍(中)丘比特靠在树桩上,身体被狮子皮垫着,跨坐在一个装饰着树叶的半球形球体上。人影睡着了,沉重的头靠在右臂上,闭上的眼睑散发出平静的表情。尽管如此,一种警觉掩盖了丘比特平静的姿态。他的背部挺直,左手抓住一个贝壳。他戴上了箭袋,翅膀已经准备好了。镀金装饰了作品的几个元素:树叶、未解开的蝴蝶结、树桩、箭袋和外壳

沉睡的丘比特,一个顽皮的渴望和平和解除武装的神,自古以来就是一个著名的主题,在文艺复兴时期重新流行起来。[1] 米开朗基罗于1490年代末创作的现已失传的大理石《沉睡的丘比特》是人们重新燃起兴趣的催化剂之一。[2] 这件大理石以其与古人的媲美甚至超越而闻名,到1502年,它进入了伊莎贝拉·德埃斯特的收藏,并与Praxiteles的主题版本一起展出。[3] 与现在的青铜一样,米开朗基罗的大理石及其许多衍生物展示了丘比特在狮子皮上休息的情景,指的是他与赫拉克勒斯的比赛

在几乎所有主题的例子中,无论是在雕塑还是绘画中,丘比特都是仰卧或侧卧的。[4] 直立休息的睡眠丘比特是极不寻常的,很可能是与青铜的功能和位置有关。这种姿势最接近的先例是意大利北部著名的睡丘比特勋章,该勋章广为流传,至少有60份(图54a)。[5] 奖牌上的人物披在胸前,胸前有他的颤抖

目前还不知道其他版本的青铜。自1932年Leo Planiscig出版以来,《沉睡的丘比特》被理所当然地认为是威尼斯人的起源。Planiscig将这件当时在维也纳布鲁诺·科恩收藏的作品追溯到四世纪末,并提出了它与卢浮宫一位年轻的青铜巴克斯跨骑在奖牌上的相似之处。[6] Hans Weihrauch确认了大约1500年的日期。Wendy Stedman Sheard将年代追溯到16世纪初的几十年,并将这件作品与安东尼奥·隆巴多的圈子联系起来,因为她将孩子的风格化卷发与这位艺术家的青铜器进行了比较。1500年左右,包括维纳斯或基督之子在内的睡像开始在威尼斯频繁出现;这个数字很适合那种环境。[7]

正如Planiscig首次观察到的那样,我们的丘比特很可能是喷泉装置的一部分。半球中空下侧的可见通道表明,有一股水流从外壳中流出,这表明这项工作是为了在桌面上布置,它位于一个收集水的盆上。最近的技术分析证实了Planiscig关于青铜功能的基本论点,同时也提供了新的见解。[8] 证据表明,水至少从两个不同的地方流出:外壳和丘比特的生殖器。两者都含有微小的铸入管,很可能是由铜组成的。此外,树桩顶部有一个大开口和铅焊料痕迹,可能与一个现已失传的青铜元素相连,可能是一棵树,其中可能包括另一股(或几股)水柱

因此,喷泉将呈现出一个睡觉、撒尿的丘比特的不同寻常的图像,这是一个粗糙的视觉笑话,引用并颠覆了睡觉的丘比特和普托密克坦人的传统表现。[9] 皇家收藏馆的一幅17世纪的绘画记录了四尊丘比特雕塑:三尊斜倚着(至少有一尊可能是关于逝去的米开朗基罗的记录),一尊坐在岩石上,手放在生殖器上(图54b)。[10] 最后一个丘比特是警觉的,而不是睡觉,但在精神和姿势上暗示了现在的青铜,它的自负几乎没有可比性。多架纵横交错的喷气式飞机肯定会提供一个有趣的场面,削弱睡眠与和平、裁军甚至死亡的传统联系。蔓延的葡萄藤甚至可能暗示着酒神的过度,生殖器喷出的级联射流表明即使在睡眠中酒精也有抑制作用

青铜的重量表明,这件作品可能不是为桌面创作的,而是一个大型独立喷泉的一部分,可能与扬·范·艾克(Jan van Eyck)的《喷泉圣母》(Madonna at The fountain)(1439)[11]中的喷泉相似,是为威尼斯宫殿的庭院设计的。半球体下边缘周围的水平划线和铅焊料痕迹指向其最初连接到另一个半球体的方向。《沉睡的丘比特》与文艺复兴时期喷泉中的其他青铜作品没有什么不同,包括维罗基奥的《Putto with a Dolphin》,这是卡雷吉美第奇别墅的喷泉。[12] 尽管我们的青铜作品展示了在蜡像中完成的精细细节,尤其是狮子皮,但翅膀的轮廓远没有那么精确,这表明喷泉布置的预定地点或其他元素会遮挡他们的视线

这件青铜在1931年拍卖斯特罗加诺夫收藏的物品之前的所有权历史尚不清楚。[13] 斯特罗加诺夫王朝是俄罗斯最富有、最强大的王朝之一,他们从世界各地收集了大量的绘画、雕塑和装饰艺术,其中大部分现在都在埃尔米塔什。沉睡的丘比特可能是在十八世纪和十九世纪家族成员前往意大利的任何一次收集旅行中获得的
-JF

脚注
。我感谢Rebecca Arnheim对青铜的研究,这有助于撰写本条目。为了睡眠
介绍(英)Leaning against the stump of a tree, his body cushioned by a lionskin, Cupid sits astride a hemispheric orb decorated with foliage. The figure is asleep, and his heavy head rests on his right arm, his closed eyelids dotting a peaceful mien. Still, an alertness belies Cupid’s restful pose. His back is erect, and his left hand grasps a shell. He wears his quiver, and his wings appear at the ready. Gilding adorns several elements of the composition: the leaves, the undone bow, the tree stump, the quiver, and the shell.

The Sleeping Cupid, the mischievous god of desire at peace and disarmed, was a well-known subject since antiquity that gained renewed popularity in the Renaissance.[1] One catalyst for the reinvigorated interest was Michelangelo’s now-lost marble Sleeping Cupid, begun in the late 1490s.[2] Acclaimed for having matched and even surpassed the ancients, the marble entered the collection of Isabella d’Este by 1502 where it was shown alongside a version of the subject ascribed to Praxiteles.[3] Like the present bronze, Michelangelo’s marble and many of its derivatives presented Cupid resting on a lionskin, referencing his competition with Hercules.

In nearly all examples of the theme, in sculpture or painting, Cupid is shown lying on his back or side.[4] The Sleeping Cupid resting upright is extremely unusual, and was likely conceived in relation to the bronze’s function and placement. The nearest precedent for the pose is a well-known northern Italian medal of the Sleeping Cupid that circulated widely and exists in at least sixty copies (fig. 54a).[5] The medal shows the figure draped against a chest containing his quivers.

No other versions of the present bronze are known. Since its publication by Leo Planiscig in 1932, the Sleeping Cupid has rightfully been considered Venetian in origin. Planiscig dated the work, then in the Bruno Kern collection in Vienna, to the end of the quattrocento and proposed an affinity between it and a bronze young Bacchus astride a medal in the Louvre.[6] Hans Weihrauch confirmed a date of around 1500. Wendy Stedman Sheard pushed the dating into the early decades of the sixteenth century and linked the work to the circle of Antonio Lombardo by virtue of comparing the child’s stylized curls to bronzes associated with that artist. Images of sleeping figures, including those of Venus or the Christ Child, began appearing with great frequency in Venice around 1500; this figure fits well within that milieu.[7]

Our Cupid likely formed part of a fountain apparatus, as first observed by Planiscig. Visible channels in the hemisphere’s hollow underside indicate that a stream flowed from the shell, suggesting that the work was meant for a tabletop arrangement where it surmounted a basin that collected the water. Recent technical analysis confirms Planiscig’s basic thesis as to the bronze’s function, while also providing new insights.[8] Evidence points to water emanating from at least two separate locations: the shell and Cupid’s genitals. Both contain tiny cast-in tubes, likely composed of copper. Additionally, the tree stump, which has a large opening at the top and traces of lead solder, possibly connected to a now-lost bronze element, perhaps a tree, that may have included another jet (or jets) of water.

Thus the fountain would have presented an unusual iconography of a sleeping, peeing Cupid, a crude visual joke that references and subverts traditional representations of the Sleeping Cupid and the putto mictans.[9] A seventeenth-century drawing in the Royal Collection records four Cupid sculptures: three recline (at least one likely a record of the lost Michelangelo) and one sits atop a rocky formation, hand at his genitals (fig. 54b).[10] This last Cupid is alert rather than sleeping, but suggests in spirit and pose the present bronze, whose conceit has few, if any, comparanda. The multiple, crisscrossing jets would surely have provided an amusing spectacle, undercutting traditional associations of sleep with peace, disarmament, or even death. The creeping vines may even allude to Dionysian excess, and the cascading jet issuing from the genitals a sign of alcohol’s disinhibiting effect even in slumber.

The weight of the bronze indicates that, rather than having been created for a tabletop, the work was probably part of a large freestanding fountain—perhaps one similar to that seen in Jan van Eyck’s Madonna at the Fountain (1439)[11]—and intended for the courtyard of a Venetian palazzo. Horizontal scribe lines and traces of lead solder around the lower edge of the half sphere point toward its being originally joined to another half sphere. The Sleeping Cupid would not be unlike other bronzes that comprised elements in Renaissance fountains, including Verrocchio’s Putto with a Dolphin for a fountain at the Villa Medici in Careggi.[12] Though our bronze exhibits fine detail work executed in the wax, particularly the lion pelt, the wings are far less precisely delineated, suggesting that the intended site or other elements of the fountain arrangement would have obstructed their view.

The bronze’s ownership history before it appeared in the 1931 auction of objects from the Stroganov collection is unknown.[13] The Stroganovs, one of the richest and most powerful Russian dynasties, amassed an opulent collection of paintings, sculpture, and decorative art from around the globe, the bulk of which are today in the Hermitage. The Sleeping Cupid may have been acquired during any one of the family members’ collecting trips to Italy throughout the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
-JF

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. I am grateful to Rebecca Arnheim for her research on the bronze, which has aided in the writing of this entry. For the Sleeping Cupid, see Campbell 2004, pp. 87–113.
2. See Bambach 2017, pp. 62, 321 n. 186, with previous references.
3. See Fusco and Corti 2006, pp. 41–52.
4. See, for example, the ancient Greek Eros Sleeping, MMA, 43.11.4. For examples in painting, see Tintoretto’s Vulcan Surprising Venus and Mars, ca. 1555, Alte Pinakothek, Munich (9257), which likely records Michelangelo’s lost sculpture. The subject continued to enjoy popularity in the seventeenth century; see Caravaggio’s Sleeping Cupid, 1608, Palazzo Pitti, Florence (Pal. 1912 no. 183).
5. The medal was formerly attributed to a Pseudo Francesco Antonio da Brescia and identified in Lewis 2008, pp. 130–31, as the Vicentine Master.
6. Planiscig 1932a, p. 745.
7. Meiss 1966.
8. I am grateful to Linda Borsch for her close study of the bronze (ESDA/OF, March 21, 2019) and the conclusions she shared with me.
9. On the type, see Simons 2009 and Coonin 2013.
10. For the drawing, see Fusco and Corti 2006, pp. 50–52.
11. Koninklijk Museum voor Schone Kunsten, Antwerp, 411.
12. Museo di Palazzo Vecchio, Florence; see Butterfield 1997, p. 127.
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