微信公众号 
图码生活

每天发布有五花八门的文章,各种有趣的知识等,期待您的订阅与参与
搜索结果最多仅显示 10 条随机数据
结果缓存两分钟
如需更多更快搜索结果请访问小程序
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)
读取中
读取中
读取中
品名(中)天文学
品名(英)Astronomy
入馆年号1964年,64.101.1450
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 1699
创作地区
分类雕塑青铜(Sculpture-Bronze)
尺寸15 3/4 英寸 × 4 3/4 英寸 × 6 英寸 (40 × 12.1 × 15.2 厘米)
介绍(中)《天文学》于1962年出版,与青铜建筑一起插图,均由欧文·昂特迈尔收藏,均归于詹博洛尼亚。在Untermyer位于第五大道960号的住所的照片中,天文学的可爱扭曲剪影与建筑的对立面对话,因为他们将陈铜器展示放在长桌上,尽管周围的室内装饰不断变化,但该装置保持不变。[1]与昂特迈尔的许多收购一样,天文学的早期出处是未知的。它于1964年进入大都会。1977年,詹姆斯·大卫·德雷珀(James David Draper)将其列为詹博洛尼亚发明的"许多复制品"之一,将其插入学者追溯到今天在维也纳签名的铸件的谱系中(图126a)。

艺术史博物馆中的小雕像,除了在背上刻有GIO BOLONGE的表带外,还拥有杰出的出处:从1750年Inventar der Schatzkammer到1891年进入维也纳博物馆的那一年,它不断出现在皇家收藏的记录中。除此之外,詹博洛尼亚发明的一个变体,在我们的天文学中被重新出现,记录在1609年的萨尔维亚蒂收藏清单中,并归因于安东尼奥·苏西尼。1612年,彼得罗·塔卡(Pietro Tacca)复制了这个铸件,以换取科西莫二世送给威尔士亲王亨利的青铜器外交礼物。[2]此外,在十七世纪初,马库斯·扎赫(Markus Zäch)在他的财产中计算了同一主题的一个版本,这可能是他的父亲塞巴斯蒂安在1590年和1592年在佛罗伦萨逗留期间获得的。[3]

因此,在评估维也纳的青铜器及其组成类型figura serpentinata时,大多数学者得出结论,它是在Giambologna职业生涯的早期阶段生产的,即1570年代中期,当时他执行了类似的作品。其中包括1573年在维奇奥宫铸造的弗朗切斯科一世工作室的阿波罗,以及1575年左右在波波里花园中实现的Grotticella的维纳斯。然而,最近帕特里夏·温格拉夫(Patricia Wengraf)和克劳迪娅·克里扎-格施(Claudia Kryza-Gersch)将希尔收藏中的一尊小雕像确定为可能早于维也纳青铜器的相同构图的亲笔签名示例。希尔失蜡铸件的特点是有限的冷作,异常新鲜的细节建模(例如,精致的coiffure的处理)和出色的表面清晰度,与Giambologna的跨步火星(昆汀基金会收藏)等作品相呼应,这是他在1570年代中期之前甚至可能在1560年代后期创作的模型[4]。

我们的天文学再现了希尔原型的几个细节——起伏的头发辫子;织物的褶皱,其中一条落在支撑物上,在人物的脚下 - 但将原件简化为一个不那么充满活力的整体。X光片显示一个厚壁石膏,纵向芯线穿过腿部,进入躯干和头部,这是Giambologna及其追随者的非典型特征。[5]此外,与人物整体铸造的模制底座与大师的亲笔签名作品不一致。

Kryza-Gersch阐明了构图的图像识别。早期的清单记录了类似人物的不同名称,从奥地利记录中的"Venere Urania"到更通用的萨尔维亚蒂青铜器"femmina della palla [ball]",以及塔卡在与美第奇礼物相关的文件中的衍生。最近的学者选择了"天文学",从而将Zäch清单中最早提及这种成分类型的"占星术"现代化。[6]
-TM

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. 综合格斗档案,欧文·昂特迈尔论文。对于Untermyer建筑,可能是十九世纪的演员,请参阅猫。答<64.101.1449>.
2. 沃森和艾弗里 1973,第 502 页。
3. Zikos 2006a,第 24–25 页。
4. 莱特-贾斯珀和温格拉夫 2004,第 130 页;温格拉夫在塞佩尔2006年,第240页,猫。17;Kryza-Gersch in Wengraf 2014, pp. 108, 116 n. 11.
5. R. Stone/TR,2011 年 3 月 2 日。
6. Kryza-Gersch in Wengraf 2014, pp. 108, 116 n. 11.
介绍(英)The Astronomy was published in 1962 and illustrated alongside a bronze Architecture, both in the collection of Irwin Untermyer and both attributed to Giambologna. In photographs of Untermyer’s residence at 960 Fifth Avenue, the lovely twisting silhouette of the Astronomy dialogues with the contrapposto of the Architecture as they frame a display of bronzes placed on a long table, an installation that remained unaltered in spite of the changing interior decoration around them.[1] As is the case with many of Untermyer’s acquisitions, the Astronomy’s earlier provenance is unknown. It entered The Met in 1964. In 1977, James David Draper placed it among the “many replicas” of an invention by Giambologna, inserting it into a lineage that the scholar traced back to the signed cast today in Vienna (fig. 126a).

The statuette in the Kunsthistorisches Museum, in addition to having GIO BOLONGE inscribed on the strap running down its back, boasts an illustrious provenance: it appears continuously in the records of the imperial collection from the 1750 Inventar der Schatzkammer through 1891, the year it entered the Vienna museum. Beyond that, a variant of Giambologna’s invention, reprised in our Astronomy, is recorded in the 1609 inventory of the Salviati collection with an attribution to Antonio Susini. It was this cast that Pietro Tacca copied for a diplomatic gift of bronzes sent by Cosimo II to Henry, prince of Wales, in 1612.[2] Additionally, at the beginning of the seventeenth century, Markus Zäch counted among his possessions a version of the same subject, which was probably acquired by his father Sebastian during his stays in Florence in 1590 and 1592.[3]

Thus, when evaluating the bronze in Vienna and its compositional type, the figura serpentinata, most scholars have concluded that it was produced in an early phase of Giambologna’s career, during the mid-1570s, when he executed similar works. These include the Apollo for Francesco I’s studiolo in the Palazzo Vecchio, cast in 1573, and the Venus of the Grotticella in the Boboli Gardens, realized around 1575. However, recently Patricia Wengraf and Claudia Kryza-Gersch have identified a statuette in the Hill collection as an autograph example of the same composition that may predate the Vienna bronze. Characterized by limited cold work, unusually fresh modeling of details (for example, the treatment of the refined coiffure), and superb surface definition, the Hill lost-wax cast is consonant with works such as Giambologna’s striding Mars (Quentin Foundation Collection), the model for which he created before the mid-1570s, perhaps even in the late 1560s.[4]

Our Astronomy reproduces several details of the Hill prototype—the undulating braids of hair; the folds of fabric, a strip of which falls onto the support, under the figure’s feet—but simplifies the original into a much less vibrant whole. Radiographs reveal a thick-walled cast with longitudinal core wires running up through the legs and into the torso and head, features atypical of Giambologna and his followers.[5] Moreover, the molded base, cast integrally with the figure, is inconsistent with the master’s autograph works.

Kryza-Gersch has shed light on the iconographic identification of the composition. Early inventories record different names for analogous figures, ranging from “Venere Urania” in the Austrian records to the more generic “femmina della palla [ball]” for the Salviati bronze and its derivations by Tacca in the documents related to the Medici gift. More recent scholars have opted for “Astronomy,” thus modernizing the earliest reference to this compositional type as “Astrology” in the Zäch inventory.[6]
-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. MMA Archives, Irwin Untermyer Papers. For the Untermyer Architecture, likely a nineteenth-century cast, see cat. A<64.101.1449>.
2. Watson and Avery 1973, p. 502.
3. Zikos 2006a, pp. 24–25.
4. Leithe-Jasper and Wengraf 2004, p. 130; Wengraf in Seipel 2006, p. 240, cat. 17; Kryza-Gersch in Wengraf 2014, pp. 108, 116 n. 11.
5. R. Stone/TR, March 2, 2011.
6. Kryza-Gersch in Wengraf 2014, pp. 108, 116 n. 11.
  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。