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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)坐姿男性身材
品名(英)Seated male figure
入馆年号1966年,66.177
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 1530 - 公元 1565
创作地区
分类雕塑青铜(Sculpture-Bronze)
尺寸整体 figure confirmed: 15 3/4 × 12 3/4 × 19 1/4 英寸 (40 × 32.4 × 48.9 厘米)
介绍(中)从一个未知的日期到20世纪20年代,我们的男性人物居住在帕多瓦南部蓬特卡塞尔的Garzoni别墅。正如1909年出版的一张照片所记录的那样(图107a),青铜以纪念性壁炉的壁炉架为中心,作为方尖碑、古董轮廓和浮雕的新古典主义排列的一部分。这座雕塑安装在一个"自然主义"的底座上,呈岩石状,再加上壁炉架背景的树叶框架,营造出一种质朴的环境

根据乔治·瓦萨里的说法,这座别墅是雅各布·桑索维诺在1540年代和1550年代为威尼斯加佐尼家族设计的。[1] 从Garzoni家族到Michiel、Martinengo和Donàdalle Rose家族,这座别墅在几个世纪内易手。[2] 在1935年的Donàdalle Rose系列拍卖中,青铜不在拍卖品之列,也没有出现在展示壁炉的目录照片中。[3] 然而,在拍卖前的几年里,由于阿道夫·卡莱加里于1926年发表的一篇关于别墅及其宝藏的文章,这尊青铜雕像获得了一定程度的知名度。在这篇文章中,这尊小雕像被复制了两次,可能引起了鉴赏家的注意。[4] 一个未注明日期的法语&;公司照片显示,该人物坐在与1909年照片中相同的岩石底座上(图107b)。除了与这位著名的纽约艺术品经销商确认其位置外,这张照片还表明,这件作品在从Villa Garzoni搬走后不久就被引入了美国市场

无论如何,在某个时候,这座雕塑进入了银行家兼政治家安德鲁·W·梅隆的侄女莎拉·梅隆·斯凯夫的收藏。1965年她去世后,这幅画被卖给了大都会博物馆,并被誉为十六世纪佛罗伦萨艺术家巴托洛梅奥·阿曼纳蒂的重要作品,此前卡莱加里和随后的意大利研究致力于这位来自塞蒂纳诺的托斯卡纳雕塑家。[5] 15世纪40年代初,Ammannati参与了由Sansovino监督的威尼斯项目,也就是说,就在同一年,这位年长的大师设计了蓬特卡塞尔的别墅。[6] 事实上,当这件青铜仍在斯卡夫手中时,它被桑索维诺誉为一件作品[7],尽管它与阿曼纳蒂或他的圈子有着持续的平行联系,但学者们对它的父亲身份仍存在分歧。[8] 此外,布伦瑞克赫尔佐格·安东·乌尔里希博物馆(Herzog Anton Ulrich Museum,Braunschweig)的另一尊小雕像被分配给了佛兰德雕塑家阿德里安·德·弗里斯(Adriaen de Vries),直到最近才在意大利背景下重新展出,这一事实使其归属变得复杂。[9]

可以肯定的是,我们青铜的具象语言来源于佛罗伦萨的灵感,所有这些灵感都可以在16世纪初找到。文献记录了米开朗基罗的漫画和卡西纳战役的预备画,特别是大英博物馆的一项研究。[10] 同样令人信服的是,参考了Baccio Bandinelli的绘画作品集(特别是卢浮宫,INV 92r),以及坐在标志广场海王星喷泉水池边缘的青铜半身像。凭借其肌肉发达、蜿蜒曲折的姿势,我们的男性形象是米开朗基罗作品中文化的雄辩和典范。在一次关于布伦瑞克青铜的讨论中,查尔斯·戴维斯强调了这种米开朗基罗式文化在本世纪上半叶的迅速传播,远远超出了佛罗伦萨。[11] 就这一点而言,Alan Darr已经指出了大都会博物馆的青铜与底特律艺术学院的火星和海王星之间的某些形式上的相似之处,后者的出处是威尼斯的雷佐尼科宫,特别是胡须和头发的画质,以及胸部和侧翼的解剖效果。12尽管很难将这三尊雕像归为同一只手(达尔将它们全部交给了丹妮斯·卡塔尼奥),但确实,细节之间的风格一致性可以追溯到一个共同的生产地点

话虽如此,但在Garzoni别墅建造时,没有任何文件证据表明我们的小雕像在别墅中。考虑到这尊雕像的尺寸很小,这使它与桑索维诺壮观的家具有所不同,我们不能排除它是在晚些时候制作的,也许是委托给一位与别墅项目没有直接联系的艺术家。人物的"开放"姿势,仿佛是在向后移动或远离相反的力的动作中,表明最初它可能是一个更复杂的整体的一部分
-TM

脚注
。瓦萨里1912–15,第9卷,第218–19页。关于别墅的历史,请参阅Puppi 1969
2.《Puppi 1969》,第95页
3.Lorenzetti和Planiscig 1934,图77
4.Callegari 1925–26,第582–83页,第588–90页
5.1975年MMA中的德雷珀,第235页;Callegari 1925–26,第582–83页,第588–90页;加布里埃尔1937年,第90页;Bettini 1940–41,第20页
6.切鲁比尼2011年,第60页
7."Sarah Mellon Scaife系列将由Parke Bernet出售",《纽约时报》,1966年9月25日
8.Krahn在Paolozzi Strozzi和Zikos,2011年,第430–31页,第25页
9.这两个版本的尺寸相似,但铸造质量不同,青铜上的铜绿非常受损(ESDA/of,1967年4月28日)。关于布伦瑞克铸件(Bro 40),见Brinckmann 1919,第2卷,第409页;Jacob 1972,第15-16页,第24号;Berger和Krahn,1994年,第70-74页,第36号
10.关于米开朗基罗的漫画,参见Callegari 1925–26,第590页;大英博物馆的一幅画,(18870502.116),见Berger和Krahn 1994,第73页
11.戴维斯,2011年,第558页
12.直径,49.417,.418;见Darr 2003,第227页。
介绍(英)From an unknown date until the 1920s, our male figure resided in the Villa Garzoni in Pontecasale, south of Padua. As documented in a photograph published in 1909 (fig. 107a), the bronze was centered on the mantel of a monumental fireplace as part of a Neoclassical arrangement of obelisks, antique profiles, and reliefs. The sculpture was mounted on a “naturalistic” base in a rocklike formation that, together with the leafy frame of the mantel backdrop, evoked a rustic environment.

According to Giorgio Vasari, the villa was designed by Jacopo Sansovino for the Venetian Garzoni family in the 1540s and 1550s.[1] The villa changed hands over the centuries, from the Garzoni to the Michiel, Martinengo, and Donà dalle Rose families.[2] In the 1935 sale of the Donà dalle Rose collection, the bronze was not among the pieces on offer, nor did it appear in the catalogue photograph showing the fireplace.[3] However, in the years immediately preceding the auction, the bronze had achieved a degree of fame thanks to an article by Adolfo Callegari about the villa and its treasures, published in 1926, where the statuette was reproduced twice and possibly caught the eye of a connoisseur.[4] An undated French & Company photograph shows the figure seated on the same rocky plinth as in the 1909 image (fig. 107b). Beyond confirming its placement with this well-known New York art dealer, the photo suggests that the piece had been introduced into the American market soon upon its removal from the Villa Garzoni.

In any case, at some point the sculpture entered the collection of Sarah Mellon Scaife, niece of the banker and politician Andrew W. Mellon. Following her death in 1965, it was sold to The Met and lauded as an important creation by a sixteenth-century Florentine artist, probably Bartolomeo Ammannati, following Callegari and subsequent Italian studies dedicated to the Tuscan sculptor from Settignano.[5] Ammannati had worked on Venetian projects overseen by Sansovino in the early 1540s, which is to say in the same years that the elder master designed the villa in Pontecasale.[6] In fact, while the bronze was still in Scaife’s possession, it was celebrated as a work by Sansovino,[7] and despite its continued parallel association with Ammannati or his circle, scholars are still divided regarding its paternity.[8] Moreover, its attribution is complicated by the fact that another version of the statuette in the Herzog Anton Ulrich Museum, Braunschweig, had been assigned to the Flemish sculptor Adriaen de Vries and only recently resituated in an Italian context.[9]

What is certain is that the figurative language that informs our bronze derives from Florentine inspirations, all of which can be found in the early sixteenth century. The literature notes correspondences to Michelangelo’s cartoon and preparatory drawings for the Battle of Cascina, in particular a study in the British Museum.[10] Just as convincing are references to the corpus of drawings by Baccio Bandinelli (see, in particular, Louvre, INV 92r) and to the bronze satyrs seated on the rim of the basin of the Fountain of Neptune in Piazza della Signoria. With its muscular and serpentine pose, our male figure is an eloquent and exemplary synthesis of the culture emanating from Michelangelo’s work. In a discussion of the Braunschweig bronze and a suggested attribution to Alessandro Vittoria, Charles Davis underlined the rapid dissemination of this Michelangelesque culture far beyond Florence in the first half of the century.[11] For that matter, Alan Darr had already pointed to certain formal affinities between The Met bronze and a Mars and Neptune at the Detroit Institute of Arts whose provenance is the Palazzo Rezzonico in Venice, in particular the pictorial quality of the beard and hair and the anatomical rendering of the chest and flanks.12 Although it is difficult to attribute the three statues to the same hand (Darr gave them all to Danese Cattaneo), it is true nonetheless that the stylistic concordance among details might be traced to a common production locale.

All that being said, no documentary evidence places our statuette in the Villa Garzoni at the time of its construction. Given the figure’s small size—which distinguishes it from Sansovino’s imposing furnishings—we cannot exclude the possibility that it was made at a later date, perhaps as a commission to an artist not directly linked to the villa project. The “open” pose of the figure, as if caught in the act of moving backward or away from an opposing force, suggests that originally it could have been part of a more complex ensemble.
-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. Vasari 1912–15, vol. 9, pp. 218–19. For the history of the villa, see Puppi 1969.
2. Puppi 1969, p. 95.
3. Lorenzetti and Planiscig 1934, fig. 77.
4. Callegari 1925–26, pp. 582–83, 588–90.
5. Draper in MMA 1975, p. 235; Callegari 1925–26, pp. 582–83, 588–90; Gabrielli 1937, p. 90; Bettini 1940–41, p. 20.
6. Cherubini 2011, p. 60.
7. “Sarah Mellon Scaife Collection Will Be Sold by Parke-Bernet,” The New York Times, September 25, 1966.
8. Krahn in Paolozzi Strozzi and Zikos 2011, pp. 430–31 n. 25.
9. The two versions are of similar dimensions, but differ in the quality of casting, and the patina on our bronze is very damaged (ESDA/OF, April 28, 1967). For the Braunschweig cast (Bro 40), see Brinckmann 1919, vol. 2, p. 409; Jacob 1972, pp. 15–16, no. 24; Berger and Krahn 1994, pp. 70–74, no. 36.
10. For Michelangelo’s cartoon, see Callegari 1925–26, p. 590; for a drawing in the British Museum, (1887,0502.116), see Berger and Krahn 1994, p. 73.
11. Davis 2011, p. 558.
12. DIA, 49.417, .418; see Darr 2003, p. 227.
  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。