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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)水星
品名(英)Mercury
入馆年号1974年,1974.28.145
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 1799
创作地区
分类雕塑青铜(Sculpture-Bronze)
尺寸整体 (confirmed, width and depth subjective depending on rotation): 13 1/4 × 4 3/8 × 6 3/4 英寸 (33.7 × 11.1 × 17.1 厘米)
介绍(中)墨丘利小雕像于1974年作为Irwin Untermyer遗赠的一部分进入大都会艺术博物馆,Irwin Untemyer于1969年以7875美元的高价从Michael Hall Fine Arts手中获得了这尊小雕像。这一价格是合理的,因为在出售时,青铜属于佛兰德雕塑家阿德里安·德·弗里斯。[1] 这一归因承认了对詹布洛涅原型的依赖,尽管在某些特殊元素上有所改变,但在整体构图中忠实地引用了詹布洛涅的原型,例如年轻的神所站的圆胖的脸。德弗里斯是16世纪下半叶一位外国艺术家在意大利学徒时期发现的青铜,与当时的佛罗伦萨经典相比,它具有"最新"但又古怪的性格,倾向于奢侈的许可证

博物馆馆长似乎很快就有了第二个想法,因为在水星被收购后的几年里,没有将其列入展示詹布洛涅之后作品的出版物或展览中,例如《萨宾的劫持》和《天文学》(cats.129126)。《水星》是昆史博物馆中詹布洛涅(Giambologna)的微缩版,有着杰出的出处(可能是1564年至1565年左右为马克西米利安二世(Maximilian II)制作的);卡波迪蒙特号(1575-78年被派往奥塔维奥·法尔内塞);以及德累斯顿的Grünes Gewölbe(1587年被派往克里斯蒂安一世)。[2] 我们的小雕像分享了他们阿拉伯式的姿势、纤细的解剖结构和头盔凸起边缘等细节。它的显著特征是"雕刻"底座,这实际上是对詹博洛格纳自己发明的变体上出现的支撑元件的误读,这是一个安装在1580年罗马美第奇别墅花园中的喷泉雕像(今天在巴杰罗)。[3] 这座雕塑底部的孩子的头代表了一个风神,可能是西风(根据别墅1588年的库存,当时被理解为风神)。它张开的嘴和鼓起的脸颊,吹出一股以风格化的上升轴呈现的气流,推动着天体信使的向上运动。这种叙事功能在我们的水星中被完全废除了:没有空气柱,底座就变成了装饰性的怪诞。[4] 除此之外,头盔上雕刻粗糙的总状花序,这是另一个不协调的地方,使我们的青铜被排除在大量复制品和衍生品之外,这些复制品和派生品可以追溯到詹博洛娜工作室的直接参与

这些以及与劣质选角相关的类似奇怪之处表明《Untermeyer Mercury》的日期较晚,它可以被解读为詹博洛涅风格的各种灵感的复制品。[5] 贝姆伯格基金会中有一件具有这种复合特性的青铜,但不能归为同一只手。[6]
-TM

脚注
。迈克尔·霍尔美术信笺发票,1969年2月26日,ESDA/OF
2.KHM,KK 5898;卡波迪蒙特,上午10748;Grünes Gewölbe,第九卷第94页;参见Paolozzi Strozzi和Zikos 2006,第259页,目录。53(Antje Scherner),261–63,猫。54(曼弗雷德·莱特·贾斯珀),264–65,猫。55(费尔南达·卡波比安科)
3同上,第268–69页,目录。57(玛丽亚·格拉齐亚·瓦卡里)
4.空气柱确实出现在其他副本上;参见卢浮宫,MR 3271
5.射线照片显示,核心支撑在一个由金属丝组成的内部电枢上,金属丝从大部分中空的腿部延伸到敞开的胸部和头部,并穿过胸部延伸到实心手臂,这一技术特征与典型的佛罗伦萨做法不同。R.斯通/TR,2011年
6.克罗斯,1996年,第109–11页。
介绍(英)The statuette of Mercury entered The Met in 1974 as part of the bequest of Irwin Untermyer, who had acquired it from Michael Hall Fine Arts in 1969 for the considerable sum of $7,875. The price was justified by the fact that, at the time of sale, the bronze was attributed to the Flemish sculptor Adriaen de Vries.[1] This attribution acknowledged a dependence on Giambologna’s prototype, faithfully cited in the overall composition though altered in certain idiosyncratic elements, for example the chubby face on which the youthful deity is poised. The attribution to de Vries, which situated the bronze in the second half of the sixteenth century and in the Italian apprenticeship of a foreign artist, accounted for its “up-to-date” but nonetheless eccentric character with a proclivity for extravagant license compared to the Florentine canon of the time.

Museum curators seem to very soon have had second thoughts, for in the years following its acquisition, the Mercury was not included in publications or exhibitions that showcased works after Giambologna no less serial—for instance, the Abduction of a Sabine and the Astronomy (cats. 129, 126). The Mercury is a miniature version of Giambologna exemplars with illustrious provenances in the Kunsthistorisches Museum (perhaps made for Maximilian II around 1564–65); the Capodimonte (sent to Ottavio Farnese in 1575–78); and the Grünes Gewölbe, Dresden (sent to Christian I in 1587).[2] Our statuette shares their arabesque pose, slim anatomy, and details such as the convex brim of the helmet. Its distinguishing feature is the “sculpted” base, which is in fact a misreading of the support element that appears on Giambologna’s own variant of his invention, a Mercury mounted as a fountain figure and installed in the gardens of the Villa Medici in Rome in 1580 (today in the Bargello).[3] The child’s head at the base of this sculpture represents a wind god, probably Zephyr (and was understood as such at the time per the villa’s 1588 inventory). With its wide-open mouth and puffed-out cheeks, it blows a stream of air—rendered in stylized ascending shafts—that propel the upward movement of the celestial messenger. This narrative function is completely abolished in our Mercury: absent the column of air, the base is reduced to a decorative grotesquerie.[4] Add to this the clumsily incised racemes on the helmet, another incongruity that sets our bronze outside the copious sequence of replicas and derivations that can be traced to the direct involvement of Giambologna’s workshop.

These and similar oddities associated with an inferior casting suggest a later date for the Untermeyer Mercury, which can be read as a pastiche of various Giambolognesque inspirations.[5] A bronze that shares this composite peculiarity is in the Fondation Bemberg, but cannot be assigned to the same hand.[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. Invoice on Michael Hall Fine Arts letterhead, February 26, 1969, ESDA/OF.
2. KHM, KK 5898; Capodimonte, AM 10748; Grünes Gewölbe, N. IX 94; see Paolozzi Strozzi and Zikos 2006, pp. 259, cat. 53 (Antje Scherner), 261–63, cat. 54 (Manfred Leithe-Jasper), 264–65, cat. 55 (Fernanda Capobianco).
3. Ibid., pp. 268–69, cat. 57 (Maria Grazia Vaccari).
4. The column of air does appear on other copies; see Louvre, MR 3271.
5. Radiographs reveal that the core was supported on an internal armature of wires that extend from the largely hollow legs into the open chest and head and across the chest into the solid arms, a technical feature that differs from typical Florentine practice. R. Stone/TR, 2011.
6. Cros 1996, pp. 109–11.
  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。