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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)坐着的女神手持鲜花(Flora?)
品名(英)Seated goddess holding flowers (Flora?)
入馆年号1978年,1978.516.4
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 1550 - 公元 1575
创作地区
分类雕塑青铜(Sculpture-Bronze)
尺寸整体 (confirmed): 9 7/8 × 4 5/8 × 3 1/8 英寸 (25.1 × 11.7 × 7.9 厘米)
介绍(中)这个部分覆盖的女性雕像,左腿悬在膝盖上,代表了16世纪上半叶在意大利北部和威尼托流行的小雕像类型。众多的青铜实例要么来源于坐着的尼玛的模型,要么受到其启发,该模型是由曼图阿贡扎加宫廷的雕塑家Pier Jacobo Alari Bonacolsi在近两代人之前创作的,被称为Antico(第00页,图9b)。[1] 从风格上讲,《坐着的女神》与安蒂科的《Nymph》相距甚远,但即使是这部后期的作品也毫无疑问地反映了早期人物独特的姿势、窗帘的布置以及在巨大的打结树干上的位置。与安蒂科小雕像不同的元素仅限于我们的女神抱在腿上的那束花,以及她那头浓密的头发,头上戴着王冠,上面覆盖着一串珍珠。贡扎加阻止了安蒂科雕塑模型的分发,并将他的青铜器数量保持在少数,仅限于宫廷。[2] 在他所有的作品中,只有坐着的尼玛被如此广泛地传播。何时、如何以及谁最初窃取了安蒂科的发明,这可能永远都是个谜。它在后来的青铜器(如女神像)中的频繁反映表明,匿名雕塑家和创始人之间存在着广泛的艺术交流网络,以及准备购买他们作品的大量收藏家

Richard Stone对大都会博物馆青铜的技术检查表明,它是在帕多瓦制造的。[3] 这座小雕像的头部是由该市最重要的青铜雕塑家安德烈亚·里奇奥发明的,并被越来越多的小大师模仿,这进一步强化了它的起源。[4] 帕多瓦的独立艺术铸造厂生产了大量的小雕像。[5] 女神代表了家庭手工业所期望的那种普通产品:人物、面部特征和窗帘的造型是广义的;光滑、加工最少的金属表面缺乏里奇奥及其追随者所制作的青铜器耗时的锤击特性。与里奇奥艺术的精髓相去甚远,女神可能可以追溯到本世纪中叶,也就是大师去世几年后

女神像可能是文艺复兴时期精英收藏家所珍视的稀有、昂贵的古代小雕像的一种更便宜的替代品。例如,威尼斯贵族Marcantonio Michiel在参观帕多瓦的NiccolóLeonico Tomeo和Pietro Bembo的重要藏品时,看到了古典罗马众神的青铜雕像。[6] 在安蒂科和里奇奥的一生中,他们的小雕像与真正的古董享有同样的古典权威,在后来的几十年里,他们被混淆了。这些情况赋予了像《女神》这样的混合模仿作品强大的古典可信度。然而,这件青铜的匿名雕塑家在传达其古代主题方面也表现出了惊人的创造力。他的形象比安蒂科的更正面,唤起了神的庄严姿态;她那巨大而华丽的王冠象征着她是一位女神;她所持的花朵可能是她作为花朵和春天女神Flora的特征

这位名不见经传的雕塑家对清晰、具体和易于理解的强调,背离了安蒂科的诗意模糊和里奇奥的深奥古物主义。相反,我们的女神与对古典图像进行分类的发展冲动相一致,例如,文森佐·卡塔里开创性的神话简编《描绘古代众神的图像》于1556年在威尼斯首次出版。这本书面向普通读者,是用白话意大利语而不是学术拉丁语写成的,即使是最早的未图示版本也很畅销。[7] 像女神这样的现代青铜器,是为收藏市场的负担得起的一端大量生产的,并以一种新颖的口语古典模式设计,这是意料之中的,甚至可能为Cartari和后来的作家普及古代视觉世界提供了信息
-DA

脚注
。参见Allison 1993-94,第183-200页,了解Antico的Nymph的复制历史以及所有已知版本的目录条目
2.见卢西亚诺2011,第7页
3.这尊小雕像是一种黄铜合金,有圆形、对称放置的重线芯销,大部分被打入圆孔的方形铜合金销取代,还有一个看起来像粘土的芯,所有特征都与巴豆的制作大致一致。R.斯通/TR,2011年9月23日
4.乔瓦尼·方杜利·达·克雷马(Giovanni Fonduli da Crema)的《华莱士收藏》(S72)中约1480–90年的《坐着的女人》中这种类型的头的可能起源,他可能是里奇奥的老师,见沃伦2016,第1卷,第190–201页,第48页。关于这种头部类型通过Riccio及其追随者的研讨会传播的信息,请参阅最近的Wengraf 2018,第8-15页,cat。1.
5。见2008年格言,第66–67页
6.Michiel 1888年,第16页:"在M.Leonico Thomeo Phylosopo的家中……Lo Giove piccolo di bronzo che siede,alla guisa del Giove del Bembo,ma minore,èopera anticha";第20页、第22页:"在彼得罗·本博小姐的家里……歌剧《滑稽的歌剧》。"
7。关于Cartari的Imagini的出版历史,请参阅https://bivio.signum.sns.it/html/editions/it/EdInfoCartari_Imagini_Dei.xml.
介绍(英)This partially draped female figure seated with her left leg slung over her knee represents a statuette type popular in northern Italy and the Veneto during the first half of the sixteenth century. The numerous bronze examples either derive from or were inspired by the model for the seated Nymph that had been created almost two generations before by the sculptor to the Gonzaga court in Mantua, Pier Jacopo Alari Bonacolsi, known as Antico (p. 00, fig. 9b).[1] Stylistically, the Seated Goddess is many steps removed from Antico’s Nymph, yet even this late variant unmistakably reflects the earlier figure’s distinctive pose, disposition of drapery, and placement upon a massive, knotted tree trunk. Elements that diverge from Antico’s statuette are limited to the bunch of flowers our goddess clasps on her lap and her lavishly tressed head, crowned with a diadem and draped with strings of pearls. The Gonzaga prevented the distribution of Antico’s sculptural models and kept the number of his bronzes small and exclusive to their courts.[2] Of all his compositions, only the seated Nymph was so widely disseminated. When, how, and who initially purloined Antico’s invention likely always will remain mysterious. Its frequent reflection in later bronzes such as the Goddess speaks to the existence of a broad network of artistic exchange among anonymous sculptors and founders and to a substantial audience of collectors ready to acquire their works.

Richard Stone’s technical examination of The Met bronze suggests that it was made in Padua.[3] This location of origin is reinforced by the statuette’s type of elaborately bejeweled head that was invented by the city’s most important bronze sculptor, Andrea Riccio, and emulated by an expanding circle of minor masters.[4] Padua’s independent art foundries generated legions of statuettes.[5] The Goddess represents the kind of average product expected from a cottage industry: the modeling of the figure, facial features, and drapery is generalized; and the smooth, minimally worked metal surface lacks the time-consuming hammering characteristic of bronzes executed by Riccio and his close followers. Far removed from the essence of Riccio’s art, the Goddess likely dates toward the middle of the century, some years after the master’s death.

The Goddess may have been made as a cheaper alternative to the rare, costly ancient statuettes so prized by elite Renaissance collectors. The Venetian patrician Marcantonio Michiel, for example, recorded seeing seated bronze figures of classical Roman gods while visiting the important collections of Niccolò Leonico Tomeo and Pietro Bembo in Padua.[6] During Antico’s and Riccio’s lifetimes, their statuettes enjoyed the same classical authority as genuine antiquities and in later decades were confused with them. These circumstances endowed a hybrid pastiche like the Goddess with a powerful aura of classical credibility. However, the anonymous sculptor of this bronze also proved to be surprisingly inventive in his efforts to convey his ancient subject. His figure, more frontal than Antico’s, evokes the dignified posture of a deity; her outsized ornate diadem signifies she is a goddess; and the blossoms that she holds are probably attributes identifying her as Flora, goddess of flowers and springtime.

The unknown sculptor’s emphasis on clarity, specificity, and ease of apprehension depart from the often poetic ambiguity of Antico and the recondite antiquarianism of Riccio. Our Goddess aligns instead with the developing impulse toward classifying classical imagery expressed, for example, in Vincenzo Cartari’s groundbreaking mythological compendium, Le imagini con la spositione de i dei de gli antichi (Images Depicting the Gods of the Ancients), first published in 1556 in Venice. Intended for a general audience, the book was written in vernacular Italian rather than scholarly Latin, and even its earliest unillustrated editions were best-sellers.[7] Modest bronzes like the Goddess, which were produced in large numbers for the affordable end of the collecting market and designed in a novel colloquially classical mode, anticipated and may even have informed Cartari and later writers’ popularization of the ancient visual world.
-DA

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. See Allison 1993–94, pp. 183–200, for the history of the replication of Antico’s Nymph and catalogue entries on all known versions.
2. See Luciano 2011, p. 7.
3. The statuette is a brass alloy with round, symmetrically placed, heavy wire core pins, most of which were replaced with copper alloy pins of square section driven into round holes, and a core that appears to have been clay, all features generally consistent with Paduan facture. R. Stone/TR, September 23, 2011.
4. For the possible origins of this type of head in the Seated Woman of ca. 1480–90 in the Wallace Collection (S72) by Giovanni Fonduli da Crema, who may have been Riccio’s teacher, see Warren 2016, vol. 1, pp. 190–201, no. 48. For the transmission of this head type through Riccio and his followers’ workshops, see most recently Wengraf 2018, pp. 8–15, cat. 1.
5. See Motture 2008, pp. 66–67.
6. Michiel 1888, p. 16: “in casa de M. Leonico Thomeo Phylosopho . . . Lo Giove piccolo di bronzo che siede, alla guisa del Giove del Bembo, ma minore, è opera anticha”; pp. 20, 22: “In casa di Misser Pietro Bembo . . . Il Giove picolo dibronzo che siede è opera anticha.”
7. For the publication history of Cartari’s Imagini, see https://bivio.signum.sns.it/html/editions/it/EdInfoCartari_Imagini_Dei.xml.
  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。