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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)坐在沙蒂尔身边,手里拿着墨水瓶和烛台
品名(英)Seated satyr with an inkwell and a candlestick
入馆年号1982年,1982.60.92
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 1525 - 公元 1545
创作地区
分类雕塑青铜(Sculpture-Bronze)
尺寸整体 (confirmed:) 10 × 6 1/4 × 6 1/2 英寸 (25.4 × 15.9 × 16.5 厘米)
介绍(中)这两个萨提尔是越来越多的青铜器的一部分,既有墨水井,也有烛台,曾经与里奇奥或他的工作室联系在一起,但现在被认为是艺术家影响的更遥远的回声。虽然有三件坐着的萨提尔被分配给里奇奥作为签名作品,但有二十多件相关的青铜器来自1532年大师去世后的不同作坊,有时是几年、几十年甚至几个世纪后。[1] 这些类型首先被认为是里奇奥和威廉·冯·博德的工作室,其次是利奥·普莱尼西格,他出版了《大都会博物馆青铜》(A),然后被收录在弗雷收藏中。1970年,John Pope Hennessy指出了这些坐着的satyr的三个不同的分组,Anthony Radcliffe在1992年进一步描述了这些分组,Alison Luchs和Dylan Smith在2007年对此进行了深入讨论。[2]最近,Jeremy Warren提供了24个例子的详细目录,他将其分为四种类型。[3]

这两件青铜器都是1982年通过林斯基遗赠进入博物馆的。第一个(A)属于沃伦类型学的"c"组:坐着的萨蒂尔相对较低地放在地上,双腿交叉,右手拿着贝壳,左手拿着烛台。在我们的青铜中,支架已经断裂,取而代之的似乎是后来制作的钱袋。这只萨提尔是一只精灵,左腿优雅地交叉在右腿上,整体质量很高,后肢和头部都有一簇簇头发,用蜡精心塑造。青铜曾经属于匈牙利重要的收藏家Marczibányi家族。最早记录在Antal Marczibányi(1793-1872)的收藏中,它很可能是四十八件意大利青铜器之一,大部分是五分硬币,由他的父亲Imre(1824年)所有,据说来自Canova的学生István Ferenczy。[4]

在他的林斯基收藏目录中,詹姆斯·大卫·德雷珀认为它是"里奇奥工作室的卓越产品",并将其与弗里克的卡波迪瓦茨卡家族的坐着的萨提尔相提并论。[5] 相反,正如Luchs和Smith所建议的那样,这项工作可能比16世纪晚得多。[6] 它在外观上最接近卢浮宫的青铜,保留了其最初的蜡烛插座,最近由菲利普·马尔古伊尔讨论过。[7] 据他说,卢浮宫铸造的"鲁本斯多于里奇奥"的脸及其制作表明,这对可能属于17世纪末或18世纪初,甚至可能更晚

第二个林斯基坐式色狼(B)以前是罗马尼亚的尼古拉斯王子收藏的,属于沃伦的"d"组:一个长耳朵、坐在树桩上、双腿不交叉的人物。大都会博物馆的头上有一对螺旋状的角,右手拿着一个装有墨水的小容器(装饰着一张怪诞的脸),左手拿着一支蜡烛的插座。他的眼睛睁得大大的,牙齿做鬼脸。色狼坐在一个中空的树桩上,上面有用来装羽毛的槽。德雷珀认为这是一个潜在的威尼斯起源,他指出"工具的松懈"在"进入这只色狼侧翼的粘稠通道"中表现得很明显;这件青铜在1982.8年的收购过程中被认为是Severo da Ravenna的。根据Cyril Humphris在Jack和Belle Linsky购买时的一份说明,它在两个修复部位都有铅填充物:烛台、颈部底部和胸部左上角。[9]

沃伦在华莱士收藏馆的相关演员名单中列出了卢浮宫和维也纳布鲁诺·科恩收藏馆的类似作品,以及巴尔的摩沃尔特斯艺术博物馆的类似作品。[10] 除此之外,丹尼尔·卡茨画廊最近还增加了一个以前不为人知的演员阵容,并将其归因于德西德里奥·达·费伦泽(图17a)。卡茨和林斯基青铜器有一个共同的特点,一只小老鼠被扔在树桩上(位置不同),这表明这对是同一个作坊的产物。这些是否是与Desiderio da Firenze(被认为是Riccio在帕多瓦的继任者)有关联的商店的产品,仍然是一个合理的假设
-JF

脚注
。关于这三件签名作品,现藏于艺术史博物馆(KK 5539)、帕多瓦奇维奇博物馆(197)和卢浮宫(TH 89),请分别参阅Claudia Kryza Gersch、Franca Pellegrini和Philippe Malgouyres在Allen 2008a的作品,第158–73页,猫。10–12。
2。史密斯收藏2007,第20-26页
3.沃伦2016,第1卷,第304–5页
4.恩茨1954–55
5.林斯基1984年,第144页
6.史密斯收藏2007,第24页,第26页,第16页:"林斯基收藏中的一只优秀的色狼……可能始于1600年左右或更晚,基于对头发的蓬松处理、不那么怪诞的脸和更感性的解剖结构。"
7。《马尔古伊尔2020》,第221页
8.林斯基1984年,第145页;1982年ESDA/OF评估清单
9.ESDA/OF
10.沃伦2016,第1卷,第305页。
介绍(英)These two satyrs are part of the growing corpus of bronzes, outfitted as both inkwells and candlesticks, once associated with Riccio or his workshop but now considered to be more distant echoes of the artist’s influence. While there are three seated satyrs assigned to Riccio as autograph works, there are more than two dozen related bronzes that came out of different workshops operating at a remove from the master’s death in 1532—sometimes years, decades, even centuries later.[1] These types were first attributed to Riccio and his workshop by Wilhelm von Bode, followed by Leo Planiscig, who published The Met bronze (A) then in the Frey collection. In 1970, John Pope-Hennessy pointed to three distinct groupings for these seated satyrs, which were further delineated by Anthony Radcliffe in 1992 and discussed in depth by Alison Luchs and Dylan Smith in 2007.[2] More recently, Jeremy Warren provided a detailed catalogue of twenty-four examples that he categorized into four types.[3]

Both of these bronzes entered the Museum through the Linsky bequest in 1982. The first (A) belongs to group “c” of Warren’s typologies: seated satyrs placed relatively low to the ground, legs crossed, with a shell in the right hand and a candleholder in the left. In our bronze, the holder has broken off and has been replaced with what appears to be a moneybag of later facture. The satyr is ithyphallic, his left leg gracefully crossed over his right, and of an overall high quality, with locks of hair, on both hinds and head, delicately modeled in the wax. The bronze once belonged to the Marczibányi family, important Hungarian collectors. First recorded in the collection of Antal Marczibányi (1793–1872), it was likely one of the forty-eight Italian bronzes, mostly cinquecento, owned by his father Imre (d. 1824), said to have come from Canova’s pupil István Ferenczy.[4]

In his catalogue of the Linsky Collection, James David Draper considered it an “altogether superior product of the Riccio workshop” and compared it favorably to the seated satyr bearing the arms of the Capodivacca family in the Frick.[5] The work instead might be considerably later than the sixteenth century, as suggested by Luchs and Smith.[6] It is closest in appearance to a bronze in the Louvre, retaining its original candle socket and recently discussed by Philippe Malgouyres.[7] According to him, the face on the Louvre cast, “more Rubens than Riccio,” together with its facture indicates that the pair may belong to the late seventeenth or early eighteenth century, and possibly even later.

Formerly in the collection of Prince Nicholas of Romania, the second Linsky seated satyr (B) belongs to Warren’s group “d”: a figure with long ears, seated on a tree stump, legs uncrossed. The Met’s has a pair of spiraling horns on his head and holds a gadrooned receptacle for ink (adorned with a grotesque face) in his right hand and a socket for a candle in his left. His eyes are open wide and teeth grimaced. The satyr sits on a hollow stump, with slots to hold quills. Draper, who posited a potential Venetian origin, noted the “laxity of tooling” evident in the “ropy channels chased into this satyr’s flanks”; the bronze was attributed to Severo da Ravenna during its acquisition process in 1982.8 According to a note from Cyril Humphris upon its purchase by Jack and Belle Linsky, it has lead fillings at the sites of two repairs: the candleholder, and from the base of the neck and across the upper left of the chest.[9]

In his entry for the related cast in the Wallace Collection, Warren lists comparable examples in the Louvre and one formerly in the Bruno Kern collection, Vienna, as well as a similar work in the Walters Art Museum, Baltimore.[10] To these can be added a previously unknown cast recently with Daniel Katz Gallery and attributed to Desiderio da Firenze (fig. 17a). The Katz and Linsky bronzes share the feature of a small mouse cast onto the tree stump (in different positions), which suggests the pair were the output of the same workshop. Whether these are the product of a shop associated with Desiderio da Firenze, thought to be Riccio’s successor in Padua, remains a plausible hypothesis.
-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. For the three autograph works, now in the Kunsthistorisches Museum (KK 5539), the Musei Civici, Padua (197), and the Louvre (TH 89), see the entries by Claudia Kryza-Gersch, Franca Pellegrini, and Philippe Malgouyres, respectively, in Allen 2008a, pp. 158–73, cats. 10–12.
2. Smith Collection 2007, pp. 20–26.
3. Warren 2016, vol. 1, pp. 304–5.
4. Entz 1954–55.
5. Linsky 1984, p. 144.
6. Smith Collection 2007, pp. 24, 26 n. 16: “A fine satyr in the Linsky Collection . . . may date from around 1600 or later, based on the fluffy treatment of the hair, the less grotesque face and the more sensuous anatomy.”
7. Malgouyres 2020, p. 221.
8. Linsky 1984, p. 145; 1982 appraisal list in ESDA/OF.
9. ESDA/OF.
10. Warren 2016, vol. 1, p. 305.
  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。