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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)大力士和埃尔曼提亚野猪
品名(英)Hercules and the Erymanthian boar
入馆年号1982年,1982.60.100
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 1630 - 公元 1665
创作地区
分类雕塑青铜(Sculpture-Bronze)
尺寸高: 17 1/2 英寸 (44.5 厘米)
介绍(中)这件青铜器代表了赫拉克勒斯劳动的第四次,其中他杀死了一头可怕的野猪,吓坏了居住在埃里曼图斯山周围的人们。詹博洛尼亚的原始作品是一系列六组银色作品的一部分,描绘了弗朗切斯科一世·德·美第奇在 1576 年(第一张纪录片记录的年份)之前委托为乌菲齐论坛委托的劳动。詹博洛尼亚的第四届工党模型是在十多年后的1589年由米歇尔·马扎菲里(Michele Mazzafirri)用银铸造的。原始的银色版本已丢失,但存在一些青铜铸件。其中一幅是为鲁道夫二世委托创作的,现在在艺术史博物馆,根据文件,它被一致认为是最好的例子,也是最早的,因为它出现在 1607 年至 1611 年间编制的皇家收藏清单中。[1]

詹博洛尼亚的小青铜器从十六世纪末到十七世纪和十八世纪都非常受欢迎。杰里米·沃伦(Jeremy Warren)编制了一份包含二十二位大力神和埃里曼斯野猪演员的名单。[2] 尼古拉斯·佩尼(Nicholas Penny)认为,许多幸存的版本很可能是十九世纪的沙铸件,因为它们的建模几乎相同。[3]然而,沃伦指出,在十九世纪上半叶之前,至少有三次被记录下来。[4] 根据理查德·斯通的说法,我们的小雕像是使用间接失蜡法铸造在佛罗伦萨轻铅锡青铜器中的,这排除了它是佩妮提到的十九世纪沙铸件之一的可能性。该合金相当"干净",铸件非常薄且均匀,几乎没有蜡与蜡连接的证据,支持了后来的年代测定。它的重量极轻,具有温暖的棕色铜绿和丰富的杂色工具,例如使球杆清晰的冲孔痕迹。X光片显示,这个人物是一体铸造的,有证据表明赫拉克勒斯的腰部和肩膀以及野猪的一条后腿有螺丝塞和铸造维修。人物的臀部和野猪的臀部上有大块的斑块,似乎是从青铜上切下来的,以便去除沉重的陶瓷芯,然后用焊料重新插入。连接是通过追逐精心完成的,斑块通过半透明的铜绿看不见。[5]

最近的目视检查证实,我们的青铜器缺乏十七世纪早期佛罗伦萨作坊的技巧。它肯定不是詹博洛尼亚商店的产品,也不能毫不费力地分配给他的传统追随者,如乔瓦尼·弗朗切斯科·苏西尼或费迪南多·塔卡。细节是机械的——例如,球杆的针痕和头发的发丝——解剖结构的渲染相当平坦。我们的大力神与华莱士系列(S125)中的版本相当:在两者中,头发和毛皮都是重复和肤浅的(簇绒遵循相同的设计);左手尽管静脉勾勒得很清楚,但跛行,没有深入皮毛。当放置在维也纳青铜器生动凿刻的表面旁边时,这些缺陷是显而易见的。沃伦将华莱士铸件放在十七世纪末或十八世纪,这是现在青铜的合理日期。无论如何,关于我们的大力神和其他几个复制品的许多问题仍然顽固地悬而未决。
-FL

脚注
(有关缩短参考文献的关键,请参阅大都会艺术博物馆艾伦、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. KHM, KK 5846.有关詹博洛尼亚的《大力神劳动》系列的深刻讨论,请参阅安东尼·拉德克利夫(Anthony Radcliffe)在C. Avery和Radcliffe 1978中,第122-23页,猫。78, 79;Claudia Kryza-Gersch in Paolozzi Strozzi and Zikos 2006, pp. 180–81, cat.12;沃伦 2016,第 2 卷,第 476–77、484–87 页。
2. 沃伦 2016,第 2 卷,第 487 页。
3. Penny 1992,第 1 卷,第 53–54 页。
4. 沃伦 2016 年,第 2 卷,第 484 页:巴杰罗的那篇记录于 1715 年;卡波迪蒙特,1829 年;普拉多,1834年。
5. R. Stone/TR,2011 年 6 月 29 日。
介绍(英)This bronze represents the fourth of the Labors of Hercules, in which he kills a monstrous boar that terrified the people living around Mount Erymanthus. The original composition by Giambologna was part of a series of six groups in silver depicting the Labors commissioned by Francesco I de’ Medici for the Tribuna of the Uffizi before 1576, the year of the first documentary record. Giambologna’s model for the fourth Labor was cast in silver more than a decade later, in 1589, by Michele Mazzafirri. The original silver version is lost, but several bronze casts exist. One, commissioned for Rudolf II and now in the Kunsthistorisches Museum, is unanimously considered the finest example and the earliest according to the documents, since it appears in the inventory of the imperial collections compiled between 1607 and 1611.[1]

Giambologna’s small bronzes were very popular from the end of the sixteenth and throughout the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Jeremy Warren compiled a list of twenty-two casts of Hercules and the Erymanthian Boar.[2] Nicholas Penny argued that many of the surviving versions are likely to be nineteenth-century sand casts because they are almost identical in their modeling.[3] Warren, however, pointed out that at least three are recorded before the first half of the nineteenth century.[4] According to Richard Stone, our statuette was cast in an excellent Florentine lightly leaded tin bronze using the indirect lost-wax method, which excludes the possibility that it is one of those nineteenth-century sand casts to which Penny referred. The alloy is quite “clean,” and the cast is extremely thin and even, with little evidence of wax-to-wax joins, supporting a later dating. Extremely light in weight, it has a warm brown patina and richly variegated tooling, such as the punch marks that articulate the club. Radiographs show that the figure was cast in one piece, with evidence of screw plugs and cast-in repairs at Hercules’s waist and shoulders and at one of the boar’s hind legs. There are large patches on the figure’s buttocks and the boar’s rump that appear to have been cut out of the bronze to access removal of the heavy ceramic core, and then reinserted with solder. The joins were carefully finished by chasing, and the patches are invisible through the translucent patina.[5]

A recent visual examination confirms that our bronze lacks the finesse of an early seventeenth-century Florentine workshop. It most certainly is not a product of Giambologna’s shop, nor can it be assigned without difficulty to followers of his tradition such as Giovanni Francesco Susini or Ferdinando Tacca. The details are mechanical—for instance, the club’s pin marks and the locks of hair—and the rendering of the anatomy quite flat. Our Hercules is comparable to the version in the Wallace Collection (S125): in both, hair and fur are repetitive and superficial (with tufts following the same design); the left hand, despite the well-delineated veins, is limp and does not dig deeply into the fur. These deficiencies are apparent when set beside the vividly chiseled surface of the bronze in Vienna. Warren places the Wallace cast in the late seventeenth or eighteenth century, a reasonable dating for the present bronze. At any rate, many questions about our Hercules and several other replicas remain stubbornly open.
-FL

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. KHM, KK 5846. For insightful discussions of Giambologna’s series of the Labors of Hercules, see Anthony Radcliffe in C. Avery and Radcliffe 1978, pp. 122–23, cats. 78, 79; Claudia Kryza-Gersch in Paolozzi Strozzi and Zikos 2006, pp. 180–81, cat. 12; Warren 2016, vol. 2, pp. 476–77, 484–87.
2. Warren 2016, vol. 2, p. 487.
3. Penny 1992, vol. 1, pp. 53–54.
4. Warren 2016, vol. 2, p. 484: the one in the Bargello is recorded in 1715; Capodimonte, 1829; Prado, 1834.
5. R. Stone/TR, June 29, 2011.
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