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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)大卫与歌利亚
品名(英)David and Goliath
入馆年号1982年,1982.60.117
策展部门欧洲雕塑和装饰艺术European Sculpture and Decorative Arts
创作者Francesco Fanelli【1608 至 1665】【意大利人】
创作年份公元 1600 - 公元 1699
创作地区
分类雕塑青铜(Sculpture-Bronze)
尺寸整体 (confirmed): 17 1/2 × 8 3/4 × 9 1/4 英寸 (44.5 × 22.2 × 23.5 厘米)
介绍(中)大卫超越了歌利亚,单膝支撑在肩膀上,将巨人的头向后拉着头发,他的剑臂伸到了致命一击的顶点。歌利亚半从地上爬起来,张着嘴,眼睛睁得大大的,但注意力不集中,击倒他的石头仍然"砸在他的额头上"(撒母耳记上17:49)。动态金字塔群仅在一个可比的例子中为人所知,以前是在古斯塔夫·德·罗斯柴尔德(Gustave de Rothschild)收藏中,由威廉·冯·博德(Wilhelm von Bode)绘制,有时与我们的青铜相混淆。[1] 莫斯科普希金博物馆中的一个更小、更概括的版本代表了该模型的新一代。[2] 这幅作品被认为是巴西奥·班迪纳利(Baccio Bandinelli)和文森佐·德·罗西(Vincenzo de‘Rossi)的作品,在1600年左右的几十年里,人们更普遍地称之为佛罗伦萨(Florentine),帕特丽夏·翁格拉夫(Patricia Wengraf)一直坚持这一归因,并与水星和丘比特(第92类)进行了有说服力的比较。[4]

在对罗斯柴尔德版本的严厉评判中,博德将《大卫和歌利亚》描述为"不过是一场毫无意义的武力之旅,(其)构图和形式处理缺乏品味,甚至缺乏艺术感……"[5]我们今天可能会减轻这种评估,将林斯基·大卫和歌利亚(Goliath)列为来自法内利(Fanelli)工作室的更具创意的作品和高度精加工的青铜器之一。与艺术家的大多数人物和团体不同,大卫和歌利亚成功地从多个角度创作了作品。在这方面,它与水星和丘比特以及他最复杂的马术战斗群相似

该模型可能于1630年代中期在英国制造,当时法内利从热那亚搬到那里。他可能被召来为贵族赞助人制作青铜陵墓雕塑,并于1632年被查理一世保留。在英国,他的小雕像似乎很快就获得了成功,这些小雕像在社会上层广泛收集。[7] 大卫·豪沃思(David Howarth)引用亚伯拉罕·范德杜特(Abraham van der Doort)1639年的皇家藏品清单,观察到白厅(Whitehall Palace)椅子室的窗台上展示了一尊《大卫与歌利亚》(David and Goliath),以及查理一世(Charles I)的一些最精美的小青铜器和橱柜绘画。[8] 从英语语境来看,法内利的作文选择意义重大。该小组逐字逐句地朗读了当时最新出版的《圣经》(1611年)中的关键段落。"大卫跑去,站在非利士人身上,拿起他的剑,从鞘中拔出,杀了他,砍下了他的头"(撒母耳记上17:51)。在大卫用石头将巨人带到地上,手持剑"站"在他身上,向他发出致命一击后,法内利避开了意大利艺术家(从多纳泰罗、曼泰格纳到卡拉瓦乔)经常代表的胜利的大卫。[9]

虽然演员阵容的高质量可能表明,我们的《大卫与歌利亚》制作的时间比法内利本人在1630年代制作的作品晚,但这说明了他直接参与制作的青铜器与随后在车间制作的模型的铜器之间的美学。[10] 它展示了佛罗伦萨的创新,用于修复和统一表面螺纹青铜塞,以填补铸造缺陷和移除芯销留下的孔洞。虽然它可能发展得更早,但"螺旋塞"在1600年左右被完善,可能是由安东尼奥·苏西尼(Antonio Susini)完成的,现在被认为是大公爵青铜作坊的标志,也是詹博洛格纳(Giambologna)的直系追随者发行的小雕像精致表面的标志(参见,例如,第137章)。如果这项技术是在本世纪之交发展起来的,那么法内利本可以在1590年代在佛罗伦萨师从乔瓦尼·班迪尼(Giovanni Bandini)或之后不久学会。[11] 如果法内利离开佛罗伦萨时(1605年),这项技术还没有发展起来,他可能会研究查理一世收藏的詹博洛格纳青铜器,对这项技术进行逆向工程。詹博洛格纳去世几年后,在他的工作室里制作的一些小雕像于1612年被送到威尔士亲王亨利手中,并于当年晚些时候转交给他的弟弟查尔斯。[12]

起初,螺旋塞似乎与法内利的制造方式不一致,即故意缺乏对表面细节的关注。小雕像几乎从不展示冷加工来强化线条或形状;表面细节都是从蜡中翻译出来的。在许多铸件上,铸件表面的裂缝和缝隙没有被金属堵塞。[13] 虽然在17世纪,阿尔卑斯山以北的今天,人们对这种制造方式的反应可以是温和的,即使不是彻底的批判,法内利的技术之所以受到称赞,正是因为他知道如何铸造"金属雕像……以使其干净……这样就不必帮助模型进一步雕刻或锉削",而他的雕像具有国王和其他艺术家都喜欢的品质。[14] 约阿希姆·冯·桑德拉特(Joachim von Sandrart)自己拥有"相当多"的法内利雕像,在这位艺术家去世几年后,他写道自己的雕像很薄,而且没有明显的冷作品,称赞这些雕像是艺术精湛的标志。[15] 在《大卫和歌利亚》中,缺少冷加工,或者青铜成品与蜡模的接近,都会引起人们的注意。虽然这两个人物的头发都由一束束深浮雕组成,但没有追逐的迹象。也许最能说明问题的是,用蜡中的一种工具制作的一排排沟槽,用来描绘形体的分离,这些沟槽被留在了歌利亚的
介绍(英)David surmounts Goliath and, bracing one knee on his shoulder, pulls the giant’s head back by the hair as his sword arm stretches to its apogee for the death blow. Goliath is half-risen from the ground, mouth agape, eyes wide but unfocused, with the stone that felled him still “sunke into his forehead” (1 Samuel 17:49). The dynamic pyramidal group is known in only one comparable example, formerly in the Gustave de Rothschild collection, which was illustrated by Wilhelm von Bode and is sometimes confused with our bronze.[1] A smaller and more summary version in the Pushkin Museum, Moscow, represents a later generation of the model.[2] The composition has been attributed to Baccio Bandinelli and Vincenzo de’ Rossi, and more generally called Florentine from the decades around 1600.[3] Anthony Radcliffe first raised the possibility of a connection to Francesco Fanelli in the late 1980s, when the artist’s biography and oeuvre were coming into sharper focus, and Patricia Wengraf has since sustained the attribution and made persuasive comparisons with the Mercury and Cupid (cat. 92).[4]

In harsh judgment of the Rothschild version, which he employed as a foil to Giambologna’s prowess, Bode described the David and Goliath as “little more than a meaningless tour de force, [whose] composition and treatment of form are devoid of taste, even of artistic feeling . . .”[5] We might mitigate such an assessment today and, in light of new knowledge of the artist, place the Linsky David and Goliath among the more inventive compositions and highly finished bronzes to have come from the Fanelli workshop. Unlike most of the artist’s single figures and groups,[6] the David and Goliath successfully composes from more than one point of view. In this, it is similar only to the Mercury and Cupid and the most complex of his equestrian battle groups.

The model was probably made in England in the mid-1630s, after Fanelli had moved there from Genoa. He may have been summoned to execute bronze tomb sculptures for aristocratic patrons, and was retained by Charles I by 1632. In England, he seems to have found success quickly with his statuettes, which were collected widely among the upper tiers of society.[7] David Howarth, citing Abraham van der Doort’s 1639 inventory of the royal collection, observed that a David and Goliath was displayed on a windowsill in the Chair Room of Whitehall Palace along with some of Charles I’s finest small bronzes and cabinet paintings.[8] Considered in an English context, Fanelli’s choice of composition gains in significance. The group acts out verbatim key passages from the King James translation of the Bible (1611), a recent publication at that time. “David ran and stood upon the Philistine, and tooke his sword, and drewe it out of the sheath, and slew him, and cut off his head therewith” (1 Samuel 17:51). Eschewing the victorious David more frequently represented by Italian artists (from Donatello and Mantegna to Caravaggio), Fanelli chose a moment at the height of action, after David had brought the giant to the ground with his stone and “stood upon” him, sword in hand, to deliver the death blow.[9]

Though the high quality of the cast likely indicates that our David and Goliath was made later than the works Fanelli himself produced in the 1630s, it is illustrative of an aesthetic of finish that unites the bronzes he was directly involved in making with those produced from his models subsequently in the workshop.[10] It exhibits a Florentine innovation for making repairs and unifying the surface—threaded bronze plugs fill the holes left by casting flaws and the removal of core pins. Though it may have developed earlier, the “screw plug” was perfected in the years around 1600, probably by Antonio Susini, and is now considered a hallmark of the grand-ducal bronze workshops and of the refined surfaces of statuettes that issued from Giambologna’s immediate followers (see, e.g., cat. 137). If the technique had been developed by the turn of the century, Fanelli could have learned it in the 1590s when he was in Florence apprenticed to Giovanni Bandini or shortly thereafter.[11] If the technique had not yet developed by the time Fanelli left Florence (by 1605), he might have studied the Giambologna bronzes in Charles I’s collection, reverse-engineering the technique. A number of statuettes made in Giambologna’s workshop a few years after his death were sent to Henry, prince of Wales, in 1612, and passed at his death later that year to his brother Charles.[12]

The screw plugs at first seem at odds with how Fanelli’s facture is often characterized, that is, as deliberately lacking in attention to surface detail. The statuettes almost never exhibit cold-working to strengthen lines or forms; surface details are all translated from the wax. On many casts, fissures and gaps in the surface—casting flaws—are not plugged with metal.[13] While today’s response to this type of facture can be subdued, if not outright critical, in the seventeenth century, north of the Alps, Fanelli’s technique was praised precisely for the fact that he knew how to cast “metal images . . . so as to make them clean . . . so that it was not necessary to help the model further with carving or filing,” and his statuettes possessed qualities that made them desirable to a king and to fellow artists alike.[14] Joachim von Sandrart, who himself owned “quite a few” of Fanelli’s statuettes, wrote some years after the artist’s death of the thinness of his casts and the absence of visible cold work, praising them as signs of virtuosity.[15] In the David and Goliath, the lack of cold work, or the closeness of the finished bronze to its wax model, draws attention to itself. While the hair of both figures consists of massed bunches in deep relief, there are no indications of chasing. Perhaps most tellingly, rows of furrows made with a tool in the wax to delineate the separation of forms were left where Goliath’s thigh and buttocks meet the ground. The marks could have been easily smoothed with a hot knife before investing the model. Instead, they are left as a flourish to call attention to the origin of the bronze in its wax model. The screw plugs in the David and Goliath, though a significant intervention after the casting, serve to strengthen the appearance of an unchased—yet highly finished—cast; even today, the plugs remain almost invisible and the extent of their use only becomes apparent in radiographs. It could be that Fanelli’s waxy, “clean” surfaces, lacking in cold-working, were part of an aesthetic that he promoted during his lifetime, or at least that he was aware possessed a certain cachet. In his most important commissions, he took steps to preserve this quality, even while improving the finish of the cast (see cat. 92).

James David Draper, whose assessment of the group’s facture led him to look outside Italy for the origins of the bronze group, broached a Northern connection by tracing the composition in eighteenth-century England.16 That we now know Fanelli’s David and Goliath was a prized sculpture in England in the 1630s helps to explain its continued resonance there, alongside the more canonical compositions of Giambologna, into the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
-PJB

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. Current location unknown; see Bode and Draper 1980, pl. 220. Liebmann (Androsov et al. 1988, p. 66) and Draper (Bode and Draper 1980, p. 107) mistakenly conflated the two bronzes, the latter correcting himself soon after our group came into the public eye (Linsky 1984, p. 157 n. 1). ‘
2. Androsov et al. 1988, pp. 65–66, no. 30; the Moscow bronze is almost 10 cm shorter than our example and rests on a smooth rectangular bronze plinth, probably of later manufacture.
3. Valentiner 1955 (to Bandinelli); Pope-Hennessy 1963b (to de’ Rossi); Bode 1907–12, vol. 3, pl. CCXX (as “Italian Master, about 1570”); Bode and Draper 1980, p. 107 (as “possibly Florentine, 17th century”); Draper in Linsky 1984, p. 156 (as “16th-century Florentine”).
4. Correspondence in ESDA/OF; Howarth 1989, p. 112 n. 135; Wengraf 2004, pp. 36, 39.
5. Bode and Draper 1980, p. 72.
6. For example, Venus, Adonis and Cupid, V&A, A.96-1956 (Howarth 1989, p. 100); most of the Saint George groups; and even the ubiquitous Galloping Horse statuettes, for which see cat. 95. 7. Stock 2004; Wengraf 2004; Schmidt 2004.
8. Howarth 1989, pp. 99, 112 n. 135.
9. The outstanding Renaissance depiction prefiguring Fanelli’s narrative choice is Michelangelo’s on the Sistine ceiling.
10. Radiographs indicate that the group was cast in one piece, with thin, even walls and very little porosity. A plaster core was held in place with multiple transfixing core pins, and wax-to-wax joins were limited to the joins between the figures. R. Stone/TR, June 22, 2011.
11. Wengraf 2004, p. 31.
12. Watson and Avery 1973.
13. See, for example, cats. 95 and 96, although it is possible these were originally filled with a less durable material, like wax.
14. Sandrart 1925, p. 235.
15. Ibid.
16. Linsky 1984, pp. 156–57.
17. The dimensions of the bronze listed in Abraham van der Doort’s 1639 inventory, 18 x 10 in. (45.7 x 25.4 cm), are essentially those of the present bronze. See the related entry in The Lost Collection of Charles I, at https://lostcollection.rct.uk/collection/david-and-goliath-little-full-length. However, recent analysis of the facture of Fanelli’s Mercury and Cupid suggests that the present bronze is a later cast from the Whitehall Palace model; see cat. 92.
18. See https://lostcollection.rct.uk/collection/david-and-goliath-little-full-length for information from the 1972 Walpole Society transcription of Charles I’s posthumous sale inventories.
  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。