微信公众号 
图码生活

每天发布有五花八门的文章,各种有趣的知识等,期待您的订阅与参与
搜索结果最多仅显示 10 条随机数据
结果缓存两分钟
如需更多更快搜索结果请访问小程序
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)
读取中
读取中
读取中
品名(中)朱诺和孔雀
品名(英)Juno and the peacock
入馆年号1986年,1986.319.52
策展部门欧洲雕塑和装饰艺术European Sculpture and Decorative Arts
创作者Alessandro Vittoria (Alessandro Vittoria di Vigilio della Volpa)【1525 至 1608】【意大利人】
创作年份公元 1500 - 公元 1599
创作地区
分类雕塑青铜(Sculpture-Bronze)
尺寸整体 (confirmed): 13 1/4 × 4 1/2 × 3 3/4 英寸 (33.7 × 11.4 × 9.5 厘米)
介绍(中)这名女性穿着覆盖躯干和大部分腿部但在胸部以下的窗帘,站在一个放松的装置中,微微向后倾斜。她的头优雅地转向一边,而她的右手抓住她的左乳房,就好像她要把牛奶从里面挤出来一样。左臂伸向一只孔雀,放在女人左腿旁边,这样她就可以用两根手指小心翼翼地抓住这只信任的鸟的小脑袋。她的头发从中间分开,在后脑勺形成一个松散的发髻,两股卷曲的头发从这里垂到她的肩膀上。孔雀的出现表明这个人物是朱诺,木星的妻子和婚姻女神,这解释了她几乎盛装打扮的状态,抚摸乳房的母亲而不是调情的方式,以及她端庄的表情

这个朱诺的模型经常被铸造。[1] 在众多复制品中,我们的无疑是最好的之一,尽管从技术上讲,所有已知的铸件都显示出缺陷。[2] 该模型被反复地与木星组合在一起,放置在火狗的顶部;然而,由于我们的朱诺号有一个异常大的圆形底座,它可能是为了另一个目的而制造的。不同的造型在孔雀羽毛的处理方式和女神触摸孔雀的方式上略有不同,这取决于孔雀的头是否有冠

1914年,当一个铸件出现在柏林的拍卖会上时,该模型被认为是维多利亚的。[3] 1916年,Leo Planiscig为《朱诺大都会博物馆》(The Met Juno)重复了这一说法,当时它仍在维也纳的扎兹卡收藏中。[4] 从那时起,这个模型要么被Vittoria自己称为作品,要么被他的工作室称为作品[5],事实上,毫无疑问,这个作品是由这位艺术家发明的。然而,已知铸件的制作是由威尼斯的一家或多家商业铸造厂完成的,这是像安迪龙这样的功能性青铜器的常见做法,毫无疑问,大多数朱诺雕像都是为安迪龙制作的。维托里亚由布雷西亚诺等专家精心铸造的模型(如他的圣塞巴斯蒂安(58号猫))和他显然以这种方式提供的模型之间存在着显著的差异,我们不知道这些模型是否适用于适销产品

身材的小头和细长比例,强调突出的腹部,姿势的巧妙扭曲,倾斜的头部和优雅的手放在胸前,是维多利亚雕塑的典型特征,还有厚重的窗帘,上面有小而锋利的褶皱和紧贴身体的大而平坦的区域,例如肚脐可以清晰地看到。Planiscig观察到,朱诺窗帘的处理方式让人想起威尼斯圣朱利安诺(约1583-84年)麦西亚祭坛上维多利亚的《圣但以理》,其特点是布料的特色对角线扫掠巧妙地遵循了人物动作的扭曲。此外,威尼斯杜卡莱宫四重奏门(Sala delle Quattro Porte,Palazzo Ducale,Venice,约1580年)中的寓言式的雄辩雕像,或同一宫殿中为法国亨利三世纪念碑(1575年)搭建框架的女性圣母像,都是我们朱诺的亲密姐妹,所有这些都最终源于维托里亚最喜欢的画家帕尔米吉尼诺的细长比例。朱诺号的模型可能创建于1580年代或1590年代[6],但铸件至少生产到17世纪中期
-CKG

脚注
。复制品,按第一次出版的顺序排列:帕多瓦奇维奇博物馆(Moschetti 1938,第223页;另见Bacchi等人的Davide Banzato,1999,第354页,目录79);Stift Klostreneuburg,KG 15(Planiscig 1942,第11-12页,第15号);Capodimonte(Molajoli 1957,编号10642;另见Ambrosio和Capobianco 1995,第36页[孔雀头失踪]);前身为Charles C.Dent系列(Allentown 1967,猫83,与Jupiter配对,安装在很可能是现代的安迪隆上);希法诺亚宫,费拉拉(瓦雷泽1975年,第115页,第95页);V&;A、 A.19-1961(Burns等人,1975年,第60页,目录110;另见2003年格言,第297页,第6号);Hermitage,H.CK-82(安德罗索夫1978年,第53–54页,第37期);纳尔逊·阿特金斯博物馆,堪萨斯城,62-8。关于美国私人收藏中朱诺头上戴王冠的演员阵容,见《格言》2003,第297页,第7页。关于另一件私人收藏的朱诺,似乎是后来制造的,见Banzato 2008a,第183页。朱诺城堡不时出现在艺术市场上:Dorotheum,维也纳,1929年5月13日至15日,23号地块;佳士得,伦敦,1967年11月20日,第166号拍品;佳士得拍卖行,纽约,2002年7月10日至11日,1099号拍品;苏富比拍卖行,伦敦,2003年10月31日,编号101;苏富比拍卖行,巴黎,2007年10月16日,第6号拍品
2.这种金属是铜、锡、锌和铅的四元合金,含有微量元素。R.Stone/TR,2009年7月24日
3.Lepke's Kunst Auctions Haus,柏林,1914年3月11日,Kunstsammlung Schacky,272号拍品
4.唯一的例外是Dent系列中的铸件被Tiziano Aspetti错误地描述为(Allentown 1967,猫.83)。在艺术市场上,人们也同样错误地将质量较低的演员归咎于尼科洛·罗卡塔利亚塔
5.比较Motture 2003,第297页和Banzato在Bacchi等人1999,第354页。
介绍(英)The female figure, dressed in drapery that covers her torso and most of her legs but finishes below the breasts, stands in a relaxed contrapposto and leans slightly backward. Her head is turned gracefully to the side, while in her right hand she holds her left breast as if she were about to compress milk out of it. The left arm reaches toward a peacock, positioned next to the woman’s left leg so that she can delicately grip the tiny head of the trusting bird with two fingers. Her hair is parted in the middle and gathered in a loose chignon at the back of her head from where two curled strands fall down onto her shoulders. The presence of the peacock identifies the figure as Juno, Jupiter’s wife and the goddess of marriage, which explains her almost fully dressed state, the motherly rather than flirtatious manner of touching her breast, and her demure expression.

The model of this Juno was cast frequently.[1] Among the many replicas, ours is certainly one of the best, although technically all known casts display imperfections.[2] The model was repeatedly combined with a Jupiter, placed atop firedogs; however, since our Juno is provided with an unusually large round base, it was probably made for another purpose. The different casts feature slight variations in the treatment of the peacock’s feathers and in the way the goddess touches the bird, depending on whether or not its head is crested.

The model was attributed to Vittoria in 1914 when a cast appeared at auction in Berlin.[3] This attribution was repeated in 1916 by Leo Planiscig for The Met Juno when it was still in the Zatzka collection in Vienna.[4] Since then, the model was either called a work by Vittoria himself or by his workshop,[5] and indeed there can be no doubt that the composition was invented by that artist. The execution of the known casts was, however, done by one or more of the commercial foundries in Venice, a common practice for functional bronzes such as andirons, for which most of the Juno statuettes undoubtedly were made. There exists a marked difference between models that Vittoria had had lovingly cast by experts like Bresciano, as in the case of his Saint Sebastian (cat. 58), and models he apparently provided—in which way, we do not know—for marketable products.

The small head and elongated proportions of the figure, with the emphasis on the prominent stomach, and the eloquent twist of the pose, with the inclined head and the elegant hand on the chest, are typical features of Vittoria’s sculptures, as is the heavy drapery with small, sharp folds and large flat areas that cling to the body so that, for instance, the navel is clearly visible. Planiscig observed that the treatment of Juno’s drapery is reminiscent of Vittoria’s Saint Daniel on the altar of the Merciai in San Giuliano, Venice (ca. 1583–84), which features the characteristic diagonal sweep of the cloth that cleverly follows the twist of the figure’s movement. Also the allegorical statue of Eloquence in the Sala delle Quattro Porte, Palazzo Ducale, Venice (ca. 1580), or the female caryatids framing the Monument for Henry III of France (1575) in the same palace are close sisters of our Juno, all of them stemming ultimately in their elongated proportions from Parmigianino, Vittoria’s favorite painter. The model for the Juno was probably created in the 1580s or 1590s,[6] but the casts were produced at least until the mid-seventeenth century.
-CKG

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. Replicas, given in order of their first publication: Museo Civici, Padua (Moschetti 1938, p. 223; see also Davide Banzato in Bacchi et al. 1999, p. 354, cat. 79); Stift Klosterneuburg, KG 15 (Planiscig 1942, pp. 11–12, no. 15); Capodimonte (Molajoli 1957, no. 10642; see also Ambrosio and Capobianco 1995, p. 36 [head of peacock missing]); formerly Charles C. Dent collection (Allentown 1967, cat. 83, paired with Jupiter and mounted on andirons—very probably modern); Palazzo Schifanoia, Ferrara (Varese 1975, p. 115, cat. 95); V&A, A.19-1961 (Burns et al. 1975, p. 60, cat. 110; see also Motture 2003, p. 297, no. 6); Hermitage, H.CK-82 (Androsov 1978, pp. 53–54, cat. 37); Nelson-Atkins Museum, Kansas City, 62-8. For a cast featuring a crown on Juno’s head in a U.S. private collection, see Motture 2003, p. 297, no. 7. For another Juno in a private collection that seems to be of later manufacture, see Banzato 2008a, p. 183. Casts of the Juno appear now and then on the art market: Dorotheum, Vienna, May 13–15, 1929, lot 23; Christie’s, London, November 20, 1967, lot 166; Christie’s, New York, July 10–11, 2002, lot 1099; Sotheby’s, London, October 31, 2003, no. 101; Sotheby’s, Paris, October 16, 2007, lot 6.
2. The metal is a quaternary alloy of copper, tin, zinc, and lead, with minor and trace elements. R. Stone/TR, July 24, 2009.
3. Lepke’s Kunst-Auctions-Haus, Berlin, March 11, 1914, Kunstsammlung Schacky, lot 272.
4. The only exception is the cast in the Dent collection that was erroneously described as by Tiziano Aspetti (Allentown 1967, cat. 83). On the art market there has also been an equally mistaken attribution of casts of lesser quality to Nicolò Roccatagliata.
5. Compare Motture 2003, p. 297 and Banzato in Bacchi et al. 1999, p. 354.
  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。