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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)科西莫一世·德·美第奇(1519–1574),佛罗伦萨公爵
品名(英)Cosimo I de' Medici (1519–1574), Duke of Florence
入馆年号1987年,1987.280
策展部门欧洲雕塑和装饰艺术European Sculpture and Decorative Arts
创作者Baccio Bandinelli【1493 至 1560】【意大利人】
创作年份公元 1539 - 公元 1540
创作地区
分类雕塑大理石(Sculpture-Marble)
尺寸整体 (confirmed): 高 31 1/2 x 宽 30 7/8 x 深 12 英寸 (80 x 78.4 x 30.5 厘米); 整体 (height with socle): 37 3/4 英寸 (95.9 厘米)
介绍(中)1534年,在与米开朗基罗的竞争中,Baccio Bandinelli在佛罗伦萨的广场上雕刻了巨大的大力神和仙人掌,这是一个大理石群,与这位年长雕塑家的著名大卫(1504年完成)对峙。班迪内利团队的人物以其僵硬的姿势和夸张的精准度,在优雅和力量上无法与米开朗基罗的年轻人竞争。多年来,班迪内利创造了一种独特的、甚至是独特的风格主义风格(1520年代后在意大利流行的风格),并取得了相当大的成功,但他不断努力摆脱米开朗基罗的阴影,他的竞争热情加剧了他作品中的夸张倾向。1537年,18岁的科西莫·德·美第奇成为佛罗伦萨公爵后,这位雕塑家在他的家乡和罗马越来越受欢迎。通过公爵的赞助,他在美第奇教皇利奥十世和克莱门特七世(1536年)的陵墓等重大项目中得到了支持 – 41,罗马圣母玛利亚女高音密涅瓦教堂),在佛罗伦萨大教堂圣坛工作(1545年 – 60).

他在大都会的科西莫半身像是公爵最早的雕塑肖像之一,可能是最早完成的all'antica(以古董的方式)。这位年轻的公爵在统治的第一年就开始蓄胡子,多梅尼科·迪·波罗的勋章就是明证。薄薄的几缕面部毛发以大理石清晰地定义,将受试者置于成年初期。[1] 佛罗伦萨画家蓬托莫的一幅粉笔画可能创作于科西莫即位的那一年(佛罗伦萨乌菲齐美术馆),展现了班迪内利半身像中强烈的轮廓和自信的风度。当将博物馆的肖像与班迪内利1543年左右更为人所知的科西莫半身像进行比较时,公爵在这里的相对年轻就显而易见了 – 44(佛罗伦萨巴杰罗国家博物馆),画中主人公的脸变得丰满起来,他的举止变得更加自信。尽管如此,这位艺术家在早期的半身像中还是不遗余力地赋予了他的主题权威。Bandinelli的许多作品中都有头部的急转弯,这是为了让Cosimo显得果断;它恰当地呼应了米开朗基罗的朱利亚诺·德·美第奇(Giuliano de‘Medici)的姿势,这是一座著名的坐着的真人大小的早期美第奇青年雕塑,1534年安装在佛罗伦萨圣洛伦佐教堂的美第奇礼拜堂。科西莫公爵的古董服饰 —  镶有饰边的胸甲和包裹的泥炭地,或高级长袍 —  有古老的帝国协会。从科西莫执政之初,他就特别渴望与奥古斯都·凯撒相提并论。他拥有一尊年轻皇帝的半身像(今天未经追踪),以及奥古斯都的古代浮雕,所有这些都反映了他对罗马统治者的崇拜。[2]

博物馆半身像的一个不同寻常的特征是将头部和躯干分开雕刻(依次分为三部分),这是班迪内利的一种已知的工作方法,乔治·瓦萨里在他的《艺术家的生活》中提到了这一方法,观察到其他雕塑家对此表示不满:"Baccio(Bandinelli)的习惯是在他创作的雕像上添加大小大理石,这样做不会感到烦恼,而且会对其轻描淡写。" [3] 事实上,将半身像分开雕刻是古罗马的一种做法,正如班迪内利从他在佛罗伦萨和罗马研究的例子中所知道的那样。[4] 他的右臂被奇怪地截断可能是必要的 —  或者至少与兼容 —  大理石的拼接

科西莫的半身像很早就被佛罗伦萨尼科里尼家族美第奇的坚定支持者所拥有。这很可能是1795年1月5日卡瓦列尔·洛伦佐·尼科里尼死后在其家中清点的五尊半身像中的第一件。[5] 两个多世纪前,这座房子归乔瓦尼·尼科里尼所有,当时半身像可能就在那里。[6] 我们知道,在十八世纪,半身像仍然矗立在一个高高的、分开的、锥形的胡桃木基座上(sgabello),这种基座在十六世纪中期经常被用来展示雕塑。最初的铁环被粘在未完工的背面,这表明这件作品曾经被固定在墙上。1795年的尼科里尼库存记录表明,最初的socle与半身像是同一块石头;现在的是后来的替代品

[Ian Wardropper,《欧洲雕塑》,1400–1900年,纽约大都会艺术博物馆,2011年,第19期,第66–67页。]
脚注:

1。 卡拉·兰格迪克。《美第奇画像》,十五至十八世纪。3卷。佛罗伦萨,1981–87年,第1卷,第495页 – 500。

2。 失去的奥古斯都半身像,见库尔特·W·福斯特。《统治的隐喻:科西莫一世·德·美第奇肖像中的政治意识形态和历史》,《佛罗伦萨艺术史研究院》,第15期,第1期(1971年),第65-104页,第88页。关于客串,请参见Wolf Rudiger Megow。Kameen von Augustus bis Alexander Severus。反慕尼黑和施泰因技术11。德国建筑学院。柏林,1987年,第166页,第18页,第8页,第6页。大都会博物馆收藏了一幅公元41年至54年间奥古斯都皇帝的精美肖像客串(编号42.11.30)。

3。 乔治·瓦萨里(Giorgio Vasari)说:"埃德·阿韦娃·巴西奥(Ed aveva Baccio)每件服装,内勒(nelle)雕像,脸上戴着面纱,脸上挂着馅饼和大馅饼,脸上涂着非英语和黑色。"。皮托里的葡萄园,古老的葡萄园。第2版,第3卷。佛罗伦萨,1568年。1906年版,Gaetano Milanesi编辑。9卷。佛罗伦萨,1906年,第6卷,第174页;英语翻译。,Vasari 1568/1996,第2卷,第293页。

4。 例如,奥斯蒂亚的安东尼时代半身像,见Raissa Calza编辑的Scavi di Ostia。第五卷,I ritratti。第1部分,约公元前160年,罗马,1964年,第108页 – 9,编号187。

5。 库存的副本(来自尼科里尼家族的档案)在策展人档案馆
介绍(英)In 1534, in rivalry with Michelangelo, Baccio Bandinelli carved the colossal Hercules and Cacus, a marble group that confronted the older sculptor’s famous David (finished in 1504) on the Piazza della Signoria in Florence. With their stiff postures and lapidary precision, the figures of Bandinelli’s group could not compete in grace and power with Michelangelo’s youth. Over the years, Bandinelli created a unique, even idiosyncratic, Mannerist style (the style prevalent in Italy after the 1520s) and achieved considerable success, yet constantly strove to emerge from Michelangelo’s shadow, and his competitive zeal intensified a tendency to exaggeration in his work. After the eighteen-year-old Cosimo de’ Medici became duke of Florence in 1537, the sculptor found increasing favor in his native city as well as in Rome. Through ducal patronage, he was supported in such major projects as the tombs of the Medici popes Leo X and Clement VII (1536 – 41, church of Santa Maria sopra Minerva, Rome) and works in the chancel of Florence Cathedral (1545 – 60).

His bust of Cosimo in the Metropolitan is one of the earliest sculptural portraits of the duke, probably the first done all’antica (in antique fashion). The young duke began to grow a beard in the first year of his reign, as medals by Domenico di Polo bear witness. Crisply defined in marble, the wispy strands of facial hair place the subject in the early years of adulthood.[1] A chalk drawing by the Florentine painter Pontormo, probably made in the year of Cosimo’s accession (Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence) displays the strong profile and confident demeanor seen in Bandinelli’s bust. The duke’s relative youth here is apparent when the Museum’s portrait is compared with Bandinelli’s better known bust of Cosimo from about 1543 – 44 (Museo Nazionale del Bargello, Florence), in which the subject’s face has fleshed out and his manner become even more assured. Nonetheless, the artist went to great lengths in the early bust to confer authority on his subject. The sharp turn of the head, a motif found in many of Bandinelli’s works, is meant to make Cosimo appear decisive; it appropriately echoes the pose of Michelangelo’s Giuliano de’ Medici, a famous seated, lifesize sculpture of a Medici youth of an earlier generation installed in 1534 in the Medici Chapel of the church of San Lorenzo, Florence. Duke Cosimo’s antique regalia —  a laced cuirass and enveloping paludamentum, or robe of rank —  have ancient imperial associations. From the beginning of his reign Cosimo was particularly eager to be compared with Augustus Caesar. He owned a bust of the youthful emperor (today untraced) as well as ancient cameos of Augustus, all of which reflect his cult of the Roman ruler.[2]

An unusual feature of the Museum’s bust, the separate carving of head and torso (which in turn is in three parts), is a known working method of Bandinelli, one that Giorgio Vasari noted in his Lives of the Artists, observing that it was frowned on by other sculptors: "It was the custom of Baccio [Bandinelli] to add pieces of marble both small and large to the statues that he executed, feeling no annoyance in doing this, and making light of it." [3] In fact, carving a bust in separate pieces was an ancient Roman practice, as Bandinelli would have known from examples he could study in Florence and Rome.[4] The odd truncation of his right arm might have necessitated —  or at least been compatible with —  the piecing of the marble.

Appropriately enough, Cosimo’s bust came early into the possession of staunch supporters of the Medici, the Niccolini family of Florence. It is likely that it is the first item in a list of five busts inventoried in the house of Cavaliere Lorenzo Niccolini on January 5, 1795, after his death.[5] More than two centuries earlier, the house was in the possession of Giovanni Niccolini, and it is possible that the bust was there at that time. [6] We know that in the eighteenth century the bust still stood on a tall, divided and tapered, walnut pedestal (sgabello) a type that had frequently been used for the display of sculpture during the mid-sixteenth century. The original iron ring cemented into the unfinished back suggests that the piece was once attached to a wall. The 1795 Niccolini inventory documents that the original socle was of the same stone as the bust; the present one is a later replacement.

[Ian Wardropper. European Sculpture, 1400–1900, In the Metropolitan Museum of Art. New York, 2011, no. 19, pp. 66–67.]
Footnotes:

1. Karla Langedijk. The Portraits of the Medici, Fifteenth–Eighteenth Centuries. 3 vols. Florence, 1981–87, vol. 1, pp. 495 – 500.

2. For the lost bust of Augustus, see Kurt W. Forster. "Metaphors of Rule: Political Ideology and History in the Portraits of Cosimo I de’ Medici." Mitteilungen des Kunsthistorischen Institutes in Florenz 15, no. 1 (1971), pp. 65-104, p. 88. For the cameos, see Wolf-Rudiger Megow. Kameen von Augustus bis Alexander Severus. Antike Münzen und geschnittene Steine 11. Deutsches Archäologisches Institut. Berlin, 1987, p. 166, a18, pl. 8, 6. The Metropolitan Museum collection contains a fine portrait cameo of Emperor Augustus dating between A.D. 41 and 54 (acc. no. 42.11.30).

3. "Ed aveva Baccio per costume, nelle statue ch’ e’ faceva, di mettere de’ pezzi piccoli e grandi di marmo, non gli dando noia il fare cio’, e ridendosene." Giorgio Vasari. Le vite de’ più eccellenti pittori, scultori ed archetettori. 2nd ed. 3 vols. Florence, 1568. 1906 ed., edited by Gaetano Milanesi. 9 vols. Florence, 1906, vol. 6, p. 174; English trans., Vasari 1568/1996, vol. 2, p. 293.

4. For one example, an Antonine-era bust in Ostia, see Raissa Calza, ed. Scavi di Ostia. Vol. 5, I ritratti. Pt. 1, Ritratti greci e romani fino al 160 circa d.C. Rome, 1964, pp. 108 – 9, no. 187.

5. A copy of the inventory (from the archives of the Niccolini family) is in the curatorial files of the Department of European Sculpture and Decorative Arts, Metropolitan Museum.

6. The sixteenth- and seventeenth-century biographies of Giovanni Bandini by Raffaello Borghini and Filippo Baldinucci give information about the house of Giovanni Niccolini. See Raffaello Borghini. Il Riposo. Florence, 1584, p. 638; Filippo Baldinucci. Notizie dei professori del disegno da Cimabue in qua. Florence, 1681-1728. Reprint ed., 7 vols. Florence, 1845-47. [Reprint ed., vols. 1-5. Florence, 1974-75.], vol. 3, p. 67
  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。