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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)圣塔西修斯
品名(英)Saint Tarcisius
入馆年号2007年,2007.407
策展部门欧洲雕塑和装饰艺术European Sculpture and Decorative Arts
创作者Alexandre Falguière【1831 至 1900】【法国人】
创作年份公元 1875 - 公元 1885
创作地区
分类雕塑(Sculpture)
尺寸整体 (confirmed): 高 23 1/2 x 宽 52 x 深 20 英寸 (59.7 x 132.1 x 50.8 厘米)
介绍(中)出生于图卢兹的亚历山大·法尔吉埃(Alexandre Falguière)作为巴黎第二帝国的雕塑家得到了广泛的认可,并收到了许多在公共建筑和广场上竖立纪念碑的委托。官方的成功来得很早。他于1859年赢得罗马大奖赛,并在罗马法兰西学院学习至1865年。[1]1864年,他向沙龙提交的必修作品《斗鸡的胜利者》在巴黎展出。尽管在主题上——意大利农民男孩的转移——它遵循了法尔吉耶尔早期大师弗朗索瓦·鲁德和他在学院的同学让-巴蒂斯特·卡波建立的传统,但其朴实的现实主义在某些方面受到批评;然而,这并没有阻止法国政府订购青铜版本(巴黎奥赛博物馆)。然而,巩固他声誉的雕塑是圣塔西修斯,法尔吉埃从意大利回来后,在 1867 年的沙龙上展出了石膏版本。政府再次支持他,购买石膏并委托制作大理石版本(奥赛博物馆),该版本在 1868 年的沙龙上获得了荣誉勋章。即使是卡波的《乌戈利诺和他的儿子》(第84号)也没有像圣塔西修斯那样得到官方的尊重,因为国家只订购了青铜器,而不是大理石。[2]

尽管法尔吉埃的大理石这个早期基督教主题看起来是理想化的,但他的模特是一个真正的意大利男孩。艺术家收藏的一张照片(图65)显示他被哄得昏厥,一张床单披在他躺着的身体上。对于完成的作品,Falguière拉伸和平滑了布料,以强调身体的曲线。在罗马逗留期间,当他可能第一次构思这个主题时,他显然看到了斯特凡诺·马德尔诺(Stefano Maderno)对另一位早期基督教殉道者圣塞西莉亚(1600年,特拉斯提弗列的圣塞西莉亚教堂)的著名巴洛克雕塑。众所周知,这座雕像描绘了圣人躺在与发现时她的尸体相同的位置,其主题的大理石渲染的凄美简单是十九世纪雕塑家无法忽视的一个例子。

在墓地之外,男性青年的卧像很少见。詹姆斯·德雷珀(James Draper)指出,弗朗索瓦-约瑟夫·博西奥(François-Joseph Bosio)的《受伤的风信子》(1817年,大理石,巴黎卢浮宫博物馆)的姿势类似,一个膝盖向前伸出,躯干抬起在肘部。[3] 皮埃尔-让·大卫·昂热(Pierre-Jean David d'Angers)的年轻革命英雄约瑟夫·巴拉(Joseph Bara)的雕塑(1838年,石膏模型,昂热大卫·德昂热画廊)广为人知,雅克-路易·大卫(Jacques-Louis David)的同一主题绘画(1794年,阿维尼翁卡尔维特博物馆)很有名。这些作品中的任何一件都可能激发了法尔吉埃的灵感,他本人也承认当代雕塑卡波的乌戈利诺和他的儿子们的影响。卡波作品中左边的小儿子,艺术家在设计过程后期添加了一个人物,以突出场景的悲情,无疑是圣塔西修斯的典范。

早期的基督教科目在十九世纪中叶开始流行。在法尔吉埃的案例中,一部被广泛阅读的当代小说启发了他:红衣主教威斯曼的法比奥拉,或地下墓穴教堂,于 1854 年在罗马出版,比法尔吉埃到达那里早几年。在书中,威斯曼描述了一个名叫塔西修斯(Tarcisius)的罗马男孩,他是早期基督教会的一名追随者,当他将圣体面包从地下墓穴带到城中的死刑犯时,他在亚壁古道上遭到嘲笑异教徒的袭击。正如这块大理石上的铭文所表明的那样,年轻人宁愿死,也不愿将主人交给不信的人。他右侧散落的石头和额头上的贴边是他殉难的证据。圣塔西修斯双手交叉在主持人身上,闭着眼睛,表情向往,引起了公众的共鸣。在第一个版本中,铭文包含在金字塔底部侧面的平板电脑状矩形中。在第二个版本中,现在在博物馆的雕塑,法尔吉埃为自己保留(或未能出售),铭文的字母被粗鲁地划入蓝色大理石上,雕刻以模拟亚壁古道的粗糙铺路石。这种和其他变化——石头的排列、降低的臀部、主机上没有装饰——表明这不仅仅是一个复制品,而是一个修订。大理石上的指向标记显示了这些更改是如何以及在何处进行的。

脚注

1.底座顶部的铭文翻译为:"当圣塔西修斯携带基督圣事时,一群暴徒要求他将其交到亵渎的手中。然而,被扔在地上,他宁愿放弃自己的生命,也不愿将天体交给愤怒的狗。
2. Janson 1985,第153页,指出是圣塔西修斯使法尔吉埃声名鹊起,并将其与乌戈利诺及其儿子的欢迎相提并论。
3. 大都会博物馆欧洲雕塑与装饰艺术部策展档案报告。
介绍(英)Toulouse-born alexandre falguière found wide acceptance as a sculptor in Second Empire Paris, receiving numerous commissions for monuments to be erected in public buildings and squares. Official success came early. He won the Prix de Rome in 1859 and studied at the Académie de France à Rome until 1865.[1] Winner of the Cockfight, his required submission piece to the Salon, was exhibited in Paris in 1864. Although in its subject —  the diversions of Italian peasant boys —  it followed a tradition established by Falguière’s early master François Rude and his fellow student at the academy, Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux, its earthy realism was criticized in some quarters; however, this did not prevent the French government from ordering a bronze version (Musée d’Orsay, Paris). The sculpture that solidified his reputation, however, was Saint Tarcisius, the plaster version of which Falguière exhibited at the Salon of 1867, after his return from Italy. Again, the government supported him, purchasing the plaster and commissioning a marble version (Musée d’Orsay), which won the medal of honor at the Salon of 1868. Even Carpeaux’s Ugolino and His Sons (no. 84) did not receive the same full measure of official esteem that Saint Tarcisius did, since the state ordered only a bronze and not a marble of it.[2]

Although Falguière’s marble of this Early Christian subject appears idealized, his model was a real Italian boy. A photograph in the artist’s collection (fig. 65) shows him coaxed into a histrionic swoon, a sheet draped over his recumbent body. For the finished work, Falguière stretched and smoothed the cloth to emphasize the body’s curves. During his stay in Rome, when he may have first conceived the subject, he obviously saw the famous Baroque sculpture by Stefano Maderno of another early Christian martyr, Saint Cecilia (1600, church of Santa Cecilia in Trastevere). By repute, that statue depicts the saint lying in the same position as her body was when it was discovered, and the poignant simplicity of the marble rendering of its subject was an example a nineteenth-century sculptor could not ignore.

Outside of cemeteries, recumbent statues of male youths are rare. James Draper has noted that François-Joseph Bosio’s The Wounded Hyacinth (1817, marble, Musée du Louvre, Paris) is similarly posed, with one knee drawn forward and the torso raised on the elbows.[3] Pierre-Jean David d’Angers’s sculpture of the young Revolutionary hero Joseph Bara lying dead (1838, plaster model, Galerie David d’Angers, Angers) was well known, and Jacques-Louis David’s painting of the same subject (1794, Musée Calvet, Avignon) was famous. Any one of those works may have inspired Falguière, who himself acknowledged the influence of a contemporary sculpture, Carpeaux’s Ugolino and His Sons. The young son to the left in Carpeaux’s composition, a figure that the artist added to heighten the pathos of the scene late in the design process, was certainly a model for Saint Tarcisius.

Early Christian subjects gained popularity in the mid-nineteenth century. In Falguière’s case, a widely read contemporary novel inspired him: Cardinal Wiesman’s Fabiola, or the Church of the Catacombs, which was published in Rome in 1854, a few years before Falguière arrived there. In the book, Wiesman gives an account of a Roman boy named Tarcisius, an acolyte in the early Christian church, who was attacked by jeering pagans on the Appian Way as he carried the eucharistic bread from the catacombs to condemned prisoners in the city. As the inscription on this marble makes clear, the youth chose to die rather than surrender the host to unbelievers. A scattering of stones by his right side and the welt on his forehead are evidence of his martyrdom. With hands crossed over the host, closed eyes, and a yearning expression, Saint Tarcisius struck a chord with the public. In the first version, the inscription is contained in a tabletlike rectangle on the side of a pyramidal base. In the second version, the sculpture now in the Museum, which Falguière kept for himself (or failed to sell), the letters of the inscription are scratched rudely into the blue-tinged marble, carved to simulate the rough paving stones of the Appian Way. This and other variations —  the arrangement of the stones, the lowered hips, the absence of decoration on the host —  ​signal that this is not merely a copy but a revision. Pointing marks on the marble show how and where these changes were made.

Footnotes

1. The inscription on the top of the base translates as: "While Saint Tarcisius was carrying the Blessed Sacrament of Christ, a band of thugs demanded that he relinquish it into their profane hands. However, thrown to the ground, he preferred to give up his own life rather than relinquish the celestial body to enraged dogs."
2. Janson 1985, p. 153, notes that it was Saint Tarcisius that made Falguière’s reputation and compares its reception to that of Ugolino and His Sons.
3. Report in the curatorial files, Department of European Sculpture and Decorative Arts, Metropolitan Museum.
  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。