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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)玉米神(Chicomecoatl)
品名(英)Maize Deity (Chicomecoatl)
入馆年号1900年,00.5.28
策展部门迈克尔·洛克菲勒之翼The Michael C. Rockefeller Wing
创作者
创作年份公元 1400 - 公元 1550
创作地区墨西哥(Mexico)
分类石雕(Stone-Sculpture)
尺寸高 19 1/2 × 宽 8 1/2 × 深 5 1/2 英寸 (49.5 × 21.6 × 14 厘米)
介绍(中)玉米是中美洲人的主要主食,也是当地宗教信仰的重要组成部分。在阿兹特克人中,玉米及其生长周期的特定方面以美丽而有力的神的形式表现出来,如Cinteotl("神化的玉米",一个年轻的神)和Xilonen("新鲜、嫩的玉米"是一个处女女神)。这里看到的雕塑很可能描绘了女神奇科梅科尔("7蛇"),成熟玉米的化身

这位神跪着坐着,双脚向内,每只手拿着一对玉米芯,戴着一顶被称为"纸屋"的高耸头饰(amacalli)。风车形的玫瑰花结装饰着每个上角,一组飘带从人物的侧面和背面垂下。头饰的中央面板有一个由折叠树皮纸(<i>amatl</i>)制成的装饰装置,上面和下面用扭曲的绳子框起来。在顶部,锯齿状和华丽的图案构成了人物锥形轮廓的上限。所有这些服装元素都是农业节日庆祝活动中常见的固定装置,牧师和他们的敌方俘虏会打扮成神,唱圣歌,跳舞,献祭,希望获得丰收

在这里,对玉米的经济描绘是一样的、钝的、直立的,强调了其象征性的一面,并重申了巨大纸冠的垂直推力。女神,就像玉米一样,也有一些普通的渲染。她的个人风格——一双咖啡豆色的眼睛、薄薄的嘴唇和谦逊的鼻子——几乎完全被她精心设计的建筑装饰所包围。通过这种方式,女神被概念化为一种匿名的母性力量,一种保护庇护所的象征,以及农业繁殖力的体现

玉米女神的雕塑从大规模、高度详细的例子到简单、便携得多的作品都有。这些人物的数量相对较大,再加上他们相当传统的形式,表明他们是大量产生的,也许是作为一个广泛流行的邪教的家喻户晓的偶像。这座特殊的雕塑,有着坚实、块状的身体和不朽的头饰,传达出的重量感和体积感远远大于其实际的物理尺寸,是无处不在的人物类型的典范(另请参阅Aztec石雕)。

William T.Gassaway,2014–15 Sylvan C.Coleman和Pamela Coleman Fellow

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资源和其他阅读

Nicholson,Henry b."生育女神的阿兹特克石头图像。"Baessler-Archiv11号(1963年):9–30。

Nicholson、Henry B.和Eloise Quiñones Keber 墨西哥阿兹特克艺术:特诺奇蒂特兰的宝藏。华盛顿国家美术馆展览目录,1983年。华盛顿特区:国家美术馆,1983年 阿兹特克艺术。诺曼:俄克拉荷马大学出版社,1983年。

Smith,Michael E.阿兹特克人。第2版,马尔登,马萨诸塞州:布莱克威尔出版社,2003年。
介绍(英)Maize (corn) was the main food staple of the Mesoamerican diet and formed an important facet of native religious beliefs. Among the Aztecs, specific aspects of maize and its growth cycle were represented in the form of beautiful and potent deities, such as Cinteotl ("deified corn," a youthful god) and Xilonen ("fresh, tender corn," a virginal goddess). The sculpture seen here likely depicts the goddess Chicomecoatl ("7 Serpent"), the personification of mature, ripened corn.

Seated in a kneeling position with her feet turned inward beneath her, the deity holds a pair of corncobs in each hand and wears a towering headdress called a "paper house" (amacalli). Pinwheel-shaped rosettes decorate each of the upper corners, as a group of streamers descends down the figure’s sides and back. The central panel of the headdress features an ornamental device made of folded bark paper (amatl) and is framed, above and below, with twisted ropes. At top, bands of crenellated and flamboyant motifs define the upper limit of the figure’s tapered silhouette. All of these costume elements were common fixtures during the celebration of agricultural festivals, when priests and their enemy captives would dress as the gods, sing sacred songs, dance, and offer sacrifices in the hope of securing a bountiful harvest.

Here, the economical depiction of corn—identical, blunted, and positioned upright—underscores its symbolic aspect and reiterates the vertical thrust of the immense paper crown. The goddess, like the corn, is rendered somewhat generically as well. Her individual traits—a pair of coffee-bean eyes, thin lips, and modest nose—are almost completely subsumed by her elaborate, architectonic adornments. In this way, the goddess is conceptualized as an anonymous maternal force, an emblem of protective shelter, and the embodiment of agricultural fecundity.

Sculptures of maize goddesses vary from large-scale and highly detailed examples to simple, far more portable works. The comparatively large corpus of these figures—combined with their rather conventionalized form—suggests that they were produced in great numbers, perhaps as household idols for a widespread popular cult. This particular sculpture, with its solid, blocky body and monumental headdress, conveys a sense of heft and volume far greater than its actual physical dimensions and is a fine exemplar of a ubiquitous figure type (see also Aztec stone sculpture).

William T. Gassaway, 2014–15 Sylvan C. Coleman and Pamela Coleman Fellow

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Resources and Additional Reading

Nicholson, Henry B. "An Aztec Stone Image of a Fertility Goddess." Baessler Archiv 11, no. 1 (1963): 9–30.

Nicholson, Henry B., and Eloise Quiñones-Keber. The Art of Aztec Mexico: Treasures of Tenochtitlan. Catalogue of an Exhibition at the National Gallery of Art, Washington, 1983. Washington, D.C.: National Gallery of Art, 1983.

Pasztory, Esther. Aztec Art. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1983.

Smith, Michael E. The Aztecs. 2nd ed. Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishing, 2003.
  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。