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)战士瓶
品名(英)Warrior Bottle
入馆年号1967年,67.167.4
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 300 - 公元 700
创作地区秘鲁(Peru)
分类陶瓷容器(Ceramics-Containers)
尺寸高 11 1/4 × 宽 6 3/4 × 深 8 英寸 (28.6 × 17.1 × 20.3 厘米)
介绍(中)这只瓶子以一种被称为"细线"的风格绘制,因其在白色背景上用红纸条(粘土和/或其他着色剂在水中的悬浮液)精心绘制的详细人物和场景而得名,它描绘了四名战士,成对排列,站在环绕容器的红色底线上。烧瓶形瓶是莫切陶瓷中不太常见的容器形状,包括马镫形壶嘴,这是莫切瓶的一个特征。这种喷口通常位于船体的顶部,因为它们在形式上与马镫相似,马镫是一种用于将脚固定在马鞍上的装置(尽管与该功能完全无关)。在这个瓶子上,镫形喷口偏心地位于侧面,从而允许放置一个中心的圆柱形密封元件,该元件类似于一个瓶子喷口,但不起作用(Donnan和McClelland,1999)

画在舰体上的战士们穿着完整的战斗服面对对手,包括盾牌、棍棒,还有长矛。每个战士都戴着一个后膝(一种身体盔甲,悬挂在腰部,终止于弯曲的边缘),下巴下系着一个圆锥形头盔,穿着束腰外衣。每个战士佩戴的头盔和束腰外衣都有匹配的设计,但每个战士的法衣都是独一无二的。四顶头盔中有三顶有羽毛细节;第四个是动物毛皮。所有的头盔顶部都有新月形的饰边。每个人一只手拿着一个小盾牌,另一只手持狼牙棒。一名战斗人员手持两个飞镖和一根投掷棒,可以通过一端的钩子和另一端的拇指抓握来识别。在这对战士的背后,有几种形式被认为代表了生活在秘鲁沿海沙漠中的开花凤梨科植物,这可能表明了战斗的大致地点(Donnan和McClelland,1999)

大约2500年来,镫形喷口船在秘鲁北部海岸一直是一种备受青睐的形式。尽管这种独特形状的象征意义仍然让学者们感到困惑,但双分支、单喷口的配置可能减缓了其液体内容物的蒸发。该形状也可能便于携带。早在公元前一千年,摩切艺术家就将这些瓶子雕刻成了各种各样的形式,包括人物、动物和植物,所有这些都带有大量的自然主义色彩。大约500年后,如本例所示,瓶室主要变成球形,提供了大的表面,可以在其上绘制复杂的多人物场景

公元200850年,即印加人崛起前的几个世纪,摩切人(也称为摩奇卡人)在秘鲁北海岸蓬勃发展。在大约六个世纪的过程中,莫切人建立了繁荣的地区中心,从南部的尼佩尼亚河谷到可能最北的皮乌拉河,靠近与厄瓜多尔的现代边界,将沿海沙漠开发成丰富的农田,并利用太平洋洪堡流的丰富海洋资源。尽管Moche政治组织的确切性质是一个争论的主题,但这些中心具有统一的文化特征,如宗教实践(Donnan,2010)

战斗和行进中的勇士是摩切艺术的一个主要主题。然而,这一时期武装冲突的考古证据相对较少(Arkush和Tung,2013),摩切遗址也没有设防。然而,在一些地位较高的墓葬中发现了棍棒和长矛等武器,这表明至少存在一定程度的暴力互动,尽管学者们对这种互动的性质并不一致(Bourget,2008;卡斯蒂略,2017;皮尔斯伯里,2001年;Scherer和Verano,2014)。一些学者认为,莫切战争主要是世俗的和扩张主义的,不同沿海或高地种族的成员之间为了获得新的领土和可灌溉的土地而发生冲突。其他学者认为,摩切战争具有强烈的仪式性,交战将涉及来自不同山谷的摩切战斗人员,并导致俘虏,可能注定要在宗教仪式上牺牲。这两种战争可能都存在于摩切社会。一些学者认为,在细线陶瓷中可以识别出不同的种族(Lau 2010),但包括本例在内的大多数器皿都表明主人公都是莫切人。然而,未来的研究可能会揭示更多的区别,并揭示莫切战争的问题

参考文献和进一步阅读

Arkush、Elizabeth和Tiffiny A.Tung。《安第斯山脉从古代到晚期的战争模式:从定居模式和颅骨创伤中的见解》,《考古研究杂志》21(4)(2013),第307-369页

波杰,史蒂夫。摩切人中的牺牲、暴力和意识形态。古代秘鲁社会复杂性的兴起。德克萨斯州奥斯汀:德克萨斯大学出版社,2016年。

卡斯蒂略,路易斯·詹姆。《宇宙大师:摩切艺术家及其赞助人》,载于乔安妮·皮尔斯伯里、蒂莫西·波茨和金·N·里希特主编的《黄金王国:古代美洲的奢侈品艺术》。洛杉矶:J.Paul Getty博物馆,2017年,第25-32页。

Donnan、Christopher B.和Donna McClelland。摩切细线画,它的演变和它的艺术家。洛杉矶:加利福尼亚大学洛杉矶分校。福勒文化历史博物馆,1999年。

Donnan,Christopher B."莫切国家宗教"。杰弗里·奎尔特和路易斯·海梅·卡斯蒂略编辑的《莫切政治组织的新视角》。第47-69页。华盛顿特区:邓巴顿橡树研究图书馆和收藏,2010年。Lau,George F."作为战争文化的防御工事:公元400-800年亚伊诺山顶中心(秘鲁安卡什)",《剑桥考古学杂志》第20期(2010年),第419-448页

Pillsbury,Joanne编辑,《古代摩切艺术与考古学》
介绍(英)Painted in a style called “fineline,” so named for the detailed figures and scenes delicately painted in red slip (a suspension of clay and/or other colorants in water) on a white background, this bottle depicts four warriors, arrayed in pairs and standing on a red ground line that encircles the vessel. The flask-shaped bottle—a less-common vessel shape in Moche ceramics—includes a stirrup-spout, a characteristic feature of Moche bottles. So-called for their formal resemblance to stirrups, a device used to anchor a foot to the saddle of a horse (although entirely unrelated to that function), such spouts are usually located at the top of the vessel’s body. On this bottle, the stirrup-spout is eccentrically located to the side, thereby permitting the placement of a central, cylindrical, sealed element that resembles a bottle spout but does not serve as one (Donnan and McClelland, 1999).

The warriors painted on the body of the vessel face their opponents in full battle regalia, including shields, clubs and, in one case, spears. Each warrior wears a backflap (a type of body armor, suspended from the waist and terminating in a curved edge), a conical helmet tied under the chin, and a tunic. The helmets and tunics worn by each warrior feature matching designs, but each warrior’s vestments are unique. Three of the four helmets have detailing suggesting feathers; a fourth features an animal pelt. All of the helmets are surmounted by crescent-shaped finials. Each figure holds a small shield in one hand and a mace in the other hand. One combatant holds two darts and a throwing stick, which can be identified by the hook at one end and the thumb grasp at the other. Behind the pairs of warriors, there are several forms thought to represent flowering bromeliads, plants that live on Peru’s coastal desert, perhaps suggesting a general location of the battle (Donnan and McClelland, 1999).

The stirrup-spout vessel was a much favored form on Peru's northern coast for about 2,500 years. Although the symbolism of this distinctive shape is still puzzling to scholars, the double-branch, single-spout configuration may have slowed the evaporation of its liquid contents. The shape may also have been convenient for carrying. Early in the first millennium A.D., Moche artists sculpted such bottles into a wide range of forms, including human figures, animals, and plants, all worked with a great deal of naturalism. About 500 years later, bottle chambers became predominantly globular, as in the present example, providing large surfaces on which to paint complex, multi-figure scenes.

The Moche (also known as the Mochicas) flourished on Peru’s North Coast from 200850 A.D., centuries before the rise of the Incas. Over the course of some six centuries, the Moche built thriving regional centers from the Nepeña River Valley in the south to perhaps as far north as the Piura River, near the modern border with Ecuador, developing coastal deserts into rich farmlands and drawing upon the abundant maritime resources of the Pacific Ocean’s Humboldt Current. Although the precise nature of Moche political organization is a subject of debate, these centers shared unifying cultural traits such as religious practices (Donnan, 2010).

Warriors, in battle and in procession, are a major theme in Moche art. Archaeological evidence of armed conflict in this period, however, is comparatively scarce (Arkush and Tung, 2013), and Moche sites are not fortified. Yet weapons such as clubs and lances have been found in some high-status burials, suggesting that there was at least some degree of violent interaction, although scholars do not agree on the nature of this engagement (Bourget, 2008; Castillo, 2017; Pillsbury, 2001; Scherer and Verano, 2014). Some scholars maintain that Moche warfare was primarily secular and expansionist, and that conflict occurred between members of different coastal or highland ethnicities in order to gain new territory and irrigable land. Other scholars argue that Moche warfare had a strong ritual character, and engagement would have involved Moche combatants from different valleys and led to the capture of prisoners, perhaps destined to be sacrificed during religious ceremonies. Both types of warfare might have existed in Moche society. Some scholars have suggested that distinct ethnicities can be identified in the fineline ceramics (Lau 2010), but most vessels, including the present example, would suggest that the protagonists are all Moche. Future study may reveal additional distinctions, however, and shed light on the question of Moche warfare.

References and Further Reading

Arkush, Elizabeth and Tiffiny A. Tung. “Patterns of War in the Andes from the Archaic to the Late Horizon: Insights from Settlement Patterns and Cranial Trauma.” Journal of Archaeological Research 21 (4) (2013), pp. 307-369.

Bourget, Steve. Sacrifice, Violence, and Ideology Among the Moche. The Rise of Social Complexity in Ancient Peru. Austin, TX: University of Texas Press, 2016.

Castillo, Luis Jaime. “Masters of the Universe: Moche Artists and Their Patrons.” In Golden Kingdoms: Luxury Arts in the Ancient Americas, edited by Joanne Pillsbury, Timothy Potts, and Kim N. Richter. Los Angeles: J. Paul Getty Museum, 2017, pp. 25-32.

Donnan, Christopher B. and Donna McClelland. Moche Fineline Painting, Its Evolution and Its Artists. Los Angeles: University of California, Los Angeles. Fowler Museum of Cultural History, 1999.

Donnan, Christopher B. “Moche State Religion.” In New Perspectives on Moche Political Organization, edited by Jeffrey Quilter and Luis Jaime Castillo. pp. 47-69. Washington D.C.: Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection, 2010. Lau, George F. “Fortifications as Warfare Culture: The Hilltop Centre of Yayno (Ancash, Peru) AD 400-800.” Cambridge Archeology Journal 20 (2010), pp 419-448.

Pillsbury, Joanne, ed. Moche Art and Archeology in Ancient Peru. Washington, D.C.: Center for Advanced Study in the Visual Arts, National Gallery of Art, 2001. Scherer, Andrew K. and John W. Verano. “Introducing War in Pre-Columbian Mesoamerica and the Andes.” In Embattled Bodies, Embattled Places, War in Pre-Columbian Mesoamerica and the Andes, edited by Andrew K. Scherer and John W. Verano, pp. 1-24. Washington D.C.: Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection, 2014.
  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。