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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)男性雕像
品名(英)Male figurine
入馆年号1974年,1974.271.7
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 1533
创作地区厄瓜多尔、秘鲁、玻利维亚、智利或阿根廷(Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, Chile, or Argentina)
分类雕塑金属板(Sculpture-Sheet metal)
尺寸高 2 7/16 × 宽 3/4 × 深 1/2 英寸 (6.2 × 1.9 × 1.3 厘米)
介绍(中)这尊雕像描绘了一个戴着美洲驼的男人,这是一种印加人的头饰,通常由骆驼毛制成,在其他方面是裸体的。杏仁形状的眼睛、鼻子和嘴巴,以及长有耳垂的耳朵,这表明它们安装了线轴,嘴巴左侧有一个凸起的小区域,这表明所描绘的人正在积极咀嚼古柯,这是一种神圣的植物,食用古柯有助于加强安第斯民族与自然世界以及彼此之间的关系(Allen 2002)。这个男性形象站得笔直,双臂和双手靠近胸部

这尊雕像很可能是作为华卡(一种奎丘亚语和艾马拉语中对神圣存在的称呼)制作和存放的,可能是印加向华卡献祭的更广泛的一部分。其中一种是印加帝国的capac hucha或皇家义务,包括收集在库斯科提供的材料和人员,以及他们在那里、印加帝国中心或省级地区的牺牲,作为标记帝国地理范围的一种方式(Cieza de León 1959、190-193;Diez de Betanzos 1996、46)

在这些印加金属拟人雕像中,往往有三个高度组(5-7厘米、13-15厘米、22-24厘米)(见McEwan 2015282,n.15),而这尊雕像属于最小的高度组。这尊雕像是通过XRF将七块金属片连接在一起制成的,金属片的成分约为53%的金、40%的银和少量的铜。它可能曾经被织物包裹过,包括一件uncu(束腰外衣)和一件yaqolla(披风),头上装饰着羽毛,还有一种编织纤维,以美洲驼的形式包裹在这种头饰的金属版上(参见MAAM 2007,72关于Llullillaco的capac hucha组合中的此类雕像的例子)

如x射线所示(见图2),物体的七个薄片组成部分包括:骆驼头或头饰;头部、躯干和腿部;两只耳朵;阴茎;裆部区域中的角撑板;和两只脚。金属匠锤击矩形薄片,将其包裹起来,形成羊驼身体的圆柱形,并将其举起,用同一块金属形成羊驼的半球形帽。这种半圆柱体的两个垂直长度的连接所产生的任何接缝都是不明显的(与Dumbarton Oaks PC.B.474在Lechtman 19960309中相反)。骆驼头上刻有围绕圆柱体延伸的水平线(见图3),在某种程度上形成了可能环绕头部的编织骆驼纤维包裹,或为脊椎骨外壳装饰的外层提供了基础,分别出现在Llullillaco和Choquepujio的男性雕像上

耳朵被拉长,以表明它们可以容纳卷轴,这是印加贵族的标志,耳朵被锤击成形,并可能通过焊接连接到头部的侧面,正如Lechtman(1996/309)在DO PC.B.474中观察到的那样。骆驼的身体与头部的顶部边缘重叠(见图3)。在连接这些部件的过程中,头部区域出现了一些不规则现象,包括头饰正下方右侧前额的金属重叠

脸上的细节是从内部和/或外部锤击的,包括口腔中有一磅古柯的迹象,表现为嘴唇左侧的轻微凹陷。与半圆柱形头饰一样,头部/躯干/腿部也在其末端连接,尽管在这种情况下是沿着其主轴连接的,并且从雕像的背面可以看到一条接缝,稍微偏右。该躯干区域的左端似乎与右端重叠,并且两端被焊接,因为存在孔隙和部分变色,这表明该区域的金属成分不同。手上的各个手指已经通过现在这张纸内部的精细锤击进行了指示

阴茎是一个单独的片状部件(见图4)。金属匠在阴茎区域的头部/躯干/腿部穿孔。除了连接在顶部的上部外,该位置的金属不再存在。阴茎是由一根锤击的金属管制成的,通过焊接连接在穿孔区域的顶部。剖面x光片显示它延伸到雕像中。睾丸已经通过锤击头部/躯干/腿部床单来指示。腿部也有接缝;在这两种情况下,接缝都在腿的面向内侧的部分,因此对观看者来说不那么显眼。从宏观观察和x射线照相来看,焊料似乎被用来连接形成每个支腿的圆柱体的两个垂直长度。睾丸下方有一个轻微的不连续性,这表明在该区域添加了一个金属角撑板,以填充头部/躯干/腿部组件就位后保持开放的空间。脚部是单独的薄片,锤击成形,顶部可能有延伸部分,并插入腿部组件。铁匠通过雕刻每只脚的顶部来指示脚趾(见图5)

这尊雕像和印加金属雕像中的其他雕像源于安第斯山脉中部金属塑性变形和多片薄片连接的悠久传统。它们的生产地点尚不确定,但就它们的沉积而言,这些雕像中的许多都是经过特别策划的,以在整个印加景观的关键圣地的大型金属、脊椎骨和纺织品组合中发挥有效作用,就像华卡人自己一样

技术说明:2017年进行的光学显微镜、X射线照相和XRF

Bryan Cockrell,AAOA策展研究员
Beth Edelstein,OCD副音乐学院院长
Ellen Howe,OCD Emerita音乐学院院长
2017

已发表参考文献
介绍(英)This figurine depicts a man wearing a llautu, an Inca headdress often made of camelid wool, who is otherwise naked. The almond-shaped eyes, nose, and mouth, along with the ears with extended lobes that suggest they were fitted with spools and a small raised region on the proper left of mouth, indicating that the person depicted is actively chewing coca, a sacred plant whose consumption helps to fortify relationships among Andean peoples to the natural world and with each other (Allen 2002). The male figure stands upright with arms and hands brought in close to the chest.

The figurine was likely fabricated and deposited as a huaca, a Quechua and Aymara term for a sacred being, and may have been part of a wider Inca offering to a huaca. One such type of offering was the Inca imperial practice of capac hucha, or royal obligation, involving the collection of materials and human beings to be offered in Cusco and their sacrifice there, in the Inca imperial center, or in provincial regions as a way of marking the geographical extent of the empire (Cieza de León 1959, 190-193; Diez de Betanzos 1996, 46).

There tend to be three height groups (5-7 cm, 13-15 cm, 22-24 cm) among this corpus of Inca anthropomorphic figurines in metal (see McEwan 2015, 282, n. 15), and this figurine is in the smallest height group. The figurine was fabricated by joining seven pieces of metal sheet together, whose composition is approximately 53% gold, 40% silver, and a small amount of copper, by XRF. It may have once been wrapped in textiles, including an uncu (tunic) and a yaqolla (mantle), adorned with feathers on its head, and woven fibers, in the form of a llautu, wrapped around the metal version of this headdress (see MAAM 2007, 72 for examples of such figurines from the capac hucha assemblage from Llullaillaco).

As the x-rays indicate (see image 2), the seven sheet components of the object include: the llautu, or headdress; the head, torso, and legs; the two ears; the penis; a gusset in the crotch region; and the two feet. The metalsmith hammered rectangular sheet, wrapping it around to form the cylindrical shape of the llautu body and raising it to form the hemispherical cap of the llautu from the same piece of metal. Any seam that would have resulted from joining the two vertical lengths of this semi-cylinder is not apparent (contra. Dumbarton Oaks PC.B.474 in Lechtman 1996, 309). The llautu is engraved with horizontal lines extending around the cylinder (see image 3), in a way creating the wraps of woven camelid fiber that may have encircled the head or providing the base for an external layer of Spondylus shell decoration, as included on male figurines from Llullaillaco and Choquepujio respectively.

The ears, elongated to show that they could accommodate spools, a marker of Inca nobility, were hammered to shape and joined to the sides of the head likely by soldering, as Lechtman (1996, 309) observed for DO PC.B.474. The body of the llautu overlaps the top edges of the head (see image 3). In the process of joining these components, some irregularities emerged in the head region, including an overlap of metal on the proper right forehead immediately underneath the headdress.

The details on the face have been hammered from the interior and/or exterior, including the indication of a quid of coca in the mouth, shown by a slight indentation on the proper left side of the lip. Like the semi-cylindrical headdress piece, the head/torso/legs piece was also joined at its ends, though along its major axis in this case, and a seam is visible down the back of the figurine, slightly right of center. It appears that the left end of this torso region overlaps the right end, and the two ends were soldered, given the presence of porosity and partial discoloration, suggesting a different metal composition, in this region. The individual fingers on the hands have been indicated by fine hammering from what is now the interior of this sheet.

The penis is a separate sheet component (see image 4). The metalsmith perforated the head/torso/legs piece in the region of the penis. The metal in this location is no longer present, except for the upper portion which is attached at the top. The penis is made of a hammered tube of metal that was attached by soldering to the top of this perforated region. The profile x-ray shows that it extends into the figurine. The testicles have been indicated by hammering the head/torso/legs sheet. Seams are also present on the legs; in both cases, the seam is on the inside-facing part of the leg and thus less conspicuous to the viewer. From macroscopic observation and x-radiography, it appears that solder was used to join the two vertical lengths of the cylinder that formed each leg. There is a slight discontinuity visible below the testicles suggesting that a gusset of metal has been added in the region to fill the space that would have remained open once the head/torso/legs component was in place. The feet are individual sheets hammered to shape that may have extension on the tops and that were inserted into the leg components. The smith has indicated toes by engraving the top of each foot piece (see image 5).

This figurine and others in the corpus of Inca figurines of metal emerged out of a long tradition in the central Andes of the plastic deformation of metal and the joining of multiple pieces of sheet. The location of their production is uncertain, but, in terms of their deposition, many of these figurines were specially curated to play an efficacious role, as huacas themselves, in larger assemblages of metal, Spondylus, and textiles at key sacred sites throughout the Inca landscape.

Technical notes: Optical microscopy, X-radiography, and XRF conducted in 2017.

Bryan Cockrell, Curatorial Fellow, AAOA
Beth Edelstein, Associate Conservator, OCD
Ellen Howe, Conservator Emerita, OCD
2017

Published References

Burger, Richard L., and Lucy C. Salazar. Machu Picchu: Unveiling the Mystery of the Incas. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2004, cat. no. 166.

Further Reading

Allen, Catherine J. The Hold Life Has: Coca and Cultural Identity in an Andean Community. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press, 2002.

Cieza de León, Pedro de. The Incas. Edited by Victor Wolfgang von Hagen. Translated by Harriet de Onis. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, [1553] 1959.

Diez de Betanzos, Juan. Narrative of the Incas. Translated and edited by Roland Hamilton and Dana Buchanan. Austin: University of Texas Press, [1551-57] 1996.

Lechtman, Heather. “Technical Descriptions.” In Andean Art at Dumbarton Oaks, edited by Elizabeth Hill Boone. Washington, D.C.: Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection, 1996.

McEwan, Colin. "Ordering the Sacred and Recreating Cuzco," in The Archaeology of Wak'as: Explorations of the Sacred in the Pre-Columbian Andes, edited by Tamara L. Bray, 265-291. Boulder: University Press of Colorado, 2015.

Museo de Arqueología de Alta Montaña (MAAM). Museo de Arqueología de Alta Montaña. Buenos Aires: Fondo Nacional de las Artes, 2007.

Scott, David A. “The Deterioration of Gold Alloys and Some Aspects of Their Conservation.” Studies in Conservation 28, no. 4 (1983), 194-203.
  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。