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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)带切口轮廓的凯尔特人
品名(英)Celt with Incised Profile
入馆年号1978年,1978.412.5
策展部门迈克尔·洛克菲勒之翼The Michael C. Rockefeller Wing
创作者
创作年份公元前 1000 - 公元前 300
创作地区墨西哥(Mexico)
分类石头工具(Stone-Implements)
尺寸高 14 3/8 × 宽 3 1/8 × 深 3/4 英寸 (36.5 × 7.9 × 1.9 厘米)
介绍(中)这把大型抛光硬玉凯尔特或斧头的一侧出现了精细切割的设计。一位雕塑家最初将坚硬的绿石塑造并抛光成一把长刀片,其锋利的边缘在古代被切碎,后来一个钻孔可以让牌匾悬挂在皮带组合上。玉石和绿石斧是奥尔梅克奉献实践的重要组成部分,大约在公元前1000年之后,恰帕斯州和危地马拉也进行了实践。在这些凯尔特人身上,奥尔梅克艺术家经常切割神灵的图像,甚至是标志性或符号符号,这些符号作为原始文字在中美洲发展和传播。

一只手腕上打结的切开的无形手漂浮在凯尔特人的中心。手是程式化的,但保留了某些细节,如缩略图,以暗示人与人之间的联系。在手背或手掌的顶部是一个大的矩形区域,内衬五个较小的矩形。这种安排可能参考了一个quincunx,这是一种在奥尔梅克艺术和建筑中广泛发现的形状,其特征是五个点:四个角和中心。这种类型的手在后来的中美洲文字中代表音节和符号符号,因此这只手可能对奥尔梅克观众有语音或概念上的阅读。

在凯尔特人的宽阔侧面切割的另一个图像是一个超自然人物的无形头部,戴着精致的头饰,面向观众的左侧。面部由咆哮,向下的嘴巴组成,上唇突出,门牙突出。由四组两个同心圆组成的形状框住嘴巴,由两条带连接,再次形成以嘴为中心的quincunx形状。眼睛是一个L形的场,由三个半圆点缀。一个大的耳饰组合与颈部的切口一起向右展开。

头饰在上部构图中占主导地位。在眼睛上方的中心是一个U形元素,充满了用圆圈连接的交叉带,再次唤起了quincunx形式。另外两个元素从前额和头部后部向上突出,代表进一步的装饰。在 U 形元件上方,其本身由 V 形裂缝加冕,是另一个突出的 V 形裂缝。奥尔梅克艺术中的这种形式代表了玉米种子种植在土壤中的洞,芽将从中长出来。在这里,一个玉米芽从头饰中出现。它采用十字架的形式,左右有两个中央分支,三个V形的田地让人联想到未成熟玉米植株上的新鲜叶子。

在这个凯尔特人的上部切开的个人资料图像已被确定为奥尔梅克玉米神,通过眼睛的形状、颊面具和头饰来识别,高大的三方元素从裂缝中出现。大约在公元前1000年之后,奥尔梅克人和玛雅人描绘了玉米神,因为他们的社会变得更加精通种植这种主食作物。即使没有切割的图像、坚硬、可抛光的翡翠,凯尔特人也象征着玉米的芽。当种植在专用藏匿处时,凯尔特人的制造者可能会呼吁他们的社区发展,因为他们希望在多产的玉米田中。

进一步阅读

Benson,Elizabeth P.和Beatriz de la Fuente,编辑古代墨西哥的奥尔梅克艺术。华盛顿特区:国家美术馆,1996年。

Berrin, Kathleen, and Virginia M. Fields, eds. Olmec: Colossal Masterworks of Ancient Mexico.旧金山:旧金山美术博物馆,2010年。

Cheetham, David, and Jeffrey P. Blomster, eds.早期奥尔梅克和中美洲:物质记录。剑桥: 剑桥大学出版社, 2017.

克拉克、约翰·E.和迈克尔·布莱克 《中美洲文明的原文:墨西哥恰帕斯州奥尔梅卡斯和莫卡亚·德尔·索科努斯科》。在El Preclásico o Formativo: Avances y perspectivas, Martha Carmona Macias, ed. Museo Nacional de Antropología, México City, 1989, pp. 385–403.

克拉克,约翰E.和迈克尔布莱克声望的力量:竞争慷慨和中美洲低地等级社会的出现。在新世界的派系竞争和政治发展中,伊丽莎白·布鲁姆菲尔和约翰·W·福克斯编辑,剑桥:剑桥大学出版社,1994年,第17-30页。

Clark, John E., and Mary Pye, eds. 2000 Olmec Art and Archaeology: Social Complexity in the Formative Period.华盛顿特区:国家美术馆。

科,迈克尔·美洲虎的孩子:前古典墨西哥中部。纽约:原始艺术博物馆,1965年。

科、迈克尔·奥尔梅克风格及其分布。《中美洲印第安人手册》第3卷(罗伯特·沃霍普,通用编辑)。奥斯汀:德克萨斯大学出版社,1965 年,第 739-775 页

Coe,Michael D. (编辑) 奥尔梅克世界:仪式和统治。普林斯顿:普林斯顿大学美术馆,1996年,第262页,图1。

Coe, Michael D., and Richard A. Diehl 1980 In the Land of the Olmec: The Archaeology of San Lorenzo Tenochtitlán, 2 vols. Austin: University of Texas

Press.Covarrubias, Miguel Indian Art of Mexico and Central America.纽约:克诺夫,1957年,图33。Origen y desarrollo del estilo artístico "Olmeca."在玛雅斯和奥尔梅卡斯:墨西哥和美洲中心作为人类问题。墨西哥城:塔勒雷斯,1942 年,第 46-49 页。

Cyphers Guillén,Ann From Stone to Symbols: Olmec Art in Social Context at San Lorenzo Tenochtitlán。在前古典中美洲的社会模式(David C. Grove和Rosemary A. Joyce编辑),华盛顿特区:敦巴顿橡树园,1999年,第155-181页。

德鲁克,菲利普·拉文塔,塔巴斯科:奥尔梅克陶瓷与艺术研究。史密森学会,美国民族学局,公告 153。华盛顿特区:政府印刷局,1952年。

德鲁克、菲利普、罗伯特·F·海泽和罗伯特·J·斯奎尔,1959年《塔巴斯科州拉文塔的发掘》,1955年。史密森学会,美国民族学局,公告 170。华盛顿特区:政府印刷局,1959年。

伊斯比、伊丽莎白·肯尼迪和约翰·F·斯科特在科尔特斯之前:中美洲雕塑。纽约:大都会艺术博物馆,1970年。

福伊希特万格,弗朗茨陶瓷奥尔梅卡。墨西哥城:社论,1989年。

菲尔兹,弗吉尼亚M.和Dorie Reents-Budet。创造之王:神圣玛雅王权的起源。伦敦和洛杉矶:斯卡拉出版有限公司,2005年,第13期,第111页。

格罗夫,大卫·C·奥尔梅克:名字里有什么?《奥尔梅克人的区域视角》(Robert J. Sharer和David C. Grove编辑):剑桥:剑桥大学出版社,1989年,第8-14页。

Joralemon, Peter David A Study of Olmec Iconography.前哥伦布时期艺术和考古学研究 7.华盛顿特区:敦巴顿橡树园,1971年。

马加洛尼·科佩尔、戴安娜和劳拉·菲洛伊·纳达尔·拉·奥夫伦德 4 de La Venta:在国家人类学博物馆中重新组织。墨西哥城:国家人类学和历史研究所,2013年。米歇

尔、多米尼克、科拉·法莱罗·鲁伊斯和史蒂夫·布尔歇·奥尔梅克和墨西哥高尔夫文化。巴黎:斯基拉,2020年。

普尔,克里斯托弗A.奥尔梅克考古学和早期中美洲。纽约: 剑桥大学出版社, 2007.普尔,

克里斯托弗·A·拉丁美洲前哥伦布时期的艺术,公元前10世纪-公元16世纪伊萨卡:安德鲁·迪克森·怀特艺术博物馆,康奈尔大学,1966年,第14期,第36页。

赖利,弗兰克肯特,三世 转型姿势中的萨满:奥尔梅克艺术中统治主题的研究。《艺术博物馆实录》,普林斯顿大学第48卷第2期,1989年,第4-21页。

陶布,敦巴顿橡树园的卡尔·华盛顿特区:敦巴顿橡树园,2004年。
介绍(英)A finely incised design appears on one side of this large, polished jadeite celt, or axe. A sculptor originally shaped and polished the hard greenstone into a long blade, the sharp edge of which was chipped in antiquity, and later a drill hole would have allowed the plaque to hang from a belt assemblage. Jade and greenstone axes were crucial components to Olmec dedicatory practices, also practiced in Chiapas and Guatemala after about 1000 B.C. On such celts, Olmec artists often incised images of deities, or even iconic or notational symbols, which developed and spread around Mesoamerica as proto-writing.

An incised disembodied hand with a knot around the wrist floats towards the center of the celt. The hand is stylized yet retains certain details like a thumbnail to suggest a human connection. Atop the back or palm of the hand is a large rectangular field lined with five smaller rectangles. The arrangement might reference a quincunx, a shape widely found in Olmec art and architecture, characterized by five points: the four corners and the center. Hands of this type represented syllabic and logographic signs in later Mesoamerican scripts, so this hand may have had a phonetic or conceptual reading to an Olmec viewer.

The other image incised on the broad side of the celt is the disembodied head of a supernatural figure in profile, wearing an elaborate headdress, facing the viewer’s left. The face is composed of a snarling, downturned mouth with prominent upper lip and protruding sharp incisor. A shape composed of four sets of two concentric circles frame the mouth, connected by two bands, again forming the quincunx shape with the mouth as the center. The eye is an L-shaped field punctuated by three semicircles. A large earflare assemblage splays to the right alongside the incised indication of a neck.

The headdress dominates the upper composition. In the center above the eye is a u-shaped element filled with crossed bands connected with a circle, again evoking the quincunx form. Two other elements protrude upward from the forehead and the rear of the head, representing further adornments. Above the u-shaped element, which itself is crowned by a v-shaped cleft, is another prominent v-shaped cleft. This form in Olmec art represents the hole in the earth into which maize seeds were planted, from which the sprouts would emerge. Here, a maize sprout is shown emerging from the headdress. It takes the form of a cross, with two central branches to the left and right, with three v-shaped fields evoking the fresh leaves on an immature maize plant.

The profile image incised on the upper portion of this celt has been identified as the Olmec Maize God, identifiable by the shape of the eye, the buccal mask, and headdress with the tall tripartite element emerging from the cleft. After about 1000 B.C., Olmec and Maya peoples depicted maize deities as their societies became more proficient at growing this staple crop. Even without incised imagery, hard, polishable jadeite, celts symbolized sprouts of maize. When planted in dedicatory caches, the makers of celts may have called for growth of their communities as they would hope for in a productive field of maize.

Further reading

Benson, Elizabeth P., and Beatriz de la Fuente, eds. Olmec Art of Ancient Mexico. Washington, D.C.: National Gallery of Art, 1996.

Berrin, Kathleen, and Virginia M. Fields, eds. Olmec: Colossal Masterworks of Ancient Mexico. San Francisco: Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, 2010.

Cheetham, David, and Jeffrey P. Blomster, eds. The Early Olmec and Mesoamerica: The Material Record. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2017.

Clark, John E., and Michael Blake El origen de la civilización en Mesoamérica: Los Olmecas y Mokaya del Soconusco de Chiapas, Mexico. In El Preclásico o Formativo: Avances y perspectivas, Martha Carmona Macias, ed. Museo Nacional de Antropología, México City, 1989, pp. 385–403.

Clark, John E., and Michael Blake The Power of Prestige: Competitive Generosity and the Emergence of Rank Societies in Lowland Mesoamerica. In Factional Competition and Political Development in the New World, Elizabeth M. Brumfiel and John W. Fox, eds., Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1994, pp: 17– 30.

Clark, John E., and Mary Pye, eds. 2000 Olmec Art and Archaeology: Social Complexity in the Formative Period. Washington, D.C.: National Gallery of Art.

Coe, Michael D. The Jaguar’s Children: Pre-Classic Central Mexico. New York: Museum of Primitive Art, 1965.

Coe, Michael D. The Olmec Style and Its Distributions. In Handbook of Middle American Indians, vol. 3 (Robert Wauchope, gen. ed.). Austin: University of Texas Press, 1965, pp. 739–775

Coe, Michael D. (ed.) The Olmec World: Ritual and Rulership. Princeton: The Art Museum, Princeton University, 1996, p. 262, fig. 1.

Coe, Michael D., and Richard A. Diehl 1980 In the Land of the Olmec: The Archaeology of San Lorenzo Tenochtitlán, 2 vols. Austin: University of Texas Press.

Covarrubias, Miguel Indian Art of Mexico and Central America. New York: Knopf, 1957, fig. 33. Origen y desarrollo del estilo artístico “Olmeca.” In Mayas y Olmecas: Segunda reunión de Mesa Redonda sobre problemas antropológicos de México y Centro América. Mexico City: Talleres, 1942, pp. 46-49.

Cyphers Guillén, Ann From Stone to Symbols: Olmec Art in Social Context at San Lorenzo Tenochtitlán. In Social Patterns in Pre-Classic Mesoamerica (David C. Grove and Rosemary A. Joyce, eds.), Washington, D.C.: Dumbarton Oaks, 1999, pp. 155–181.

Drucker, Philip La Venta, Tabasco: A Study of Olmec Ceramics and Art. Smithsonian Institution, Bureau of American Ethnology, Bulletin 153. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1952.

Drucker, Philip, Robert F. Heizer, And Robert J. Squier 1959 Excavations at La Venta, Tabasco, 1955. Smithsonian Institution, Bureau of American Ethnology, Bulletin 170. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1959.

Easby, Elizabeth Kennedy, and John F. Scott Before Cortés: Sculpture of Middle America. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1970.

Feuchtwanger, Franz Ceramica olmeca. Mexico City: Editorial Patria, 1989.

Fields, Virginia M., and Dorie Reents-Budet. Lords of Creation: The Origins of Sacred Maya Kingship. London and Los Angeles: Scala Publishers Limited, 2005, no. 13, p. 111.

Grove, David C. Olmec: What’s in a Name? In Regional Perspectives on the Olmec (Robert J. Sharer and David C. Grove, eds.): Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1989, pp. 8-14.

Joralemon, Peter David A Study of Olmec Iconography. Studies in Pre-Columbian Art and Archaeology 7. Washington, D.C.: Dumbarton Oaks, 1971.

Magaloni Kerpel, Diana, and Laura Filloy Nadal La Ofrende 4 de La Venta: un tesoro olmeca reunido en el Museo Nacional de Antropología. Mexico City: Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia, 2013.

Michelet, Dominique, Cora Falero Ruiz, and Steve Bourget Les Olmèques et les cultures du golfe du Mexique. Paris: Skira, 2020.

Pool, Christopher A. Olmec Archaeology and Early Mesoamerica. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2007.

Pool, Christopher A. Pre-Columbian art of Latin America, 10th century B.C.-16th century A.D. Ithaca: Andrew Dickson White Museum of Art, Cornell University, 1966, no. 14, p. 36.

Reilly, Frank Kent, III The Shaman in Transformation Pose: A Study of the Theme of Rulership in Olmec Art. Record of the Art Museum, Princeton University vol. 48 no. 2, 1989, pp. 4–21.

Taube, Karl A. Olmec Art at Dumbarton Oaks. Washington, D.C.: Dumbarton Oaks, 2004.
  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。