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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)雨神之首
品名(英)Head of a Rain God
入馆年号1978年,1978.412.24
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 900 - 公元 1100
创作地区墨西哥, 尤卡坦半岛(Mexico, Yucatan)
分类石雕(Stone-Sculpture)
尺寸高 13 3/4 x 宽 11 7/8 x 深 9 3/8 英寸 (34.9 x 30.2 x 23.8 厘米)
介绍(中)这个由石灰石雕刻而成的纪念性头像描绘了一个超自然的存在。它的主题是由骨骼特征来定义的,戴着大耳环和串珠头带。长发是向后留的,由头部反面的深切口表示。额头上有一个圆形的凸起,可能代表着一颗圆形的宝石从头带上垂下来。这个现已分离的头像很可能属于一个高浮雕的建筑雕塑,作为立面的一部分或作为一个独立的纪念碑

玛雅人认为,像这里描绘的神具有与人类不同的视觉类型,艺术家通过眼睛表明了这一点。突出的眼睛由浓密的眉毛和以滚动形状终止的眼下线条构成,有一个带有红色颜料痕迹的螺旋形瞳孔。结合鼻子两侧脸颊上凸起的圆点,这些瞳孔是玛雅艺术中虔诚的标志。没有肉的下巴上有一排笔直的方形牙齿,嘴巴两侧露出两个卷轴。鼻子损坏了。这种损失可能发生在它在古代使用的过程中

玛雅艺术家经常描绘具有与不同神有关的混合属性或方面的超自然实体。这种方法使识别具有与万神殿相关的特定神圣属性的主体的工作变得复杂。大多数描绘的特征——骨骼般的下巴、从嘴里发出的卷轴、耳罩、螺旋瞳孔的神眼和长发——都将这幅图像与被称为Chahk的雨神联系在一起。然而,眼下卷轴也可能表明,艺术家们为这位雨神注入了太阳神的一面,太阳神的眼睛经常装饰着这样的图案

神面雕塑也反映了几种不同风格方法的侧面,这是奇琴伊察艺术的标志之一。风格的模糊通常被解释为后古典主义早期(约公元900-1200年)奇琴伊察的玛雅人与他们的同时代人,墨西哥中部的托尔特克人之间相互作用的证据。不管它的确切身份如何,它都是一幅超自然的肖像画,旨在吸引观众注意这张可怕的脸上化身的多变的自然现象

乔治·维兰特于1926年在奇琴伊察发掘,这颗头颅是在一座朝南的小寺庙中发现的,该寺庙被戏称为"Cabecitas之家"或"小头之家"(结构5C3)。这个头像是神庙室内许多圆形雕塑中最好的,其中包括两个完整的亚特兰蒂斯雕像,它们曾经支撑着入口的门楣。与这个雨神头像有关的尸体没有被发现,这可能表明该市居民将头像从原来的位置移走,并对其进行了足够的尊敬,将其放置在小寺庙中

奇琴伊察遗址于1988年被联合国教科文组织指定为世界遗产,目前每年接待200多万游客。这座城市本身在古典主义早期时期(约公元250-550年)就有人定居,但在古典主义晚期和晚期(约公元650-1000年)达到了人口和建筑建设的顶峰。当西班牙人在16世纪抵达时,迭戈·德·兰达指出,奇琴伊察附近的当地居民继续举行宗教仪式,并向圣坛投掷祭品,圣坛是一个充满水的天坑,几个世纪以来一直是朝圣的目的地

James A.Doyle博士
参考文献

Vaillant,George C.1952年George C.Vaillant关于13号车站挖掘的报告[1926]。在《奇琴伊察:建筑笔记与平面图》中,卡尔·鲁珀特著。华盛顿:华盛顿卡内基研究所。第157-162页。图145b。
介绍(英)This monumental head carved from limestone depicts a supernatural being. Its subject is defined by skeletal features and wears large earflares and a beaded headband. Long hair is held back and indicated by deep incisions flowing down the reverse side of the head. A circular boss dominates the forehead, probably representing a round jewel hanging down from the headband. This head, now detached, likely belonged to an architectural sculpture in high relief as part of a façade or as a free standing monument.

Deities such as the one depicted here were seen to have a different type of vision than humans by the Maya, and artists indicated this through the eyes. The prominent eyes, framed by heavy brows and under-eye lines that terminate in scrolled shapes, have an incised spiral-shaped pupil with traces of red pigment. Combined with the raised dots on the cheeks on either side of the nose, these pupils are markers of godliness in Maya art. The fleshless jaw contains a row of straight, squared teeth and two scrolls emerge from either side of the mouth. The nose is damaged. That loss may have occurred over the course of its use in antiquity.

Maya artists often depicted supernatural entities with a mixture of attributes or aspects relating different deities. This approach complicates efforts to identify their subjects with particular divine attributes relating to their pantheon. Most of the depicted features – the skeletal jaw, scrolls emitting from the mouth, the earflares, god eyes with spiral pupils, and long hair – associate this image with the rain deity, known as Chahk. The under-eye scrolls, however, could also indicate that the artists infused this rain deity with an aspect of the Sun God, whose eyes are often adorned with such motifs.

The sculpture of the deity face also reflects the facets of several different stylistic approaches, which is one of the hallmarks of art from Chichen Itza. The blurring of styles is commonly interpreted as evidence of Early Postclassic Period (ca. AD 900-1200) interaction between the Maya at Chichen Itza and their contemporaries, the Toltecs in Central Mexico. Regardless of its precise identification, the representation was a supernatural portrait meant to draw the viewers’ attention to the mercurial natural phenomena personified in this fearsome face.

Excavated by George Vaillant in 1926 at Chichen Itza, this head was found in a small, south-facing temple nicknamed the “Casa de Cabecitas” or “House of the Small Heads” (Structure 5C3). This head was the finest of many pieces of sculpture in the round from within the temple chamber, including two intact atlantean figures that once supported the lintel of the entryway. The fact that the body associated with this Rain God head was not found may indicate that the inhabitants of the city removed the head from its original location and revered it enough to place it in the small temple.

The site of Chichen Itza was designated a UNESCO world heritage site in 1988 and currently receives over two million visitors per year. The city itself was settled in the Early Classic period (ca. A.D. 250-550), but reached its peak of population and architectural constructions in the Late and Terminal Classic periods (ca. A.D. 650-1000). When the Spanish arrived in the 16th century, Diego de Landa noted that local populations near Chichen Itza continued to perform religious ceremonies and throw offerings into the Sacred Cenote, a water-filled sinkhole that was a pilgrimage destination for centuries.

James A. Doyle, Ph.D.

References

Vaillant, George C. 1952 Report of George C. Vaillant on the Excavations at Station No. 13 [1926]. In Chichen Itza: Architectural Notes and Plans, by Karl Ruppert. Washington: Carnegie Institution of Washington. pp. 157-162. Fig. 145b.
  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。