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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)磁盘(屏蔽盖)
品名(英)Disk (Shield Cover)
入馆年号1978年,1978.412.144
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 1300 - 公元 1500
创作地区秘鲁(Peru)
分类金属装饰品(Metal-Ornaments)
尺寸高 12 1/2 × 宽 13 5/8 × 深 1/2 英寸 (31.8 × 34.7 × 1.3 厘米)
介绍(中)这个圆盘,很可能是一个仪式盾罩(见66.196.44),是秘鲁北海岸一个或多个墓葬中至少发现的十一个之一。所有十一个共享一个相似的组合,四个同心带围绕着一个中央凸。浮雕装饰是通过从背面加工金属板,将金属压入柔韧的材料(例如沥青)来实现的。通过使用描摹工具从正面操作磁盘来描绘形状,这些设计得到了进一步增强。这十一个圆盘遵循四种不同的图像图案之一,其中包括带有新月头饰、海洋动物和神话生物的人物(另见大都会收藏中的物体编号 66.196.44)。现在的圆盘是唯一的例子,其中外部寄存器由波浪状的起伏带定义,其内部看起来像流苏或绳索图案。在起伏带下方的间隙中描绘了一只岸鸟,而在上方的间隙中则出现了一个举起手臂的喙状神话人物。

第二个也是最大的寄存器由交替的拟人化和动物形态组成。动物形态似乎是一种轮廓显示的生物,戴着新月形头饰,被认为是等级或神性的象征。一条鳗鱼或蛇从生物的嘴里出来,一条蛇一样的形状从头顶出来,尽管这种生物可能只是咬了一条起伏的双头蛇的身体。该生物身体的下部是三方的,有一条中央的脚腿,对称地两侧是额外的张开嘴,露出牙齿的轮廓动物形态头,从身体中伸出和向下。这个拟人化的人物也戴着新月形头饰,两只手拿着一根法杖。五线谱可能是植物形式,有根和似乎是玉米穗的东西。一种双头蛇形式,也许是一种装饰性王权的代表,将头部与身体分开。

第三条带具有阶梯状品格图案,这在奇穆银盘的语料库中是不寻常的。品格形式充满了小鸟、猴子和神话生物。最里面的带子由一群戴着新月形头饰的岸鸟组成,抓着一些身份不明的小生物,虽然有点像蜥蜴。这条带子在图案之间显示出更大的尺寸差异,就好像创造它的银匠很难在构图中间隔鸟类一样。同样,在奇穆帝国首都Chan Chan的建筑浮雕中描绘了戴着新月头饰的鸟类,Chan Chan现在是秘鲁现代城市特鲁希略附近的考古遗址。这个圆盘

的边缘在两个地方略微折叠,显然是在古代,使圆盘略呈椭圆形。这样折叠边缘后,在圆盘边缘附近制作了五对穿孔加一个穿孔。然后,这个薄薄的银盘可能被绑在手杖背衬或框架上,以创建战士盔甲的壮观组件。

Joanne Pillsbury
Andrall E. Pearson策展人,古代美洲艺术,2018年



出版

原始艺术博物馆的大洋洲,非洲和美洲艺术。纽约:大都会艺术博物馆,1969,471。

金、海蒂、路易斯·海梅·卡斯蒂略·巴特斯和帕洛玛·卡塞多·德·穆法雷奇。月雨:古代秘鲁的银。纽约、纽黑文和伦敦:大都会艺术博物馆,2000,15d,44-5。

延伸阅读

布恩,伊丽莎白希尔编辑,敦巴顿橡树园的安第斯艺术。华盛顿特区:敦巴顿橡树研究图书馆和收藏,1996年,第218-222页。

唐南,克里斯托弗B.,多斯卡贝萨斯的莫切墓。加利福尼亚州洛杉矶:加州大学洛杉矶分校科森考古研究所,2007 年。

白邦瑞,乔安妮。"Luxury Arts and the Lords of Chimor",载于《拉丁美洲收藏:纪念Ted J.J. Leyenaar、Dorus Kop Jansen和Edward de Bock的论文》,编辑,第67-81页。莱顿:泰特尔编辑,2003
介绍(英)This disk, most likely a ceremonial shield cover (see 66.196.44), is one of at least eleven said to have been found in one or more burials on Peru’s north coast. All eleven share a similar composition of four concentric bands encircling a central convex boss. The relief decoration was achieved by working the sheet metal from the back, pressing the metal into a pliant material such as pitch. The designs were further enhanced by working the disk from the front using tracing tools to delineate forms. The eleven disks follow one of four distinct iconographic patterns featuring figures with crescent headdresses, marine animals, and mythological creatures (see also object number 66.196.44 in the Met's collection). The present disk is the sole example in which the outer register is defined by a wave-like, undulating band with what looks to be a tassel or cord motif in its interior. A shore bird is depicted in the interstices below the undulating band while a beaked mythological figure with raised arms appears in those above.

The second, and largest, register is composed of alternating anthropomorphic and zoomorphic forms. The zoomorphic forms appear to be a creature shown in profile and wearing a crescent headdress, thought to be a symbol of rank or divinity. An eel or snake emerges from the creature’s mouth, and a serpent-like form from the crown of the head, although it is possible the creature is simply biting into the body of an undulating, double-headed snake. The lower portion of the creature’s body is tripartite with a single, central, footed leg symmetrically flanked by additional open-mouthed, teeth-baring profile zoomorphic heads that flare out and down from the body. The anthropomorphic figure, also wearing a crescent headdress, holds a staff in either hand. The staves are probably plant forms, complete with roots and what appear to be ears of maize. A bicephalic snake form, perhaps a representation of a type of ornamental regalia, separates the head from the body.

The third band features a stepped-fret pattern, unusual in the corpus of Chimú silver disks. The fret forms are filled with tiny birds, monkeys, and mythological creatures. The innermost band consists of a ring of shore birds wearing crescent headdresses and grasping small unidentified, though somewhat lizard-like, creatures. This band displays greater variation in size between the motifs, as if the silversmith who created it had difficulty spacing the birds in the composition. Similarly, birds wearing crescent headdresses are depicted in the architectural reliefs at Chan Chan, the capital of the Chimú Empire, now an archaeological site near the modern city of Trujillo, Peru.

The rim of this disk was slightly folded over in two places, apparently in ancient times, giving the disk a slightly oval shape. After the edges were thus folded, five pairs of perforations plus a single perforation were made close to the edge of the disk. This thin silver disk was then likely lashed to a cane backing or frame to create a spectacular component of a warrior’s armor.

Joanne Pillsbury
Andrall E. Pearson Curator, Arts of the Ancient Americas, 2018



Published

Art of Oceania, Africa, and the Americas from the Museum of Primitive Art. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1969, 471.

King, Heidi, Luis Jaime Castillo Butters, and Paloma Carcedo de Mufarech. Rain of the Moon: Silver in Ancient Peru. New York, New Haven and London: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2000, 15d, 44-5.

Further Reading

Boone, Elizabeth Hill, ed., Andean Art at Dumbarton Oaks. Washington, D.C.: Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection, 1996, pp. 218-222.

Donnan, Christopher B., Moche Tombs at Dos Cabezas. Los Angeles, CA: Cotsen Institute of Archaeology at UCLA, 2007.

Pillsbury, Joanne. "Luxury Arts and the Lords of Chimor," in Latin American Collections: Essays in Honor of Ted J.J. Leyenaar, Dorus Kop Jansen and Edward de Bock, eds., pp. 67-81. Leiden: Ed. Tetl, 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。