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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)图:喇叭播放器
品名(英)Figure: Horn Player
入馆年号1978年,1978.412.310
策展部门迈克尔·洛克菲勒之翼The Michael C. Rockefeller Wing
创作者Edo artist
创作年份公元 1550 - 公元 1680
创作地区尼日利亚(Nigeria)
分类金属雕塑(Metal-Sculpture)
尺寸高 24 3/4 × 宽 11 1/2 × 深 6 3/4 英寸 (62.9 × 29.2 × 17.2 厘米)
介绍(中)在贝宁的艺术中,青铜作品只能由欧巴或统治者委托,或经他许可的其他人委托。根据口头传统,失蜡青铜铸造技术是在十四世纪末左右从伊菲(Ife)带到贝宁的,伊菲是北部的古老王国,以其精美的铸铜纪念头像而闻名。在此之前,贝宁工匠生产锤击和切割的青铜装饰品,但不是铸造的。

一旦贝宁的工匠掌握了失蜡铸造技术,青铜头像和人物就开始出现在欧巴的神龛上。这幅宫廷音乐家演奏侧吹小号的形象证明了贝宁青铜铸造者的精湛技艺。该人物精心设计的服装描绘了豹子的皮,豹子是一种与欧巴力量相关的动物。同样,他脖子和胸前的珊瑚链重申了这位音乐家在贝宁宫廷中的地位,因为珊瑚像青铜和象牙一样,是贝宁的皇家特权。

1897年英国入侵贝宁王国首都,导致贝宁艺术品的背景信息丢失。因此,学者们试图利用书面文件、口述历史和雕塑本身的物理属性分析的组合来重建贝宁艺术史年表和谱系。贝宁

宫廷艺术的遗产:从悲剧到复原力

贝宁中央集权的城邦起源是由讲江户语的民族建立的。官方宫廷历史学家的叙述和游客提供的描述唤起了一个充满活力的文化中心,其领导层通过不断变化的内部和外部权力动态不断重新定义。根据口头传统,大约在1300年,江户酋长据说已经与邻近的伊菲的领导人奥兰米扬(Oranmiyan)接触,以建立一个新的神圣认可的王朝。从那以后,贝宁统治者被授予奥巴斯头衔,立即赋予他们首席祭司的角色,主持重要的宗教仪式并主持精心设计的宫廷官员结构。在Oba Ewuare统治的15世纪期间,贝宁的军队成立,并用巨大的城墙加固其首都。与此同时,葡萄牙商人代表团不遗余力地寻求与该地区最强大政体的领导人签订独家商业条约。在1500年的鼎盛时期,贝宁的权威扩展到东部的尼日尔三角洲和西部的拉各斯沿海泻湖。它的主要出口胡椒、纺织品和象牙被换成大量的进口金属。这种黄铜的涌入导致了宫廷艺术家的创造力爆炸,他们将其转化为宫殿的作品,从位于皇家祭坛上的祖先肖像到描绘奥巴、他的朝臣和外国对话者的装饰牌匾。从最早的这种交流开始,这些欧洲人就委托江户雕刻师制作精美的象牙文物,用于国内的王子收藏。

近五百年来,贝宁的独立领导人坚定地确立了与葡萄牙、荷兰和法国代理人的接触条件,并有效地代表了他们自己的利益。尽管大西洋奴隶贸易提出了要求,但几个世纪以来,他们的参与仅限于将战俘出售给葡萄牙人。历史学家认为,这种情况只是在十八世纪才改变,当时地区政体之间的竞争升级产生了对获得欧洲枪支的需求。在后来的时期,继承争端和内战造成的不稳定通过用俘虏交换火器而进一步加剧。十九世纪随后的一些内部和外部发展影响了贝宁君主的地位和脆弱性。在奥巴·阿多洛(Oba Adolo)的统治下,权力平衡似乎有利于更强大的酋长,到他的继任者奥文拉姆温统治的早期,激烈的争斗和煽动性的阴谋分裂了他们的队伍。这种转变表现在越来越重视奥巴的仪式和仪式活动,以及超过宫殿的主要住所的扩张。与此同时,贝宁周围也发生了重大变化:伊斯兰教在竞争对手奥约州处于优势地位;基督教被约鲁巴南部接受;废除奴隶贸易导致了伊塞基里君主制的灭亡;英国当地官员越来越决心削弱奥巴的权威。1897 年英国

入侵贝宁王国首都是 1892 年至 1902 年发起的一场运动的一部分,该运动旨在强行将现代尼日利亚的大部分内陆领土置于英国统治之下。随着英国征服贝宁城,奥巴·奥文拉姆文被流放到卡拉巴尔,士兵们掠夺了宫殿。移除其内容的残酷性永远将献给从 1300 年到贝宁征服的每个奥巴的祭坛与为纪念它们而构思的特定作品脱钩。军事行动发生后,外交大臣直接向大英博物馆赠送了约200件贝宁文物,其他文物则在国际艺术市场上出售。除了经销商和私人收藏家外,此时的主要客户是西方新建立的民族志博物馆。1913年奥文拉姆文去世后,他的儿子埃韦卡二世恢复了英国保护国的办公室,并优先考虑在贝宁市恢复艺术赞助。在十九世纪贝宁作品的传播之后,对其非凡的审美力量、美感和复杂性的认识深刻地影响了黑人公共知识分子。其中值得注意的是W.E.B. Dubois,Alain Locke和哈莱姆文艺复兴时期的艺术家。与此同时,它们在殖民时代被降级为民族志博物馆,这继续反映了西方创作者强行移除和隔离可比文化成就的遗产。

1950年,一些贝宁作品通过大英博物馆出售,交换和捐赠转移到今天的尼日利亚国家博物馆和纪念碑委员会,在贝宁市和拉各斯展出。1960年,随着尼日利亚联邦作为一个国家的成立,贝宁市成为埃多州的首府。今天保存在大都会艺术博物馆的这一传统的典范于1969年和1991年由在国际艺术市场上获得它们的个人赠送给该机构,以立即向公众开放并庆祝其卓越。2016年,Oba Ewuare II担任贝宁现任oba。他指出,虽然这些作品"已成为我们文化在世界各地的大使",但当务之急是在贝宁市建立一个致力于这一遗产的新博物馆。由大卫·阿贾耶(David Adjaye)设计,这项嵌入古城墙结构的重大文化倡议有望提供更多的机会来理解和反思这一活生生的传统在其源头以及国际合作的重要性。
介绍(英)In the art of Benin, works in bronze can be commissioned only by the Oba, or ruler, or by others with his permission. According to oral traditions, the technique of lost-wax bronze casting was brought to Benin around the end of the fourteenth century from Ife, the ancient kingdom to the north noted for its exquisite cast-bronze commemorative heads. Prior to that time, Benin craftsmen produced hammered and incised, but not cast, bronze ornaments.

Once the technique of lost-wax casting was mastered by the craftsmen of Benin, bronze heads and figures began to appear on the Oba's shrines. This figure of a court musician playing a side-blown trumpet attests to the technical virtuosity of the Benin bronze-casters. The figure's elaborately textured garment depicts the hide of a leopard, an animal associated with the power of the Oba. Similarly, the strands of coral around his neck and chest reaffirm this musician's status in the Benin court, since coral, like bronze and ivory, is a royal prerogative in Benin.

The British invasion of the capital of the Kingdom of Benin in 1897 led to the loss of contextual information about Benin works of art. Therefore, scholars attempt to reconstruct Benin art-historical chronologies and lineages utilizing a combination of written documents, oral histories, and analysis of physical attributes in the sculptures themselves.

The Legacy of Benin Court Art: From Tragedy to Resilience

At its origins, the centralized city-state of Benin was founded by Edo-speaking peoples. The accounts by official court historians and descriptions provided by visitors evoke a vibrant cultural center continually redefined by its leadership through shifting internal and external power dynamics. According to oral tradition, circa 1300, Edo chiefs are reputed to have reached out to the leader of neighboring Ife, Oranmiyan, to establish a new divinely sanctioned royal dynasty. Since then, the investiture of Benin’s rulers to the title of obas has conferred upon them at once a role of chief priest officiating in important religious ceremonies and presiding over an elaborate structure of palace officials. During the fifteenth century reign of Oba Ewuare, Benin’s armies were formed and the fortification of its capital with a massive wall undertaken. In parallel, delegations of Portuguese traders assiduously sought to secure exclusive commercial treaties with this leader of the region’s most powerful polity. At its height in 1500, Benin’s authority extended to the Niger delta in the east and to the coastal lagoon of Lagos in the west. Its major exports of pepper, textiles, and ivory were exchanged for copious quantities of imported metals. This access to an influx of brass led to an explosion of creativity by court artists who transformed it into works for the palace ranging from ancestral portraits, positioned on royal altars, to decorative plaques depicting the oba, his courtiers, and foreign interlocutors. From the earliest such exchanges, those Europeans commissioned exquisite ivory artifacts from Edo carvers for princely collections back home.

For nearly five hundred years, Benin’s independent leaders firmly established the terms of engagement with Portuguese, Dutch, and French agents and effectively represented their own interests. Despite the demands of the Atlantic Slave trade, for centuries they limited their participation to selling prisoners of war to the Portuguese. Historians have suggested that this only changed during the eighteenth century when escalation of contests among regional polities created a demand for access to European firearms. During that later period instability engendered by disputes over succession and civil war was further fueled through the exchange of captives for firearms. A number of internal and external developments that followed in the nineteenth century impacted the standing and vulnerability of Benin’s monarchs. Under Oba Adolo, the balance of power appears to have favored the more powerful chiefs and by the early years of his successor Ovonramwen’s reign, bitter feuds and seditious conspiracies divided their ranks. This shift was manifest in the increased emphasis on the oba’s ceremonial and ritual activities and the aggrandizement of chiefly residences that outstripped the palace. Concurrently significant changes were unfolding around Benin: Islam was in the ascendant in the rival state of Oyo; Christianity was embraced by the southern Yoruba; abolition of the slave trade was leading to the demise of the Itsekiri monarchy; and local British officials were increasingly determined to undermine the oba’s authority.

The British invasion of the capital of the Kingdom of Benin in 1897 was part of a campaign waged from 1892 through 1902 to forcibly bring most of the inland territory of modern-day Nigeria under British rule. With the British conquest of Benin City, Oba Ovonramwen was exiled to Calabar and soldiers plundered the palace. The brutality of the removal of its contents has forever decoupled altars dedicated to each individual oba dating from 1300 to Benin’s conquest with the specific works conceived to commemorate them. Directly following the military action some 200 Benin artifacts were given to the British Museum by the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs while others were sold on the international art market. In addition to dealers and private collectors the major clientele at this time were newly established ethnographic museums in the West. Following Ovonramwen’s death in 1913, his son Eweka II was restored to the office within a British protectorate and prioritized a renewal of artistic patronage in Benin City. Subsequent to the nineteenth century dispersal of Benin works, awareness of their extraordinary aesthetic power, beauty, and complexity profoundly influenced Black public intellectuals. Notable among these in the U.S. were W.E.B. Dubois, Alain Locke and artists from the Harlem Renaissance on. At the same time, their relegation to ethnographic museums during the colonial era continues to reflect the legacy of their forceful removal and segregation from comparable cultural achievements by Western creators.

In 1950 a selection of Benin works were transferred through sale, exchange, and donation from the British Museum to what is today Nigeria’s National Commission for Museums and Monuments for display in Benin City and Lagos. In 1960 with the establishment of the Federation of Nigeria as a nation, Benin City became the capital of Edo State. Exemplars of this tradition today conserved at the Metropolitan Museum of Art were given to this institution in 1969 and 1991 by individuals who acquired them on the international art market to at once make them accessible to the public and celebrate their excellence. In 2016 Oba Ewuare II assumed the title of Benin’s current oba. He has noted that while such works "have come to serve as ambassadors of our culture around the world," a priority is the building of a new museum devoted to this legacy in Benin City. Designed by David Adjaye, this major cultural initiative embedded in the very fabric of the ancient city walls promises to afford expanded opportunities to understand and reflect on the significance of this living tradition at its source as well as those for international collaboration.
  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。