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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)耳弹,战士
品名(英)Earflare, Warrior
入馆年号1979年,1979.206.1241
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 390 - 公元 450
创作地区秘鲁(Peru)
分类金属装饰品(Metal-Ornaments)
尺寸高 1 15/16 x 宽 3 3/16 英寸 (4.9 x 8.1 厘米)
介绍(中)在这个圆形耳饰的中心是一位地位崇高的战士。4.9厘米高的近乎立体的金色雕像从圆盘上失去光泽的银色中脱颖而出。这位战士穿着衬衫、腰布和月牙形头饰,头饰的下半部分呈猫头鹰的形状,翅膀伸展,头部呈高浮雕状。蓝绿色的宝石珠构成了战士的项链,并镶嵌在他的耳饰中。战士的右臂微微弯曲并向外延伸,而左臂则弯曲在肘部,以握着银色金属板制成的战棍。这只耳环是一对中的一对,它的伴侣(1979.206.1242a-c)也有一个战士,准备举行一个战争俱乐部,尽管这对的战争俱乐部现在不见了。战争俱乐部在Moche对战斗和仪式的描绘中很突出,但它们似乎也充当了权力的象征;有时,战争俱乐部的陶瓷图案装饰着建筑物的屋顶

Moche于公元200年至850年间在秘鲁北海岸蓬勃发展,以其在视觉艺术方面的成就而闻名,尤其是在纪念性建筑、陶瓷和金属物体上生动地绘制了壁画和浮雕。精英战士是莫切肖像画中一个特别突出的主题。他们参与战斗、俘虏、狩猎和参加仪式活动。过去三十年的考古研究表明,莫切文化中地位较高的人在安息时穿着与纪念碑、陶瓷和金属饰品上描绘的人物相同的武士礼服。这对耳饰很可能是Moche精英个人佩戴的,并埋葬在他或她的墓中。虽然耳饰通常与男性有关,但最近在Chornancap遗址的发现表明,至少在后期,女性偶尔也会佩戴耳饰(Wester La Torre 2012)

这对耳饰在风格上与Loma Negra有关,这是一个位于秘鲁远北海岸上皮乌拉山谷的考古遗址。Loma Negra以其创新的金属加工工匠而闻名,他们使用创新的金属制造方法为精英们创造了精致的皇室,使他们的权威合法化。武士雕像是通过结合机械和冶金方法,将单独成形的金片和银片连接起来而成的。该图形通过插入银色背板的四个凸耳(每侧两个)进行机械连接。圆盘周围有28个压印的半圆形凹陷,最初镶嵌着镶嵌物,可能是绿岩。边缘、耳罩的背面和圆柱轴都是由金片制成的,用焊料连接在一起。前额的边缘是金条和金片,耳饰的柄部(穿过佩戴者耳垂的部分)通过三个凸耳机械地连接到背部

银和金的视觉并置对摩卡人来说极具象征意义。这两种金属的结合是莫切金属加工的标志性特征之一,它具有宇宙学和政治意义。16世纪的资料显示,在前哥伦布时代,金与太阳有关,银与月亮有关。在Sipán的Moche遗址,沃尔特·阿尔瓦(Walter Alva)的发掘揭示了1号墓中的金银物品之间的一种惊人的互补模式:仪式刀、背圈(武士帝王的一种元素)和成对的锭,一个是金的,一个银的。金器放在死者的右侧,银器放在左侧。使用银色和金色金属片制作这一耳饰,强调了莫切宇宙观的互补象征意义,并突出了其视觉表现在莫切仪式服装中的重要性

Alicia Boswell,保护文化研究员,2016-2018年
展览

《来自月球的雨:来自古代秘鲁的银》,2000年11月3日至2001年4月22日。纽约大都会艺术博物馆

1992年10月13日至1993年7月4日,秘鲁领主墓洛马·内格拉。纽约大都会艺术博物馆

参考文献和进一步阅读

阿尔瓦、沃尔特和克里斯托弗·多南。锡潘皇家陵墓。洛杉矶:福勒文化历史博物馆,加利福尼亚大学,1993年。

Bourget,Steve和Kimberly Jones编辑。《莫切人的艺术和考古:秘鲁北海岸的古代安第斯社会》。奥斯汀:德克萨斯大学,2008年。

Heidi King。月雨。古秘鲁的白银。纽约:大都会艺术博物馆,耶鲁大学出版社,2000年。[列于第59页,清单7]。Pillsbury,Joanne,Timothy F.Potts,Kim Richter,eds.,《黄金王国:古代美洲的奢华艺术》。洛杉矶:J.Paul Getty博物馆,2017年。

Schorsch,Deborah,"来自秘鲁洛马内格拉的银和金Moche文物"。大都会艺术博物馆期刊33:109-36。

Schorsch、Deborah、Ellen G.Howe和Mark T.Wypyski。"Loma Negra的镀银和镀金铜金属制品:制造和美学",Boletín Museo del Oro 41(1996):145-163

琼斯,朱莉。"Mochica金属艺术作品:回顾",《南美前哥伦布冶金》,伊丽莎白·P·本森主编,53-104。华盛顿特区:邓巴顿橡树,1979年。合唱:兰巴耶克文化宫。秘鲁兰巴耶克:秘鲁文化部,2016年。
介绍(英)At the center of this circular earflare is a high-status warrior. The nearly three-dimensional gold figure at 4.9 cm tall stands out sharply from the tarnished silver of the disk. The warrior wears a shirt, loincloth, and a crescent-shaped headdress, the lower section of which takes the shape of an owl with extended wings and a head in high relief. Beads of blue-green stone make up the warrior’s necklace and are inlaid in his earflares. The warrior’s proper right arm bends slightly and extends outward while the proper left arm is bent at the elbow, to hold his war club, made of silver sheet metal. This earflare is one of a pair, and its mate (1979.206.1242a-c), also features a warrior, poised to hold a war club, although the pair’s war club is now missing. War clubs are prominent in Moche representations of battles and ceremonies, but they also appear to have served as generalized symbols of power; on occasion ceramic representations of war clubs adorned the rooflines of buildings.

The Moche flourished between A.D. 200–850 on Peru’s north coast and are well-known for their accomplishments in the visual arts, particularly vividly painted murals and reliefs on monumental architecture, ceramics, and metal objects. Elite warriors are an especially prominent subject in Moche iconography. They are shown engaged in combat, taking prisoners, hunting, and participating in ceremonial activities. Archaeological research in the past thirty years has revealed that high-status individuals in the Moche culture were laid to rest wearing the same warrior regalia as those figures depicted on monuments, ceramics, and metal ornaments. It is likely that this pair of earflares was worn by an elite Moche individual and interred in his or her tomb. While ear ornaments have generally been associated with men, recent discoveries at the site of Chornancap suggest that at least in later periods women also occasionally wore them (Wester La Torre 2012).

This pair of earflares has been associated stylistically with Loma Negra, an archaeological site located in the Upper Piura Valley on Peru’s far north coast. Loma Negra is known for its innovative metalworking artisans who used innovative metalworking methods to create elaborate regalia for elites, legitimizing their authority. The warrior figure was created by joining individually shaped pieces of gold and silver sheet metal through a combination of mechanical and metallurgical methods. The figure was mechanically attached via four tabs (two on each side) inserted into the silver backplate. Twenty-eight stamped semi-circular depressions around the circumference of the disk originally held inlays, probably of greenstone. The rim, the backside of the earflare, and the cylinder shaft, all made of gold sheet, were attached using solder. The rim of the frontal are gold strip and sheet, and the stem of the ear ornament—the part that extends through the wearer’s lobe—was attached to the back mechanically with three tabs.

The visual juxtaposition of silver and gold was highly symbolic for the Moche. The joining of these two metals is one of the signature features of Moche metalworking, and it had cosmological and political significance. Sixteenth-century sources reveal that gold was associated with the sun, and silver with the moon in the PreColumbian world. At the Moche site of Sipán, excavations by Walter Alva revealed a striking pattern of complementarity among the gold and silver objects in Tomb 1: ceremonial knives, backflaps (an element of warrior regalia), and ingots were made in pairs, one of gold and one of silver. The gold objects were placed on the right side of the deceased, the silver objects on the left. The use of both silver and gold sheet metal to create this ear flare emphasizes the complimentary symbolism of Moche cosmology and highlights the importance of its visual representation in Moche ritual attire.

Alicia Boswell, Culture of Conservation Fellow, 2016-2018

Exhibited

Rain from the Moon: Silver from Ancient Peru, November 3, 2000–April 22, 2001. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.

Loma Negra, a Peruvian Lord's Tomb, October 13, 1992-July 4, 1993. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.

References and Further Reading

Alva, Walter and Christopher Donnan. Royal Tombs of Sipán. Los Angeles: Fowler Museum of Cultural History, University of California, 1993.

Bourget, Steve and Kimberly Jones, eds. The Art and Archaeology of the Moche: An Ancient Andean Society of the Peruvian North Coast. Austin: University of Texas, 2008.

King, Heidi. Rain of the Moon. Silver in Ancient Peru. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Yale University Press, 2000. [Listed on p. 59, Checklist no. 7]. Pillsbury, Joanne, Timothy F. Potts, Kim Richter, eds., Golden Kingdoms: Luxury Arts in the Ancient Americas. Los Angeles: The J. Paul Getty Museum, 2017.

Schorsch, Deborah, “Silver-and-gold Moche Artifacts from Loma Negra, Peru.” The Metropolitan Museum of Art Journal 33:109-36.

Schorsch, Deborah, Ellen G. Howe and Mark T. Wypyski. “Silvered and Gilded Copper Metalwork from Loma Negra: Manufacture and Aesthetics.” Boletín Museo del Oro 41(1996): 145-163.

Jones, Julie. “Mochica Works of Art in Metal: A Review.” In Pre-Columbian Metallurgy of South America, Elizabeth P. Benson, ed., 53-104. Washington DC: Dumbarton Oaks, 1979.

Wester La Torre, Carlos. Chornancap: Palacio de una gobernante y sacerdotisa de la cultura Lambayeque. Lambayeque, Peru: Ministerio de Cultura del Perú, 2016.
  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。