微信公众号 
图码生活

每天发布有五花八门的文章,各种有趣的知识等,期待您的订阅与参与
搜索结果最多仅显示 10 条随机数据
结果缓存两分钟
如需更多更快搜索结果请访问小程序
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)
读取中
读取中
读取中
品名(中)站立女性形象
品名(英)Standing Female Figure
入馆年号1979年,1979.206.346
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 1100 - 公元 1500
创作地区秘鲁(Peru)
分类木雕(Wood-Sculpture)
尺寸高 29 1/4 × 宽 7 × 深 2 7/8 英寸 (74.3 × 17.8 × 7.3 厘米)
介绍(中)这个女性形象胸前抓着一个圆柱形物体,站在一根旨在固定在地板或壁龛上的柱子上。这个人物被雕刻在几个平面上:她的大脑袋、脚、前臂、手和她抓住的物体从身体的其他部分延伸出来,她的腿、躯干、脖子和脖子和头部之间的标签状元素让人联想到耳朵装饰物,或者可能是另一种服装元素,都呈现在隐性平面上。头顶是一个平顶的盖子,下面是一个T形的眉毛和鼻子。她的脸被雕刻得大约深一厘米,她的眼睛、鼻唇沟和嘴巴通过简单的切口呈现出来。虽然已经磨损,但她脸上仍残留着大量的红色色素。她的手指和脚趾上有浅切口,生殖器上方有一道弧线。她的乳房低垂了。柱子——脚部以下的部分和雕塑可能沉入墙壁或地面的部分——比雕像显示出更多的磨损,并带有砂土或土石膏的痕迹

人物的背部是简单的雕刻,除了鞋跟的曲线之外几乎没有任何细节。从侧面看,人物的轻微后倾更为明显,膝盖的轻微弯曲也更为明显。人物的丰富光泽在人物的右侧(见照片左侧)和背面(左侧)受损

Chimú人在公元1000年至1470年间兴盛起来,当时他们被印加人征服。在它们的鼎盛时期,它们统治了秘鲁干旱的北海岸约800英里的地区。这片沿海沙漠的干燥条件使得木材和布料等有机材料得以保存,而在美洲的大多数其他地区,这些材料在暴露于自然环境或埋在地下的几个世纪里都无法保存下来。北海岸的建筑入口处安装了木制的人像雕塑,包括Chimú王国首都Chan Chan的宫殿(见MMA.19979.206.774)。在坟墓中也发现了这样的人像,包括在Nepeña山谷Samanco的一个可追溯到Chimú-印加时期(公元1470–1532年)的墓葬中发现的一对(Helmer 2015:图4.22),身高60厘米,比本例更大,并且缺乏明显的性别细节,以及其他不同之处。然而,本例和Nepeña例都显示了抓住一个圆柱形物体,很可能是一种被称为quena的长笛。Nepeña墓还藏有约16支藤笛

像这样的木制雕像无疑是为了保护Chimú精英的专属和神圣空间,并永远庆祝在其中举行的仪式。类似的、通常较小的木雕也是独立的游行场面和埋葬中的建筑模型的一部分(例如,见Jackson,2004;Uceda,19992011),可能是出于相关目的。这些场景传达了一种丰富的音乐和盛宴的感觉,这是古代安第斯仪式的核心

Joanne Pillsbury,Andrall E.Pearson古代美国艺术策展人,2018年
参考文献和进一步阅读
克里斯托巴尔,坎帕纳·德尔加多。Chan Chan del Chimo。利马:编辑奥鲁斯,2006年。

赫尔默,马修。海边古镇的考古:秘鲁内佩尼亚山谷萨曼科的表演和社区(约公元前500-1年)。牛津:考古出版社,2015年

玛格丽特,杰克逊。"华卡斯·塔卡伊纳摩和El Dragon的Chimú雕塑,秘鲁莫切山谷。"《拉丁美洲古董》第15卷,第3期(2004年),第298-322页。

Pillsbury,Joanne。《帝国光辉:印加人及其祖先的奢华艺术》,载于乔安妮·皮尔斯伯里、蒂莫西·F·波茨和金·里希特主编的《黄金王国:古代美洲的奢华艺术"》,第33-43页。洛杉矶:J.Paul Getty博物馆,2017年。

皮尔斯伯里、乔安妮、帕特里夏·萨罗、詹姆斯·道尔和朱丽叶·维尔斯玛。永恒的设计:来自古代美洲的建筑模型。纽约:大都会艺术博物馆,2015年。

Uceda,圣地亚哥。"小型文化和制造业:Chimú的文化和祖先",Beiträge zur Allgemeinen und Vergleichen Archäologie 19(1999),第259-311页。

Uceda,圣地亚哥。《卢纳和卢纳的华卡斯与环境》,载于Modelando el mundo:Imágenes de la arquitectura pre-combina,Cecilia Pardo主编,第144-163页。利马:利马艺术博物馆,2011年。
介绍(英)This female figure clutching a cylindrical object to her chest stands on a post intended to be anchored to a floor or niche. The figure was carved in several planes: her large head, feet, forearms, hands, and the object she grasps, extend out from the rest of the body, and her legs, trunk, neck, and tab-like elements between the neck and head—evoking ear ornaments or possibly another costume element—are rendered on the recessive plane. The head is surmounted by a flat-topped covering, below which is a T-shaped brow-and-nose. The plane of her face was carved approximately one centimeter deeper, and her eyes, nasolabial folds, and mouth rendered through simple incisions. Although worn, a considerable amount of red pigment remains on her face. Her fingers and toes are indicated by shallow cuts, and an arc was carved above the genitals. Her breasts were rendered in low relief. The post—the section below the feet and the portion of the sculpture likely sunk into a wall or the ground—shows somewhat more wear than the figure and bears traces of a sandy soil or earthen plaster.

The back of the figure is simply carved, with little detail beyond the curve of the heels. In profile view, the slight backward tilt of the figure is more evident, as is the gentle bend in the knees. The rich patina of the figure is damaged on the proper right side of the figure (seen on the left of the photograph), and on the back (proper left).

The Chimú flourished between ca. A.D. 1000 and 1470, when they were conquered by the Incas. At their height, they dominated some 800 miles of Peru’s arid North Coast. The dry conditions of this coastal desert allows for the preservation of organic materials such as wood and cloth—materials that in most other parts of the Americas would not have survived centuries exposed to the elements or buried in the ground. Figural sculptures made of wood were installed at entrances to buildings on the North Coast, including the palaces of Chan Chan, the capital of the Chimú kingdom (see MMA.1979.206.774). Such figures have also been found in tombs, including a pair found in a burial dated to the Chimú-Inca period (A.D. 1470–1532) at Samanco, in the Nepeña Valley (Helmer 2015:fig. 4.22). The Nepeña figures, at 60 cm in height, are larger than the present example, and lack overtly gendered detailing, among other dissimilarities. Both the present example and the Nepeña examples, however, are shown grasping a cylindrical object, most likely a type of flute known as a quena. The Nepeña tomb also contained some 16 cane flutes.

Wood figures such as these were surely meant to protect the exclusive and sacred spaces of the Chimú elite and to celebrate eternally the rituals held within them. Similar, usually smaller, wood sculptures were also part of free-standing processional tableaux and architectural models deposited in burials (see, for example, Jackson, 2004; Uceda, 1999, 2011), perhaps for related purposes. These scenes convey a rich sense of the music and feasting that were at the heart of ancient Andean ritual practice.

Joanne Pillsbury, Andrall E. Pearson Curator of Ancient American Art, 2018

References and Further Reading

Campana Delgado, Cristóbal. Chan Chan del Chimo. Lima: Editorial Orus, 2006.

Helmer, Matthew. The Archaeology of an Ancient Seaside Town: Performance and Community at Samanco, Nepeña Valley, Peru (ca. 500-1 BC). Oxford: Archaeopress, 2015.

Jackson, Margaret. “The Chimú Sculptures of Huacas Tacaynamo and El Dragon, Moche Valley, Peru.” Latin American Antiquity vol. 15, No. 3 (2004), pp. 298-322.

Pillsbury, Joanne. “Imperial Radiance: Luxury Arts of the Incas and their Predecessors,” in Golden Kingdoms: Luxury Arts in the Ancient Americas, edited by Joanne Pillsbury, Timothy F. Potts, and Kim Richter, pp. 33-43. Los Angeles: The J. Paul Getty Museum, 2017.

Pillsbury, Joanne, Patricia Sarro, James Doyle, and Juliet Wiersema. Design for Eternity: Architectural Models from the Ancient Americas. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2015.

Uceda, Santiago. “Esculturas en miniatura y una maqueta en madera: El culto a los muertos y a los ancestros en la época Chimú,” Beiträge zur Allgemeinen und Vergleichenden Archäologie 19 (1999), pp. 259-311.

Uceda, Santiago. “Las maquetas Chimú de las Huacas de la Luna y sus contextos,” in Modelando el mundo: Imágenes de la arquitectura precolombina, ed. Cecilia Pardo, pp. 144-163. Lima: Museo de Arte de Lima, 2011.
  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。