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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)束缚手形状的Hacha
品名(英)Hacha in the Shape of Bound Hands
入馆年号1979年,1979.206.1042
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 300 - 公元 700
创作地区墨西哥, 韦拉克鲁斯(Mexico, Veracruz)
分类石雕(Stone-Sculpture)
尺寸高 7 1/16 x 宽 5 1/2 x 深 5 英寸 (18 x 14 x 12.7 厘米)
介绍(中)这个雕塑由火山石制成,采用两只比真人大小更大的手,握紧拳头的形式。双手背靠背放置,手指朝外。在每一侧,手指以均匀的线条下降到手掌,而切割的线条描绘了手掌的垫子和拇指的关节。虽然手看起来很自然,但艺术家选择强调均匀性和对称性,而不是描绘人类手的不规则性;例如,小指和拇指以夸张的"U"形向手掌弯曲,而不是在不同的关节处弯曲。

这件作品是"hacha",一种与古代中美洲球赛相关的雕塑。hachas以西班牙语中的"斧头"命名,是球赛中佩戴的装备的代表。来自韦拉克鲁斯州和玛雅地区的图像描绘了在轭上戴着哈查的球手,腰间戴着U形石头物体(见MMA 1979.206.423和MMA 1978.412.15)。这个哈查背面的凹痕或"凹口"略微凹陷,标志着哈查被固定在轭上的地方,大概是用布或绳子绑住的。石轭和哈查加在一起会很重,以至于学者们认为它们本质上是仪式性的,可能是石头版的布料或实际游戏中穿的木头原件。

哈查斯是一种独特的形式,与经典韦拉克鲁斯文化的艺术有关,该文化在公元300年至900年间在墨西哥湾沿岸蓬勃发展。除了出现在韦拉克鲁斯州的肖像画中外,哈查斯还从考古发掘中被发现,在那里它们在精英坟墓中发现了带有轭。在韦拉克鲁斯的古典时期(约公元300-900年),艺术家们开始创作更纤细和刀片状的哈查;术语"hacha"指的是这些后来的迭代(参见MMA 1978.412.18,了解刀片状hacha的例子)。在韦拉克鲁斯州的一些地方,哈查斯最终被帕尔马斯(palmas)所取代,帕尔马斯(palmas)是大型的扇形石雕,也附在轭上(见MMA 2007.215.9和MMA 1978.412.16)。然而,正如艺术史学家雷克斯·孔茨(Rex Koontz)所指出的那样,在经典韦拉克鲁斯文化中,轭、哈查斯和棕榈的使用因地而异;在一些地点,帕尔马斯取代了哈查斯,而在其他地点,帕尔马斯不是材料记录的一部分。虽然哈查形式起源于韦拉克鲁斯州,但考古学家已经从玛雅地区发现了哈查斯。哈查斯也出现在古典时期(约公元250-900年)的玛雅艺术中。例如,托尼纳纪念碑171上有两名低浮雕的球手,其中一人戴着轭和哈查击球。

雕刻的石哈查上的图像代表了从动物到叙事场景的各种主题。人头形状的哈查斯特别常见(见MMA 2004.551.2和MMA 1979.206.371),一些学者将这些哈查与韦拉克鲁斯州球赛相关的斩首仪式联系起来。球赛是El Tajin等网站雕塑节目的中心焦点。在韦拉克鲁斯州的这个地点,南球场有许多低浮雕的叙事面板。其中一些面板描绘了在球场内或周围发生的牺牲。基于这些面板,学者们认为人头形状的hachas代表被切断的头 - 这是面板中描绘的斩首仪式的最终结果。许多头部哈查斯闭着的眼睛和张开的嘴巴支持了这种解释,暗示所描绘的人已经死了。像

这个例子这样描绘人手的哈查斯很少见。手在这个哈查上的位置 - 手掌和手指朝外 - 也很不寻常,并表明这些是俘虏的手,被绑在背后或交叉在手腕上并绑在身体前面。俘虏是韦拉克鲁斯州和玛雅地区艺术中的常见主题,并且与球赛及其牺牲和再生主题密切相关。在与球赛有关的仪式或表演中使用,这个哈查本来是对被俘虏的身体的惊人提及——也许也是对失去的后果的引用。

Caitlin C. Earley,Jane and Morgan Whitney Fellow,2016-17

延伸阅读

Arnold III,Philip J.和Christopher A. Pool,编辑。韦拉克鲁斯南部和中部的经典时期文化潮流。敦巴顿橡树研究图书馆和收藏:华盛顿特区,2008 年。

昆茨,雷克斯。闪电神和羽蛇:El Tajin的公共雕塑。德克萨斯大学出版社:奥斯汀,2009 年。

Orr,Heather和Rex Koontz,编辑。血与美:中美洲和中美洲艺术与考古学中的有组织暴力。洛杉矶: 科森考古研究所出版社, 2009.

Scarborough,Vernon L.和David R. Wilcox,编辑。中美洲球赛。亚利桑那大学出版社:图森,1991年。

舒克、埃德温·石头的秘密:来自中美洲南部的轭、哈查斯和帕尔马斯。美国哲学学会:费城,1996年。

塔拉多瓦尔,埃里克。"中美洲佩洛塔的Juego de Pelota Mesoamericano: Origen y Desarrollo。"墨西哥考古学44.8(2000):21。

惠廷顿,E.迈克尔,编辑。生死运动:中美洲球赛。泰晤士河和哈德逊:纽约,2001年。
介绍(英)This sculpture, made of volcanic stone, takes the form of two larger-than-life-size hands with clenched fists. The hands are placed back to back, with fingers facing outward. On each side, fingers descend to the palm in an even line, while incised lines delineate the pad of the palm and the joints of the thumb. Although the hands look naturalistic, the artist has chosen to stress uniformity and symmetry rather than depict the irregularities of human hands; the pinkies and thumbs, for example, bend toward the palms in an exaggerated “U” shape rather than at distinct joints.

This work is an “hacha,” a type of sculpture associated with the ballgame in ancient Mesoamerica. Named after the Spanish term for “axe,” hachas are representations of gear worn in the ballgame. Imagery from Veracruz and the Maya area depicts ballplayers wearing hachas on top of yokes, U-shaped stone objects worn around the waist (see MMA 1979.206.423 and MMA 1978.412.15). The indentation or “notch” on the back of this hacha is slightly concave and marks the place where the hacha would have been attached to a yoke, presumably with cloth or rope binding. Together, the stone yoke and hacha would have weighed so much that scholars presume they were ceremonial in nature, perhaps stone versions of cloth or wood originals worn in actual play.

Hachas are a distinctive form associated with art from the Classic Veracruz culture, which flourished along the coast of the Gulf of Mexico between A.D. 300 and 900. In addition to appearing in Veracruz iconography, hachas have been recovered from archaeological excavations, where they were discovered with yokes in elite tombs. Over the course of the Classic period (ca. A.D. 300–900) in Veracruz, artists began to create hachas that were more slim and blade-like; the term “hacha” refers to these later iterations (see MMA 1978.412.18 for an example of a blade-like hacha). In some parts of Veracruz, hachas were eventually replaced by palmas, large, fan-like stone sculptures that also attached to yokes (see MMA 2007.215.9 and MMA 1978.412.16). However, as art historian Rex Koontz has noted, the use of yokes, hachas, and palmas varied from place to place in Classic Veracruz culture; at some sites, palmas replaced hachas, while at other sites, palmas are not part of the material record. While the hacha form originated in Veracruz, archaeologists have recovered hachas from the Maya area. Hachas also appear in Maya art from the Classic period (ca. A.D. 250–900). Tonina Monument 171, for example, features two ballplayers carved in low relief, one of whom wears a yoke and hacha to strike the ball.

The imagery on carved stone hachas represents a wide array of subject matter, from animals to narrative scenes. Hachas in the shape of human heads are particularly common (see MMA 2004.551.2, and MMA 1979.206.371), and some scholars have connected these hachas to decapitation rituals associated with the ballgame in Veracruz. The ballgame was a central focus of sculptural programming at sites like El Tajin. At this site in Veracruz, the South Ballcourt featured a number of narrative panels carved in low relief. Some of these panels depict sacrifices taking place in or around a ballcourt. Based on these panels, scholars have suggested that hachas in the shape of human heads represent severed heads—the end result of the rites of decapitation depicted in the panels. The closed eyes and open mouths of many head hachas support this interpretation, hinting that the depicted individuals are dead.

Hachas depicting human hands, like this example, are rare. The position of the hands on this hacha—with palms and fingers facing outward—is also unusual, and suggests these are captive hands, bound behind the back or crossed at the wrist and bound in front of the body. Captives were a common theme in art from Veracruz and the Maya area, and would have been closely associated with the ballgame and its themes of sacrifice and regeneration. Used in ceremonies or performances related to the ballgame, this hacha would have been a striking reference to the captive body—and perhaps to the consequences of loss.

Caitlin C. Earley, Jane and Morgan Whitney Fellow, 2016–17

Further reading

Arnold III, Philip J. and Christopher A. Pool, editors. Classic Period Cultural Currents in Southern and Central Veracruz. Dumbarton Oaks Research Library & Collection: Washington, DC, 2008.

Koontz, Rex. Lightning Gods and Feathered Serpents: The Public Sculpture of El Tajin. University of Texas Press: Austin, 2009.

Orr, Heather, and Rex Koontz, editors. Blood and Beauty: Organized Violence in the Art and Archaeology of Mesoamerica and Central America. Los Angeles: Cotsen Institute of Archaeology Press, 2009.

Scarborough, Vernon L. and David R. Wilcox, editors. The Mesoamerican Ballgame. University of Arizona Press: Tucson, 1991.

Shook, Edwin M. and Elayne Marquis. Secrets in Stone: Yokes, Hachas and Palmas from Southern Mesoamerica. American Philosophical Society: Philadelphia, 1996.

Taladoire, Eric. "El Juego de Pelota Mesoamericano: Origen y Desarrollo." Arqueología Mexicana 44.8 (2000): 21.

Whittington, E. Michael, editor. The Sport of Life and Death: the Mesoamerican Ballgame. Thames & Hudson: New York, 2001.
  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。