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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)带有神话场景的船只
品名(英)Vessel with mythological scene
入馆年号1980年,1980.213
策展部门迈克尔·洛克菲勒之翼The Michael C. Rockefeller Wing
创作者Metropolitan Painter【600 至 800】
创作年份公元 600 - 公元 800
创作地区墨西哥或危地马拉(Mexico or Guatemala)
分类陶瓷容器(Ceramics-Containers)
尺寸高 4 1/2 × 宽 4 15/16 × 深 4 15/16 英寸 (11.4 × 12.5 × 12.5 厘米)
介绍(中)这个带阶梯式三脚架的小酒杯是玛雅器皿上绘画最精湛、保存最完好的神话场景之一。由于书法线条与三本被称为法典(sing.codex)的玛雅书中的书法线条相似,这类彩绘花瓶被称为"法典风格",但这些法典风格的器皿让我们得以一窥关于农业周期的绘画叙事和复杂的玛雅神话的丰富世界。这艘特殊船只的主题是一个与热带雨季开始有关的神话

奶油色的黑色场景,由明亮的边缘和底座上生动的红色条纹框起来,以一只带有黑点的拟人化猫科动物为中心。这只"睡莲美洲豹",一个从其他描述和象形文字中已知的角色,蹲在一座有生命的山的大图像上,在各种玛雅语言中被称为witz。这只美洲豹身穿白色斗篷,头部和前爪长出精致的植被

在美洲豹的右边,古代玛雅雨神Chahk左手挥舞着一把标有象形文字符号的大斧头,右手挥舞着一个头骨形状的有生命的石头。他积极地向山上的美洲豹讲话,也许是威胁性的攻击,也许是庆祝性的舞蹈。Chahk留着典型的打结头发和植物头饰,戴着海贝耳环,胸脯可能是由打结的绳索制成的,还有一张有一颗突出门牙的鱼一样的嘴。此外,象形文字规定这是"第一场雨"的Chahk,场景设定在玛雅低地5月至6月的雨季开始时。艺术家没有缩小人物的体型来展示他们的全身,而是选择剪掉腰部的描绘。场景底部的泥泞边界可能表明,这一行动发生在烟雾弥漫或水汪汪的地方,可能是被早雨淹没的低洼地区

睡莲美洲豹左边的另一个人物是一个跳舞的死神,他与一条从山上冒出来的超自然蛇互动。这个死亡之神被描绘成既有骨骼,有一个人形头骨,上面有两个挤压的眼球和黑色的脸漆,又像昆虫一样,躯干像蜈蚣的身体一样分段,还有一个类似的分段头饰元素。他举起双手,好像在恳求或威胁面对他的美洲豹。死神的鼻孔里出现了一颗流苏宝石,代表着一个真正的鼻子装饰,或者可能代表着呼吸。这个角色身体左侧的象形文字说明可能包含他的名字的徽标(受损的带有黑色面部油漆的象形文字头部),并表示"这是他的wahy"或共同本质。这个"wahy occurrence"的短语很可能指的是船主,一些人认为他是一名王室青年,尽管孩子的具体王朝没有明确命名。这些wahy的存在往往是死亡、疾病和玛雅宇宙中其他令人讨厌的方面的化身。这个特殊的生物有着黑色的眼睛,可能与拟人化的神Akan有关,与斩首和醉酒遗弃有关

这里的场景还没有被完全理解,但代表了公共和私人收藏中其他几艘法典风格船只上描绘的主题的一个变体。有时雨神的脸是人的,有时死神的肚子像尸体一样膨胀,有时拟人化的美洲豹背上是婴儿,比如大都会博物馆的"美洲豹宝宝"容器(1978.412.206)。在其他场景中,主人公与夜晚的生物相伴,如萤火虫、蟾蜍、狗或其他神。画这些花瓶的艺术家可能在更大的叙事中展示了不同的场景,或者以非常不同的方式描绘了同一个场景。

这个小杯子的功能是容纳一份玉米饮料或者巧克力饮料。大多数法典风格的壶都是作为陪葬品发现的,包括在墨西哥坎佩切卡拉克穆尔遗址发掘的1号墓中的一个例子。卡拉克穆尔最近的工作揭示了许多流行主题的法典风格片段,比如这里展示的那个,玉米神重生的场景,以及代表祖先角色的其他老年神的各种活动



进一步阅读


Barrois,Ramzy R.和Alexandre Tokovinine
2005 El inframundo y El mundo天体与佩洛塔玛雅。在第十八届危地马拉Arqueológicas研究会议,2004年(由J.P.Laporte、B.Arroyo和H.Mejía编辑),第27-38页。国家考古博物馆,危地马拉

Brittenham,Claudia和Debrah Nagao
2014 Cacaxtla Figural陶瓷 科学研究所分析。第三十六卷,núm。104,第55-96页。科学研究所。墨西哥联邦区

García Barrios,Ana
2008 Chaahk,el dios de la lluvia,在Clásico maya时期:宗教和政治方面。马德里大学美国人类学系未发表博士论文

Griffith、Cameron S.和Sarah M.P.Jack
2005年纪念性改良Speleothem雕塑:一类古玛雅洞穴艺术中的新模式。创造标记:新千年岩石艺术研究生研究。Jennifer K.K.Huang和Elisabeth V.Culley,编辑。美国摇滚艺术研究协会。第1-25页

Keener,Candis Michelle
2009捷豹系列:比较分析。未发表的硕士论文。肯特州立大学

克尔,J
介绍(英)This small drinking cup with stepped tripod supports features one of the most masterfully painted, well-preserved mythological scenes found on a Maya vessel. Because of the calligraphic line’s resemblance to that found in the three Maya books known as codices (sing. codex), this class of painted vases are referred to as "codex-style." Only four Maya codices have survived from what was certainly a large corpus, but these codex-style vessels afford a glimpse into the rich world of painted narratives and complex Maya mythologies about agricultural cycles. The subject of this particular vessel is a myth pertaining to the start of the tropical rainy season.

The black-on-cream painted scene, framed by vivid red bands on the flaring rim and the base, centers on an anthropomorphic feline marked with dark spots. This "water lily jaguar," a character known from other depictions and hieroglyphic texts, crouches on a large image of an animate mountain, known as witz in various Mayan languages. The jaguar wears a white cape and delicate vegetation sprouts from both his head and front paw.

To the jaguar’s right, Chahk, the ancient Maya rain god, wields a large axe marked with the hieroglyphic symbol for shiny objects in his left hand, and an animate stone object in the shape of a skull in his right. He actively addresses the jaguar on the mountain, perhaps in a menacing attack, or perhaps in a celebratory dance. Chahk is shown with his typical knotted hair and vegetal headdress, marine shell earrings, a pectoral perhaps made of knotted cords, and fish-like mouth with one projecting frontal tooth. Furthermore, the hieroglyphic text specifies that this is the Chahk of the "First Rain," setting the scene in the start of the rainy season of the Maya Lowlands from May to June. Rather than shrinking down the characters to show their full bodies, the artist chose to cut off the depictions at the waist. A smudgy border on the bottom of the scene may denote the fact that this action takes place in a smoky or watery location, possibly a low-lying area flooded by the early rains.

The other personage to the left of the water lily jaguar is a dancing death god, who interacts with a supernatural serpent emerging from the mountain. This death deity is depicted as both skeletal, with a humanoid cranium topped with two extruded eyeballs and black face paint, and insect-like, with the torso segmented like the body of a centipede and a similarly segmented headdress element. He raises his hands as if to beseech or threaten the jaguar, who faces him. A tasseled jewel emerges from the death god’s nostril, representing an actual nose ornament, or perhaps representing breath. A hieroglyphic caption directly to the left of this character’s body likely contains a logogram for his name (the damaged glyphic head with black face paint) and states that "it is his wahy," or co-essence. This phrase of wahy possession likely refers to the vessel’s owner, who some have argued was a royal youth, although the child’s specific dynasty is not explicitly named. These wahy beings are often personifications of death, disease, and other unsavory aspects of the Maya cosmos. With its blackened eyes, this particular being might be related to the anthropomorphic deity Akan, associated with decapitation and drunken abandon.

The scene here is not fully understood, but represents one variation of a theme depicted on several other codex-style vessels in public and private collections. Sometimes the rain god is shown with a human face, sometimes the death god has the distended belly of a corpse, and sometimes the anthropomorphic jaguar is shown as an infant on its back, such as in the Metropolitan Museum’s "Baby Jaguar" vessel (1978.412.206). In other scenes the protagonists are accompanied by creatures of the night, such as fireflies, toads, dogs, or other deities. The artists painting these vases might be showing different scenes in a larger narrative, or the same scene depicted in very different ways.

The function of this small cup would have been to hold an individual serving of a maize-based beverage or a chocolate drink. Most codex-style pots are found as offerings in funerary contexts, including an example from Tomb 1 excavated at the site of Calakmul, Campeche, Mexico. Recent work at Calakmul has revealed many codex-style fragments of popular themes, such as the one shown here, scenes of the rebirth of the maize god, and various activities of other aged gods that represent ancestral characters.




Further Reading


Barrois, Ramzy R. and Alexandre Tokovinine
2005 El inframundo y el mundo celestial en el Juego de Pelota Maya. In XVIII Simposio de Investigaciones Arqueológicas en Guatemala, 2004 (edited by J.P. Laporte, B. Arroyo, and H. Mejía), pp.27-38. Museo Nacional de Arqueología y Etnología, Guatemala.

Brittenham, Claudia and Debrah Nagao
2014 Cacaxtla Figural Ceramics. Anales del Instituto de Investigaciones Estéticas. vol. XXXVI, núm. 104, pp. 55-96. Instituto de Investigaciones Estéticas. Distrito Federal, México.

García Barrios, Ana
2008 Chaahk, el dios de la lluvia, en el period Clásico maya: aspectos religiosos y politicos. Unpublished Ph.D. Dissertation, Department of Anthropology of America, Universidad Complutense de Madrid.

Griffith, Cameron S., and Sarah M. P. Jack
2005 Monumental Modified Speleothem Sculpture: New Patterns in a Class of Ancient Maya Cave Art. In Making Marks: Graduate Studies in Rock Art Research at the New Millennium. Jennifer K.K. Huang and Elisabeth V. Culley, Editors. American Rock Art Research Association. pp. 1-25.

Keener, Candis Michelle
2009 The Baby Jaguar Series: A Comparative Analysis. Unpublished Master’s Thesis. Kent State University.

Kerr, Justin and Barbara Kerr.
1988. Some Observations on Maya Vase Painters. In Elizabeth P. Benson and Gillett G. Griffin, eds., Maya Iconography, pp. 236-259. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. - See Fig. 7.11d, p. 251:

Lacadena, Alfonso, and Soren Wichmann
2004 On the representation of the glottal stop in Maya writing. In The Linguistics of Maya Writing. Edited by Soren Wichmann. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press. pp. 103-162.

Looper, Matthew
2009 Lightning Warrior: Maya Art and Kingship at Quirigua. Austin: University of Texas Press. p. 87, Fig. 3.13

Robicsek, Francis and Donald Hales.
1988. The Sacrifice of Xbalanque. In Elizabeth P. Benson and Gillett G. Griffin, eds., Maya Iconography, pp. 260-276. - See p. 269, Fig. 8.11 for black and white rollout:

Robicsek, Francis and Donald Hales.
1981. Maya Book of the Dead: The Corpus of Codex Style Ceramics of the Late Classic Period . Charlottesville, VA: University of Virginia Art Museum and Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press. - For black and white rollout photograph, see Vessel 27, p. 24; for description, see pp. 41-42; for color rollout photograph, see interior front cover

Van Akkeren, Ruud
2012 Bebé jaguar como pelota: Nueva contribución a un tema Clásico Maya. In XXV Simposio de Investigaciones Arqueológicas en Guatemala, 2011 (edited by B. Arroyo, L. Paiz, and H. Mejía), pp. 698-713. Ministerio de Cultura y Deportes, Instituto de Antropología e Historia y Asociación Tikal, Guatemala.



James Doyle
  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。