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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)坐着的长者
品名(英)Seated elder
入馆年号1982年,1982.231
策展部门迈克尔·洛克菲勒之翼The Michael C. Rockefeller Wing
创作者Tolita-Tumaco artist(s)
创作年份公元前 200 - 公元 400
创作地区哥伦比亚或厄瓜多尔(Colombia or Ecuador)
分类陶瓷雕塑(Ceramics-Sculpture)
尺寸高 25 英寸 × 宽 14 1/2 英寸 × 深 18 3/4 英寸 (63.5 × 36.8 × 47.6 厘米)
介绍(中)这座雕塑是托利塔-图马科艺术家创作的最壮观的陶瓷人物之一。它描绘了一个老人,可以通过面部皱纹、眼睛下方松弛的皮肤、仅存的几颗牙齿和下巴胡茬来识别。它的扁平头部揭示了童年时期的颅骨变化,这是一种文化习俗,可能标志着古代的种族身份或等级。这个雕像的性别尚不清楚。在厄瓜多尔沿海的托利塔-图马科和贾马-科克陶瓷传统中,有标记的,如这个人物的胸部,在女性中比男性更常见。然而,这座雕像缺乏女性形象中常见的长裙。

由于身体的复杂性和潮湿粘土的重量,艺术家需要几天时间才能完成雕塑。这个人物是使用灰色粘土膏制作的,这是托利塔-图马科陶瓷的特征。躯干最有可能使用逐渐添加的粘土板成型,直到完成最终形式。四肢和头部分开制作,并在干燥和射击之前连接到躯干上。面部使用单面模具,当粘土膏仍然柔软时,切开皱纹和其他细节。今天这些雕塑的单色和哑光外观是磨损的结果。显然,这些物体中的许多都具有光滑和抛光的表面,并用烧制后的油漆装饰(见Valdez 1992:136;MMA 1991.436.7a,b),与Jama-Coaque雕塑相似(MMA 1980.34.38a,MMA 1980.34.39)。

仔细检查下背部表明,这个数字可能坐在凳子上(与MMA 1991.436.7a,b相比)。精致的石头或木座椅是古代美洲权威的重要象征,从厄瓜多尔到中美洲,包括亚马逊和加勒比地区(McEwan and Looper 2021)。这个人相对较高的地位或重要性也从以粘土建模的项圈和手镯中可以看出。装饰品可能由黄金制成,最初悬挂在鼻子,耳朵和上的孔中(见MMA 1979.206.1204和1979.206.1136)。

托利塔-图马科陶艺家以其对人类的逼真渲染而闻名,例如基多的阿拉巴多之家(Cruz Cevallos 1992:225)和圣地亚哥的智利艺术博物馆(MCHAP 0348)中的例子。他们的一些人物被描绘成身体前倾,采用动画姿势,弯曲的腿,拱形的躯干和凝视前方的脸。长者是一个受欢迎的主题,在基多(编号12-53-69,LT-2-16-69,LT-3-11-70)和瓜亚基尔(GA-1-2268-82,GA-5-1631-80)的厄瓜多尔中央银行博物馆的收藏中可以找到几个例子。一种常见的解释是,这些年长的人物是宗教专家或古代"萨满"的代表,他们有责任调解人与自然界中其他生物之间的关系。背部明显的脊柱可能不仅仅显示出一个非常瘦削的身体,因为它与鬣蜥相似(与巴伊亚鬣蜥的例子相比:MMA 1988.117.7)。由于皮肤干燥和皱纹,将托利塔-图马科受人尊敬的长者与那些爬行动物进行比较可能是唤起人与动物联系的一种方式,这是萨满教仪式的关键要素。

托利塔-图马科是一个在厄瓜多尔北部和哥伦比亚南部的热带太平洋沿岸蓬勃发展的文明。在由河流形成的景观中,沼泽红树林和茂密森林覆盖的山丘,这些社区定居在围绕广场和几个巨大的土丘(称为托拉斯)组织的大村庄中,这些土丘是精英的住所和墓葬。这些人类和动物雕塑的遗骸在定居点和墓地被发现,但它们的原始用途仍然未知。托利塔-图马科传统始于公元前600年左右,但其独特的风格在公元前200年至公元400年之间成熟。在这几个世纪中,这些社区产生了古代美洲最精致的金属制品传统之一,并与太平洋沿岸的其他社区建立了关系,包括秘鲁北部的社区。


雨果 C. 池原-冢山,安德鲁 W. 梅隆策展/收藏专家研究员,古代美洲艺术,2022 年。



参考文献和进一步阅读


Burtenshaw,Julia,Héctor García Botero,Diana Magaloni和María Alicia Uribe Villegas(编辑)。便携式宇宙/El universo en tus manos:哥伦比亚土著的思想和辉煌。洛杉矶/纽约:洛杉矶县艺术博物馆,德尔莫尼科图书,2022 年。

克鲁兹·塞瓦洛斯,伊万。El mundo de los espíritus en el Ecuador precolombino.米兰:五大洲,2012年。

康明斯,汤姆。"厄瓜多尔前西班牙裔艺术的传统",载于《美洲印第安人标志:厄瓜多尔前哥伦布时期艺术的5.000年》,由弗朗西斯科·瓦尔迪兹和迭戈·维因蒂米拉编辑,第63-81页。基多:科利布里出版社,1992年。

麦克尤恩、科林和马修·卢珀。"座位,座位和社会角色:跨文化比较",载于:前哥伦布时期的中美洲,哥伦比亚和厄瓜多尔:迈向综合方法,由Colin McEwan和John W. Hoopes编辑,第377-407页。华盛顿特区:敦巴顿橡树研究图书馆和收藏,2021 年。

帕蒂尼奥,迪奥杰尼斯。图马科史前:哥伦比亚太平洋海岸的阿森塔米恩托、辅助和间歇。哥伦比亚波帕扬:考卡大学编辑部,2003年。

斯科特,大卫A."拉托利塔-图马科文化:黄金和铂金金属大师"。《拉丁美洲古代》2011年第22卷第1期:65-95.

乌加尔德,玛丽亚·费尔南达。托利塔文化圣像:区域发展代表的意识形态理论。Forschungen zur Archäologie Außereuropäischer Kulturen Band 7.Deutsches Archäologisches Institut.威斯巴登: 赖歇特出版社, 2009.

乌加尔德,玛丽亚·费尔南达。"Las alfareras rebeldes:在两性、妇女和父权的统治下,厄瓜多尔的考古学是错误的。安蒂波达。人类学和考古学研究第36期(2019):33-56。

瓦尔迪兹,弗朗西斯科。"托利塔陶瓷传统",载于《美洲印第安人标志:厄瓜多尔前哥伦布时期艺术5.000年》,弗朗西斯科·瓦尔迪兹和迭戈·维因蒂米拉编辑,第135-40页。基多:科利布里出版社,1992年。
介绍(英)This sculpture is one of the most spectacular examples of ceramic figures created by Tolita-Tumaco artists. It depicts an elderly person, recognizable by facial wrinkles, baggy skin beneath the eyes, the few remaining teeth, and chin stubble. Its flattened head reveals cranial modification during childhood, a cultural practice that could have signaled ethnic identity or rank in antiquity. The gender of this effigy is not clear. Marked nipples, as in this figure’s chest, were more common in female than male representations in Tolita-Tumaco and Jama-Coaque ceramic traditions of coastal Ecuador. This statue, however, lacks the long skirts that are typically seen in female images.

The artist(s) would have taken several days to complete the sculpture due to the complexity of the body and the weight of the moist clay. This figure was crafted using the gray clay paste that characterizes Tolita-Tumaco ceramics. The torso was shaped most likely using clay slabs that were gradually added until completing the final form. The limbs and the head were made separately and attached to the torso before drying and firing. A one-side mold was used for the face while the wrinkles and other details were incised when the clay paste was still soft. Today’s monochromatic and matte appearance of these sculptures is the result of wear. Apparently, many of these objects had a smooth and polished finish and were decorated with post-fired paints (see Valdez 1992:136; MMA 1991.436.7a, b), in a similar fashion to Jama-Coaque sculptures (MMA 1980.34.38a, MMA 1980.34.39).

A careful examination of the lower back shows that this figure may have been seated on a stool (compare with MMA 1991.436.7a, b). Elaborate stone or wood seats were important symbols of authority in the ancient Americas, from Ecuador to Mesoamerica, including the Amazonian and the Caribbean areas (McEwan and Looper 2021). The relatively high rank or importance of this individual is also suggested by the collar and bracelets modeled in clay. Adornments, probably made of gold, originally hung from holes on its nose, ears, and nipples (see MMA 1979.206.1204 and 1979.206.1136).

Tolita-Tumaco potters are known for their realistic renderings of humans, such as the examples in the collections of Casa de Alabado in Quito (Cruz Cevallos 1992:225) and Museo Chileno de Arte Precolombino in Santiago (MCHAP 0348). Some of their figures are depicted leaning forward, adopting an animated pose, with flexed legs, arched torsos, and faces staring ahead. Elders were a popular theme, and several examples can be found in the collections of the Museo del Banco Central de Ecuador in Quito (No. 12-53-69, LT-2-16-69, LT-3-11-70) and in Guayaquil (GA-1-2268-82, GA-5-1631-80). A common interpretation is that these elder figures were representations of religious specialists, or ancient "shamans" who had the responsibility to mediate relations between people and other beings in nature. The marked spine in the back may be revealing of more than a very lean body, as it bears a resemblance to iguanas (compare with a Bahia example of iguanas: MMA 1988.117.7). With dry and wrinkled skin, the comparison of Tolita-Tumaco revered elders with those reptiles could have been a way to evoke the human-animal connection that is a key element in shamanistic rituals.

Tolita-Tumaco was a civilization that flourished on the tropical Pacific coast of northern Ecuador and southern Colombia. In a landscape shaped by the rivers, with swampy mangroves, and hills covered in dense forests, these communities settled in large villages organized around plazas and several massive earthen mounds, knowns as tolas, that were the residences and burials of the elite. Remains of these human and animal sculptures have been found in settlements and cemeteries, but their original use remains unknown. The Tolita-Tumaco tradition started around 600 B.C., but its distinctive style matured between 200 B.C. and A.D. 400. During these centuries, these communities produced one of the most refined metalwork traditions in the ancient Americas and established relationships with other communities on the Pacific coast, including those in Northern Peru.


Hugo C. Ikehara-Tsukayama, Andrew W. Mellon Curatorial/Collection Specialist Fellow, Arts of the Ancient Americas, 2022.



References and further reading


Burtenshaw, Julia, Héctor García Botero, Diana Magaloni, and María Alicia Uribe Villegas (eds.). The Portable Universe/El universo en tus manos: Thought and Splendor of Indigenous Colombia. Los Angeles/New York: Los Angeles County Museum of Art, DelMonico Books, 2022.

Cruz Cevallos, Iván. El mundo de los espíritus en el Ecuador precolombino. Milan: 5 Continents, 2012.

Cummins, Tom. "Tradition in Ecuadorian Pre-Hispanic Art," in Amerindian Signs: 5.000 Years of Precolumbian Art in Ecuador, edited by Francisco Valdez and Diego Veintimilla, pp. 63-81. Quito: Colibrí editions, 1992.

McEwan, Colin, and Matthew Looper. "Seats, Seating, and Social roles: Cross-cultural Comparisons," in: Pre-Columbian Central America, Colombia, and Ecuador: Toward an Integrated Approach, edited by Colin McEwan and John W. Hoopes, pp. 377-407. Washington, D.C.: Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection, 2021.

Patiño, Diógenes. Tumaco prehispánico: Asentamiento, subsistencia e intercambio en la costa pacífica de Colombia. Popayán, Colombia: Editorial Universidad del Cauca, 2003.

Scott, David A. "The La Tolita-Tumaco Culture: Master Metalsmiths in Gold and Platinum." Latin American Antiquity Vol. 22, No 1 (2011):65-95.

Ugalde, María Fernanda. Iconografía de la cultura Tolita: Lecturas del discurso ideológico en las representaciones figurativas del Desarrollo Regional. Forschungen zur Archäologie Außereuropäischer Kulturen Band 7. Deutsches Archäologisches Institut. Wiesbaden: Reichert Verlag, 2009.

Ugalde, María Fernanda. "Las alfareras rebeldes: una mirada desde la arqueología ecuatoriana a las relaciones de género, la opresión femenina y el patriarcado." Antípoda. Revista de antropología y arqueología No 36 (2019):33-56.

Valdez, Francisco. "The Tolita Ceramic Tradition," in Amerindian Signs: 5.000 Years of Precolumbian Art in Ecuador, edited by Francisco Valdez and Diego Veintimilla, pp. 135-40. Quito: Colibrí editions, 1992.
  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。