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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)磁盘
品名(英)Disk
入馆年号1987年,1987.394.98
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 500 - 公元 700
创作地区秘鲁(Peru)
分类金属装饰品(Metal-Ornaments)
尺寸深 7/8 × 直径 12 3/16 英寸 (2.2 × 31 厘米)
介绍(中)这个圆盘的图像描绘了一个被两只秃鹰牺牲的摩切战士。两个"秃鹰"都显示在侧面;左边的那个举起了受害者的左臂,而右边的那个挥舞着一把新月形的刀,被称为tumi 由锤击的金属片组成,部分背景被切掉以创建场景,并被包围在边界内。最初,这件作品是银色的。在铜片基底的表面添加了精心制作的银薄层。今天可见的绿色是腐蚀和铜金属随着时间的推移暴露在元素中的结果。周边的小孔表明,这个圆盘可能被附在仪式盾牌或仪式旗帜上,在宗教仪式中游行和展示

Moche在公元200年至公元850年期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、陶瓷和金属制品上生动地绘制壁画和浮雕。战士在摩切图像中尤为突出,他们参与战斗、俘虏、狩猎和仪式活动。有时,战士是拟人化的动物,这些动物通常在仪式活动中扮演重要角色

在这个圆盘上,两只秃鹰上的切口表示眼睛和尾羽。秃鹰的身体通过"悬挂物"来增强,悬挂物是用金属线连接的羽毛或圆形的小块金属片。危险也出现在战士的外衣和圆盘的边缘;其中一些现在已经不见了,尽管连接它们的电线还保留着。有趣的是,每只秃鹰都有一只标准的鸟腿和脚,以及一只人类手臂。秃鹰和<i>tumis</i>是摩切意象中常见的配对。大都会艺术博物馆收藏的一把Moche<i>tumi</i>刀,1987.394.217,刀柄上有一只秃鹰

秃鹰家族的成员,秃鹰与莫切世界的牺牲和死亡有着密切的联系。安第斯山脉最大的鸟类,它们的觅食和狩猎习惯将它们与死者的世界联系在一起。在莫切陶瓷的绘画场景中,有一个著名的主题,即埋葬主题,以秃鹰为特色(Donnan和McClelland,1979年)。埋葬主题呈现了一系列与埋葬精英和秃鹰有关的仪式,秃鹰为一位张开的裸体女性加冕。秃鹰还配有系绳,这表明莫切人饲养秃鹰是为了这个目的。在同一个场景中,秃鹰本身被显示为囚犯,在一个架子上。最后,秃鹰在葬礼中被描绘出来,这表明它们在葬礼仪式中发挥了重要作用。其他莫切陶瓷,如大都会博物馆收藏的马镫嘴瓶,1978.412.71,描绘了秃鹰解绑和肢解俘虏的场景

在这一陈述中,受害者似乎不是典型的俘虏。莫切图像中的大多数俘虏都被剥去了衣服。在这里,受害者穿着一件带垂饰的束腰外衣,头戴头饰。圆锥形的头饰表明他是一名战士,尽管他没有后膝,这是一种通常带有这些人物的防弹衣。看来,由于死者举起的手臂失去了手,牺牲性的肢解过程已经开始

科学发掘证实,摩切图像中描绘的许多仪式活动确实是摩切宗教传统的一部分。秘鲁北海岸的多个地点都有人和动物被屠杀的记录。考古学家记录了埋葬在杰奎特佩克山谷帕卡特纳穆遗址的一座仪式建筑中的秃鹰,这些秃鹰是被肢解的人集体埋葬的(Rea 1986;Verano 1986)。在摩切信仰中,这种祭祀仪式可能被认为是他们世界延续的必要条件

Alicia Boswell,Andrew W.Mellon"保护文化"博士后研究员,2017年

参考文献和进一步阅读
阿尔瓦、沃尔特和克里斯托弗·多南。锡潘王陵。洛杉矶:福勒文化历史博物馆,加利福尼亚大学,1993年。

Benson,Elizabeth。古代拉丁美洲的鸟类和动物。盖恩斯维尔:佛罗里达大学出版社,1975年

Bourget,Steve。"广场3a的执行",载于《月球之花研究》1995年,S.Uceda、E.Mujica和R.Morales编辑,第51-59页。特鲁希略:国家自由大学社会科学院,1997年。

Bourget,Steve和Kimberly Jones,编辑。摩切的艺术和考古:秘鲁北海岸的古代安第斯社会。奥斯汀:得克萨斯大学,2008年

Donnan、Christopher和Guillermo A.Cock,编辑。帕卡特纳穆论文:第1卷。洛杉矶:文化历史博物馆,加利福尼亚大学,1986年

多南、克里斯托弗和唐娜·麦克莱兰。摩切艺术与图像学。洛杉矶:加州大学洛杉矶分校拉丁美洲中心,加州大学,1978年。

---。"莫切图像学中的埋葬主题"。《前哥伦布艺术与考古研究》21(1979):1-46.---。莫切细线画:它的演变和它的艺术家。洛杉矶:Fowler博物馆,加利福尼亚大学,1999年。

Donnan,C.B.和L.J.Castillo"Excavaciones de Tumbas de Sacerdotias Moche en San Joséde Moro,Jequetepeque"。在Moche,观点和视角。Santiago Uceda和Elias Mujica编辑的《墨西哥文化》(Actas del Primero Coloquio sobre la Cultura Moche),第415-424页。秘鲁特鲁希略:国家自由大学,特鲁希略,秘鲁,1994年

卡斯蒂略、路易斯·詹姆和卡洛斯·伦吉福。Krzysztof Makowski编辑的《Los señores de Los reinos de la luna》中写道:"女性葬礼的身份和女性社会的意识形态"。利马:秘鲁艺术与艺术学院,秘鲁银行,2008年

卡斯蒂略、路易斯·詹姆和圣地亚哥·乌塞达。《苏手册》中的"莫奇卡人"
介绍(英)The imagery of this disk depicts a Moche warrior sacrificed by two condors. Both “condors” are shown in profile; the one on the left raises the victim’s left arm while the on the right wields a crescent knife, known as a tumi. Composed of hammered sheet metal, portions of the background were cut away to create the scene, encircled within a border. Originally, this work was silver in color. Expertly crafted thin layers of silver were added to the surface of the copper sheet substrate. The green color visible today is a result of corrosion and the copper metal’s exposure to the elements over time. Small holes on the perimeter suggest that this disk may have been attached to a ceremonial shield or a ceremonial banner, paraded and displayed in religious rituals.

The Moche flourished between A.D. 200 and A.D. 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. Warriors are particularly prominent in Moche iconography, and are shown engaged in combat, taking prisoners, hunting, and ceremonial activities. Sometimes the warriors are anthropomorphized animals, and these creatures often play important roles in representations of ceremonial activities.

On this disk, incising on the two condors indicate the eyes and tail feathers. The condors’ bodies are enhanced by “danglers,” small pieces of sheet metal in the shape of a feather or circle attached with metal wires. Danglers are also on the warrior’s tunic and the border of the disk; some of these are now missing although the wires for their attachment remain. Interestingly, each condor has one standard bird leg and foot, and one human arm. Condors and tumis are common pairings in Moche imagery. A Moche tumi knife in the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s collection, 1987.394.217, has a condor perched on top of the handle.

Members of the vulture family, condors are strongly associated with sacrifice and death in the Moche world. The largest birds in the Andes, their scavenging and hunting habits connect them with the world of the dead. In painted scenes on Moche ceramics, one well-known subject, known as the Burial Theme, features condors (Donnan and McClelland 1979). The Burial Theme present a series of rituals associated with the burial of elites and condors defleshing a splayed nude female. Condors are also shown with tethers, suggesting that the Moche kept condors for this purpose. In the same scene condors themselves are shown as prisoners, on a rack. Finally, condors are depicted in the burial itself, suggesting they played an important role in funerary rituals. Other Moche ceramics such as on a stirrup-spout bottle in the Met collection, 1978.412.71, depict condors defleshing and dismembering captives.

In this representation, the victim does not appear to be a typical captive. Most captives in Moche iconography are shown stripped of their attire. Here the victim wears a tunic with danglers and a headdress. The conical headdress indicates he is a warrior, although he lacks a backflap, a type of body armor normally with these figures. It appears that the sacrificial dismemberment process has already begun as the individual’s raised arm is missing its hand.

Scientific excavations have confirmed that many of the ritual activities depicted in Moche iconography did occur as part of Moche religious traditions. Dismemberment of humans and animals have been documented at various sites on Peru’s north coast. Archaeologists have documented condors interred in a mass burial of mutilated individuals in association with a ceremonial building at the site of Pacatnamu in the Jequetepeque Valley (Rea 1986; Verano 1986). In Moche beliefs, such sacrificial rituals were likely considered essential to the continuation of their world.

Alicia Boswell, Andrew W. Mellon “Cultures of Conservation” Postdoctoral Fellow, 2017

References and Further Reading

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

Benson, Elizabeth. Birds and Beasts of Ancient Latin America. Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 1975.

Bourget, Steve. “Excavaciones en la Plaza 3a.” In Investigaciones en la Huaca de la Luna 1995, edited by S. Uceda, E. Mujica and R. Morales, pp. 51-59. Trujillo: Facultad de Ciencias Sociales, Universidad Nacional de La Libertad, 1997.

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

Donnan, Christopher and Guillermo A. Cock, editors. The Pacatnamu Papers: Volume 1. Los Angeles: Museum of Cultural History, University of California, 1986.

Donnan, Christopher and Donna McClelland. Moche Art and Iconography. Los Angeles: UCLA Latin American Center, University of California, 1978.

---. “The Burial Theme in Moche Iconography.” Studies in Pre-Columbian Art and Archaeology 21 (1979): 1-46. ---. Moche Fineline Painting: Its Evolution and Its Artists. Los Angeles: Fowler Museum, University of California, 1999.

Donnan, C.B. and L.J. Castillo “Excavaciones de Tumbas de Sacerdotisas Moche en San José de Moro, Jequetepeque.” In Moche, propuestas y perspectivas. Actas del Primero Coloquio sobre la Cultura Moche edited by Santiago Uceda and Elias Mujica, pp. 415-424. Trujillo, Peru: Universidad Nacional de La Libertad, Trujillo, Peru, 1994.

Castillo, Luis Jaime and Carlos Rengifo. “Identidades funerarias femeninas y poder ideológico en las sociedades mochicas.” In Los señores de los reinos de la luna, edited by Krzysztof Makowski. Lima: Colección Arte y Tesoros del Perú, Banco de Crédito del Perú, 2008.

Castillo, Luis Jaime and Santiago Uceda. “The Mochicas.” In Handbook of South American Archaeology, edited by Helaine Silverman and William Isbell, pp. 707-729. New York: Springer Press, 2008.

Chicoine, David. “Death and Religion in the Southern Moche Periphery: Funerary Practices at Huambacho, Nepeña, Peru.” Latin American Antiquity 22, 4 (2011): 525-548.

Hill, Erica. 1998. “Death as a Rite of Passage the Iconography of the Moche Burial Theme.” Antiquity 72: 528-38.

Klaus, Haagen D. and J. Marla Toyne, editors. Ritual Violence in the Ancient Andes: Reconstructing Sacrifice on the North Coast of Peru. Austin: University of Texas Press, 2016.

Rea, Amadeo M. “Black Condors and Human Victims: Archaeological Evidence from Pacatnamu.” The Pacatnamu Papers, Vol. 1, edited by Christopher B. Donnan and Guillermo A. Cock, pp. 139-145. Los Angeles: Museum of Cultural History, University of California, 1986.

Schaeffer, Anne-Louise. “Cathartidae in Moche Art and Culture.” Proceedings 44th International Congress of Americanists, Flora and Fauna Imagery in Precolumbian Cultures: Iconography and Function, edited by Jeanette F. Peterson, pp. 29-68. Oxford: BAR International Series 171, 1983.

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.

Uceda, Santiago. “El poder y la muerte en la sociedad Moche.” In Investigaciones en la Huaca de la Luna 1995, edited by Santiago Uceda, Elías Mujica, and Ricardo Morales, pp. 177-188. Trujillo, Peru: Facultad de Ciencias Sociales, Universidad Nacional de La Libertad, 1997.

---. “Investigations at Huaca de la Luna, Moche Valley: An Example of Moche Religious Architecture.” In Moche Art and Archaeology in Ancient Peru, edited by Joanne Pillsbury, pp. 47-67. Washington D.C.: National Gallery of Art, 2001.

Uceda, Santiago and Moisés Tufino, editors. Moche: Hacia el final del milenio. Lima: Pontificia Universidad Católica del Peru, 2003.

Verano, John. Paleontological Analysis of Sacrificial Victims at the Pyramid of the Moon, Moche River Valley, Northern Peru. Chungara, Revista de Antropología Chilena 43, 1(2000): 61-70.

---. “Where do they Rest? The Treatment of Human Offerings and Trophies in Ancient Peru.” In Tombs for the Living: Andean Mortuary Practices, edited by Tom D. Dillehay, pp. 189-227. Washington D.C: Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collections, 1995.

---. “Sacrificios humanos, desmembramientos y modificaciones culturales en restos osteológicos: evidencias de las temporadas de investigación 1995-96 en la Huaca de la Luna.” In Investigaciones en la Huaca de la Luna 1996, edited by S. Uceda, E. Mujica, and R. Morales, pp. 159-171. Trujillo, Peru: Facultad de Ciencias Sociales Universidad Nacional de Trujillo, 1998.

---. “A Mass Burial of Mutilated Individuals at Pacatnamu.” In The Pacatnamu Papers, Vol. 1. edited by Christopher B. Donnan and Guillermo A. Cock, pp. 117-139. Museum of Cultural History, University of California, Los Angeles, 1986.
  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。