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)猫形瓶子
品名(英)Bottle in the shape of a feline
入馆年号1996年,1996.290
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 600 - 公元 900
创作地区秘鲁(Peru)
分类陶瓷容器(Ceramics-Containers)
尺寸高 8 × 宽 2 3/4 × 深 4 1/2 英寸 (20.3 × 7 × 11.4 厘米)
介绍(中)这款瓦里瓶将拟人化猫科动物的身体与烧瓶状容器的身体无缝融合。这种陶瓷结合了圆形、低浮雕和绘画元素,在视觉和技术上都很复杂。其泥土色调的深度和体积的平衡出色地说明了瓦里艺术家在陶器艺术中融合安第斯人对色彩和雕塑的精通的能力


直立,双臂靠在身上,这只猫的姿势淡化了它的兽性。这个人物睁大眼睛挑衅地盯着观众,直立的耳朵、张开的尖牙嘴和星星点点的眉毛放大了他的威胁姿态。这种动物的爪子部分是人性化的,用手指而不是爪子描绘,顶部有一条灰色腕带。有爪的手指在每一侧抓住一种神奇的生物,在学术界通常被称为"驼背动物"(Menzel 1964;Knobloch 1983)(一侧受损,可能是由于长期暴露在地下的盐中)。这两只隆起的动物被漆成砖红色,凸起的圆形上有黄色的轮廓。这种配色方案在瓶子圆周上的两个图形上颠倒了,瓶子的细长主体与容器腔室的曲率非常吻合。几何设计,如带附属物的虚线圆圈和菱形,与船体的彩绘装饰相得益彰。一排橙色、砖红色和灰色的人字形在瓶口顶部,这是瓦里陶瓷的常见特征


这款瓶子上高度抛光的橙色滑片(粘土与水混合的悬浮液,通常添加颜料)提供了光滑光滑的背景,突出了陶瓷上凸起的圆形和猫的腿。白色的亮点在这个表面上很突出,尤其是多个人物的眼睛、尖牙和爪子,这些致命的特征表明这个物体富含危险的野生动物。通过将自然渲染的动物特征、混合的超自然人物和抽象的几何图案结合在一起,这个瓶子唤起了身体和形式的复杂微观世界,观众必须从远处和近距离观察。图像随着观测者操纵、转动和倾斜船只而展开


这个瓶子来自于今天秘鲁南海岸纳斯卡流域Ingenio山谷被掠夺的精英墓葬(Tello 1917;Menzel 1968)。从公元600年到1000年左右,瓦里人统治着一个帝国,该帝国在安第斯山脉中部的大部分地区扩张,尽管其存在和控制程度各不相同。瓦里文化诞生于华帕人和南海岸纳斯卡人之间的互动,华帕人是今天阿亚库乔中部高地的一个当地群体。它的帝国连接了多个地区、文化和艺术实践。事实上,这个瓶子的技术和图案继承自纳斯卡的曲目,从其多色到隆起的动物和腹肌延伸的生物等图案,但它们与北方传统的元素相结合,例如模仿猫科动物


在秘鲁北部高地的Wilkawain遗址发现了一个几乎一模一样的瓶子(Paredes Olvera 2016:图16)。考古学家认为它是从那里进口的,可能是从瓦里中心地带进口的。Wilkawain和Ingenio Valley的瓶子是否都是在同一个车间生产的,然后出口到不同的地区,目前尚不清楚。虽然其他瓦里瓶也有类似的扁平身体,但这种型号的不同之处在于,为了让观众面对猫,它必须侧向放置,使容器的形状与图相适应。


尽管这个瓶子可能从未使用过,只会被埋葬,但它可能曾经装过液体,可以倒在地上或被摄入,也许是玉米或红胡椒啤酒(Sayre等人,2012)。这艘船的体积很小,这表明它是为了个人的虔诚实践。当一个人手里拿着这个瓶子,瓶子上有多个强大的生物时,观看体验就会发生变化,尤其是当瓶子被倒置以从瓶子的喷口倾倒液体时。这种物理操作会不会促使用户对这些实体产生恐惧和尊重的感觉,或者取而代之的是对它们的控制感



进一步阅读


Knobloch,Patricia J."从早期中期到中期地平线时代的安第斯华里陶瓷研究I",纽约州立大学博士论文,1983年。"中地平线时代华里帝国的新数据2A。"尼奥帕·帕查6(1968):47–114。
Paredes Olvera,Juan。"Ichic Willkawain y el Callejón de Huaylas:Un飞地省Wari en la sierra norte del Perú。"载于《安卡什山脉的Arqueología 2:Población y territorio》,由Babel Ibarra Asencios编辑,137-64。Huari,Ancash:Instituto de Estudios Huarinos,2016。
Sayre、Matthew P.、D.Goldstein、W.Whitehead和Patrick Ryan Williams。"显著偏好:Chicha de Molle和Huari State消费实践",尼亚瓦帕·帕查32(2012):231–82。朱利奥·特洛(Julio C.Tello),"洛斯·安提戈斯·水泥里奥斯(Los antigous cementerios del valle de Nasca)。《第二届泛美科学大会会议记录》,美国华盛顿,1915年12月27日,星期一至1916年1月8日,1:283–91。华盛顿特区,1917年,图5。
介绍(英)This Wari bottle seamlessly merges the body of an anthropomorphized feline with that of a flask-like vessel. Combining in-the-round, low-relief, and painted elements, this ceramic is both visually and technically intricate. The depth of its earthy tones and its balance of volumes brilliantly illustrate the ability of Wari artists to fuse Andean mastery of color and sculpture in the art of pottery.


Standing upright with its arms against its body, the feline’s posture de-emphasizes its animality. The figure stares defiantly at the viewer with its eyes wide-open, a threatening stance amplified by its upright ears, gaping fanged mouth, and dotted eyebrows. The animal’s paws are partially humanized, depicted with digits rather than claws and topped with a grey wristband. The clawed fingers grab a fantastical creature, commonly known as the "humped animal" in scholarship (Menzel 1964; Knobloch 1983), on each side (one side is damaged, perhaps from prolonged exposure to salts in the ground). The two humped animals were painted in brick red with a yellow outline on raised roundels. This color scheme is reversed on the two figures on the circumference of the bottle, whose elongated bodies fit closely the curvature of the vessel’s chamber. Geometric designs, such as dotted circles and rhombuses with appendages, complement the painted decoration of the vessel’s body. A row of orange, brick red, and grey chevrons crown the bottle’s spout, a feature common to Wari ceramics.


The highly burnished orange slip (a suspension of clay mixed with water, often with added pigments) on this bottle provides a smooth and glossy background that accentuates the raised roundels and feline’s legs on the ceramic. The white highlights stand out on this surface, in particular the eyes, fangs, and claws of the multiple figures—lethal attributes that suggest that this object abounds with dangerous wildlife. By bringing together naturalistically-rendered animal features, hybrid supernatural figures, and abstract geometric motifs, this bottle invokes a complex microcosm of bodies and forms, which the viewer must examine from a distance as well as up-close. The imagery unfolds as the viewer handles, turns, and angles the vessel.


This bottle comes from a looted elite burial from the Ingenio Valley in the Nasca drainage on the south coast of present-day Peru (Tello 1917; Menzel 1968). From around 600 to 1000 A.D., the Wari ran an empire that expanded throughout most of the Central Andes, albeit with varying degrees of presence and control. Wari culture was born out of the interactions between the Huarpa, a local group of the central highlands in present-day Ayacucho, and the Nasca people on the South Coast. Its empire bridged multiple regions, cultures, and artistic practices. Indeed, this bottle features techniques and motifs inherited from the Nasca repertoire, from its polychromy to motifs such as the humped animal and the ventrally extended creature, but they are combined with elements taken from northern traditions, such as the modeled feline.


An almost identical bottle was excavated at the site of Wilkawain, in the northern highlands of Peru (Paredes Olvera 2016: fig. 16). Archaeologists believe that it was imported there, possibly from the Wari heartland. Whether the bottles from Wilkawain and the Ingenio Valley were both made in the same workshop and then exported to different regions remains unknown. While other Wari bottles have a similarly flattened body, this model differs in that it has to be oriented sideways in order for the viewer to face the feline, adapting the form of the container to the figure.


Although it is possible that this bottle was never used and only destined to be deposited in a burial, it could have once contained liquid to be poured on the ground or ingested, perhaps maize- or red peppercorn- beer (Sayre et al. 2012). The vessel’s small size suggests that it was meant for personal devotional practice. As one held this bottle featuring multiple powerful beings in one’s hands, the viewing experience would have evolved, especially as the bottle was tilted upside-down to pour liquid from the bottle’s spout. Would this physical manipulation have prompted in the user sensations of fear and respect for these entities, or instead a sense of control over them?


Louise Deglin, Sylvan C. Coleman and Pam Coleman Memorial Fund Fellow, Arts of the Ancient Americas, 2022


 

Further Reading


Knobloch, Patricia J. "A Study of the Andean Huari Ceramics from the Early Intermediate Period to the Middle Horizon Epoch I." Ph.D. Dissertation, State University of New York, 1983.


Menzel, Dorothy. "New Data on the Huari Empire in Middle Horizon Epoch 2A." Ñawpa Pacha 6 (1968): 47–114.
Paredes Olvera, Juan. “Ichic Willkawain y el Callejón de Huaylas : Un enclave provincial Wari en la sierra norte del Perú.” In Arqueología de la sierra de Ancash 2: Población y territorio, edited by Babel Ibarra Asencios, 137–64. Huari, Ancash: Instituto de Estudios Huarinos, 2016.
Sayre, Matthew P., D. Goldstein, W. Whitehead, and Patrick Ryan Williams. “A Marked Preference: Chicha de Molle and Huari State Consumption Practices.” Ñawpa Pacha 32 (2012): 231–82.

Tello, Julio C. “Los antiguos cementerios del valle de Nasca.” In Proceedings of the Second Pan American Scientific Congress, Washington, U.S.A., Monday, December 27, 1915, to Saturday, January 8, 1916, 1:283–91. Washington, D.C., 1917, fig. 5.
  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。