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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)鼻子装饰物
品名(英)Nose Ornament
入馆年号2002年,2002.322.6
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 1 - 公元 1000
创作地区哥伦比亚(Colombia)
分类金属装饰品(Metal-Ornaments)
尺寸高 1 3/4 × 宽 1 7/8 × 深 1/2 英寸 (4.4 × 4.8 × 1.3 厘米)
介绍(中)这件物品与大都会艺术博物馆2002.322.5一样,是一件由Zenú人制作的金属鼻饰,他们今天生活在哥伦比亚的加勒比海低地。它由金或可能是金铜合金组成。Zenú金属工人主要通过失蜡铸造制造。(关于这一进程的更多信息,请参见2008.569.13a,b)。该物体由一个具有圆形横截面的弯曲杆组成,具有两个带帽端。Zenú陶瓷雕像显示,人们佩戴这种两端向下的装饰物,至少有三种情况下是通过将装饰物穿过鼻中隔(Museo del Oro,波哥大CS4272,CS4197,CS4195),至少有一种情况下显然是通过在鼻子上平衡装饰物(Museo de Oro,BogotáCS4270)。Falchetti(1976,81)指出,塔皮亚斯河地区的一个陶瓷随葬瓮显示,一个人戴着类似的鼻饰,但"开口转向一侧"。Montelíbano综合体的其他陶瓷雕像(见Falcheti 1995,第57a,b页)显示,人们戴着这些装饰物穿过隔膜,但也可以与其他半月形状的鼻饰一起佩戴。16世纪的西班牙殖民者Jorge Robledo报告说,在哥伦比亚卡尔达斯省的Anserma附近看到人们戴着这些鼻饰(Falchetti 1976,81)

弯曲的杆和现在看起来像带帽的末端是铸造在一起的。在盖子和曲杆之间的狭窄空间中有陶瓷熔模的残留物,当物体在铸造后从熔模中清理出来时,很难接近。盖子某些部分的浅凹陷表明,一旦大部分投资被移除,金属工人就对这些扩口端进行了锤击。在盖子开口端附近看到的撕裂可能与锤击引起的应力有关。弯曲钢筋的外表面也有一些冲压痕迹,相对靠近其中一个带帽端,这表明金属工人试图通过锤击来完成钢筋的形状。铸造后,可能在挖掘后,盖子的相对表面经过了大量抛光,使其具有今天可见的光滑表面

有趣的是,在弯曲的钢筋上可以看到一条细线,沿着曲线的形状,位于钢筋宽度的中心。仔细检查,这条线所在的地方有轻微的不连续;沿着这条线的金属具有焊料的外观。一种可能性是,这个物体实际上被铸造成两半,然后焊接成两半。当这些端部被锤击时,帽状端部区域中的任何不连续性都可能被掩盖。另一种选择是连接与修复相关。Ayapel背景中至少有两个相同形状的鼻饰沿着弯曲的条形显示出相似的线条(宾夕法尼亚大学考古与人类学博物馆,宾夕法尼亚州费城,SA2721)

这种装饰物属于Ana María Falchetti(1995152,图71a)定义的"n'形状的鼻饰"("narigueras en forma de'n'"),特别是1a型。这种类型的物体显示出相对较高的金含量和向内弯曲的带帽末端。在较大的群体中存在差异;在某些情况下,端部不带帽,而在其他情况下,末端具有编织设计或几个金属带(参见Falchetti 1976,图17;Falcheti 1995,图71)。Falchetti(1995年,表16)报告的55个此类物体具有广泛的地理分布,尤其是在Sinú、San Jorge、lower Cauca和NechíRivers地区。在圣豪尔赫河和考卡河之间的Ayapel附近挖掘的一个大型群(16)是上述背景的一部分。根据宾夕法尼亚州费城宾夕法尼亚大学考古与人类学博物馆的记录,这16件饰品的尺寸各不相同,重量从4.8克到64.5克不等。有关Zenú金属制品的更多信息,请参阅1979.206.542

Bryan Cockrell,策展人,非洲、大洋洲和美洲艺术,2017年

相关对象:1979.206.534、1979.206.542、1979.2 06.543、19792.06.544、2002.322.5

进一步阅读
Falchetti,Ana María。哥伦比亚北部锡努地区的黄金制品。MPhil等人。,伦敦大学,1976年。

---El oro del Gran Zenú。波哥大:共和国银行,1995年。
介绍(英)This object, like Metropolitan Museum of Art 2002.322.5, is a metal nose ornament that was fabricated by Zenú people, who lived and live today in the Caribbean Lowlands of Colombia. It consists of gold or likely a gold-copper alloy. Zenú metalworkers fabricated it primarily by lost-wax casting. (For more information on this process, please see 2008.569.13a, b). The object consists of a curved bar with a circular cross-section, with two capped ends. Zenú ceramic figurines show people wearing such an ornament with the two ends pointing downward, in at least three cases by passing the ornament through the septum of the nose (Museo del Oro, Bogotá CS4272, CS4197, CS4195) and in at least one case apparently by balancing the ornament over the nose (Museo del Oro, Bogotá CS4270). Falchetti (1976, 81) notes that a ceramic funerary urn from the area of the Tapias River shows a person wearing a similar nose ornament, but with the “opening turning to one side.” Other ceramic figurines of the Montelíbano Complex (see Falchetti 1995, pl. 57a,b) show people wearing these ornaments through the septum, with the ends downward, but also wearing them with other nose ornaments in the shape of half-moons. Jorge Robledo, a 16th-century Spanish colonist, reported seeing people wearing these nose ornaments, around Anserma, located in the Caldas department of Colombia (Falchetti 1976, 81).

The curved bar and what now appear as the capped ends were cast together. There is residue of the ceramic investment in the narrow space between the caps and the curved bar, which would have been difficult to access when the object was cleaned of the investment after casting. The shallow depressions on some parts of the caps suggest that metalworkers hammered these flaring ends once most of the investment was removed. The tears seen on the caps near their open ends may relate to the stress induced by hammering. There are also some punch marks on the exterior face of the curved bar, relatively close to one of the capped ends, suggesting that the metalworkers sought to finish the shape of the bar by hammering. After casting and likely after excavation, the opposite faces of the caps were heavily polished giving them the smooth surface visible today.

Interestingly, there is a thin line visible on the curved bar, following the shape of the curve, and located at the center of the bar’s width. On close inspection, there is a slight discontinuity where this line is located; the metal along this line has the appearance of a solder. One possibility is that the object was actually cast in two halves and then soldered to join these halves. Any discontinuity in the region of the capped ends may have been masked when these ends were hammered. An alternative is that the join relates to a repair. At least two nose ornaments of this same form from the Ayapel context show a similar line along the curved bar (University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, Philadelphia, PA, SA2721).

This ornament belongs to the group defined by Ana María Falchetti (1995, 152, fig. 71a) as “nose ornaments in the shape of an ‘n’” (“narigueras en forma de ‘n’”) and specifically Type 1a. Objects of this type show relatively high gold content and capped ends that curve inwards. There are variations within the larger group; in some cases, the ends are not capped, while in other cases, the ends have a braided design or several bands of metal (see Falchetti 1976, fig. 17; Falchetti 1995, fig. 71). The 55 objects of this type that Falchetti (1995, table 16) reports have a wide geographic distribution and are especially found in the areas of the Sinú, San Jorge, lower Cauca, and Nechí Rivers. A large group (16) was part of the aforementioned context excavated near Ayapel, between the San Jorge and Cauca Rivers. The sizes of these 16 ornaments are variable, their weights ranging from 4.8 g to 64.5 g according to the records of the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, Philadelphia, PA. For further information on the context of Zenú metalwork, please see 1979.206.542.

Bryan Cockrell, Curatorial Fellow, Arts of Africa, Oceania, and the Americas, 2017

Related objects: 1979.206.534, 1979.206.542, 1979.206.543, 1979.206.544, 2002.322.5

Further Reading

Falchetti, Ana María. The Goldwork of the Sinu Region, Northern Colombia. MPhil diss., University of London, 1976.

———. El oro del Gran Zenú. Bogotá: Banco de la República, 1995.
  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。
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