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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)Nespekashuty墓的浮雕
品名(英)Reliefs from the Tomb of Nespekashuty
入馆年号1923年,23.3.468
策展部门埃及艺术Egyptian Art
创作者
创作年份公元前 656 - 公元前 610
创作地区来自于: 埃及(From: Egypt)
分类
尺寸as displayed: 长 303 × 高 127 × Th. 10 厘米 (9 ft. 11 5/16 英寸 × 50 英寸 × 3 15/16 英寸) main section of relief as displayed: 长 245 × 高 106.5 × Th. 10 厘米 (96 7/16 × 41 15/16 × 3 15/16 英寸)
介绍(中)在底比斯建造装饰坟墓大约三个世纪后,第25王朝末期和第26王朝的高级官员再次在底比斯建造了精美的陵墓,并用精美的石灰石浮雕装饰它们。早期的中王国和新王国在底比斯的寺庙和陵墓提供了主题并改变了他们的风格。其中一个令人印象深刻的项目是Nespekashuty墓,这是Psamtik I在亚述人推翻库什特王朝后在底比斯安装的维齐尔。MMA在1920年代首次挖掘,最近对坟墓的重新清理和保护允许进行彻底的研究,即将进行。

维齐尔内斯佩卡舒蒂(Nespekashuty)接管了一座著名的中王国第11王朝坟墓的露台,该坟墓位于Deir el-Bahri的北悬崖上,靠近门图霍特普二世第11王朝神庙和哈特谢普苏特第18王朝神庙(见23.3.174a)。悬崖边的可怜石头被雕刻出来,以创建Nespekashuty的墓室,然后使用细密的石灰石块来排列坟墓。这些套管块最终因火灾而变脆,大部分从墙壁上坍塌,使坟墓处于被发现时的破碎状态。



装饰 展出的浮雕来自Nespekashuty墓的西墙;与布鲁克林博物馆这面墙的其他浮雕一起,他们专注于他的葬礼。在最低的登记册中,男性和女性供奉者向右移动,这些持有者与代尔巴赫里哈特谢普苏特神庙的奉献持有者非常相似。在从左到右的第二个登记册中,载有Nespekashuty棺材的驳船和穿着豹皮的主持太平间牧师被拖过河到西岸的墓地,前面是载有手势哀悼者的船只。这个场景特别受到18王朝墓葬的影响,但在某些方面也与当代门图姆哈特墓中的平行场景非常接近,暗示了两座墓葬的艺术团队可能存在关系。

坟墓的创造者似乎也对活泼的底比斯第11王朝风格的举止拉长的眼睛和眉毛感到特别亲和力。

装饰过程

Nespekashuty墓的装饰从未完成,为艺术家的工作过程提供了非凡的视角。

灰石套管墙准备通过平滑然后涂上石膏涂层来雕刻,该石膏填充间隙并均匀表面。浮雕工作始于通过将掺有红色赭石漆的绳索扣在墙壁上来创建寄存线。在仍然可以看到的红线周围溅起油漆是这个过程造成的。这些登记线稍后将被绘制。中轴线被绘制到一般位置人物中(绘画通常是徒手的,尽管在这个博物馆中没有的Nespekashuty的大型人物上有网格的痕迹)。接下来的初步图纸是用相当宽的笔触刷在相对微弱的红色中制作的。最终图纸涉及修改和定义这些图纸,并使用更精细的深色画笔详细阐述细节。左侧较小的孤立浮雕部分只有献祭者的红色图纸(23.3.468c),是最容易观察绘制阶段的地方,从折断绳索的飞溅到人物的红色中心线,再到初步和最终图纸。

完成此操作后,救济切割开始了。对于任何给定的数字,这也涉及两个阶段。工匠们直接切割了人物的轮廓和剖面背景,留下了千篇一律的形状人物。在第二遍中,精细浮雕师对人物进行了工作,使人物的雕刻边缘变圆,并制定了它们的细节和建模。切割阶段在显示的墙壁的左下角和右上角特别明显。

这堵墙为工作组织的某些方面提供了线索。浮雕雕刻师团队似乎正在一个登记册上工作,并且至少有两个团队可能同时从两个相邻登记册的两端开始工作,以避开彼此。在底部的寄存器上方,墙壁甚至没有完成,表明工人从底部开始。坟墓的长使用寿命 附在一座中王国坟墓上,在内斯佩卡舒蒂的坟墓



建成之前的几个世纪里,内斯佩卡舒蒂的坟墓本身就被重新用于第三中间时期的墓葬,从公元前五世纪开始,正如在那里发现并展示的书面奥斯特拉卡所表明的那样。到托勒密时期,人口和希腊文本表明,这座坟墓要么与附近的Deir el Bahri治疗神庙有关,要么本身被认为是一个受人尊敬的人或Hsy的神殿。在船上哀悼者上方的浮雕墙上可以看到希腊文字,指的是在神龛中称呼众神。从坟墓使用的最后已知阶段来看,附近展出了一个块,展示了六至七世纪晚期古董圣人的图画(23.3.761),当时该坟墓由科普特僧侣或阿塞特人居住。
介绍(英)After a lapse of some three centuries in the construction of decorated tombs at Thebes, high officials of the late 25th dynasty and the 26th dynasty again built elaborate tombs in Thebes, and decorated them with fine limestone reliefs. Earlier Middle Kingdom and New Kingdom temples and tombs at Thebes offered subject matter and inflected their style. One of these impressive projects was the tomb of Nespekashuty, the vizier installed in Thebes by Psamtik I after the removal of the Kushite Dynasty by the Assyrians. First excavated by the MMA in the 1920s, recent re-clearance and conservation of the tomb have allowed a thorough study, which is forthcoming.

The vizier Nespekashuty took over the terrace of a prominent Middle Kingdom Dynasty 11 tomb cut into the north cliff at Deir el-Bahri near the Dynasty 11 temple of Mentuhotep II and the Dynasty 18 temple of Hatshepsut (see 23.3.174a). The poor stone of the cliffside was carved out to create Nespekashuty's tomb chambers and then blocks of fine dense limestone were used to line the tomb. These casing blocks eventually became brittle from fire and mostly collapsed from the walls, leaving the tomb in the crumbled state in which it was found.

The decoration

The reliefs displayed are from the west wall of Nespekashuty's tomb; along with others from this wall in the Brooklyn Museum, they focus on his funeral. In the lowest register male and female offering bearers advance to the right, and these have considerable similarities to offering bearers from Hatshepsut's Temple at Deir el-Bahri. In the second register from left to right, the barge bearing Nespekashuty's coffin and the officiating mortuary priest clad in a leopard skin is being towed across the river to the necropolis on the West Bank, preceded by boats holding gesticulating mourners. This scene is particularly influenced by 18th dynasty tombs, but is also very close in some respects to the parallel scene in the contemporary tomb of Mentuemhat, suggesting a possible relationship of the artistic teams for the two tombs.

The tomb's creators seem to have also felt a particular affinity for the manneristically elongated eyes and brows of the lively Theban 11th dynasty style.

The process of decoration

Decoration of Nespekashuty’s tomb was never completed, offering a remarkable view of the artists’ work process.

The limestone casing walls were prepared for carving by smoothing and then applying a coating of plaster that filled interstices and evened the surface. Work on the relief carving began with creating register lines by snapping ropes doused in red ocher paint against the walls. Spatters of paint around the red lines where they can still be seen result from this process. These register lines would later be drawn over. Central axis lines were drawn in to generally position figures (Drawing was in general freehand, although there are traces of a grid on the large scale figures of Nespekashuty not in this museum). Next preliminary drawings were made with a rather wide stroke brush in a comparatively faint red color. Final drawings involved modifying and defining those drawings and elaborating details with a finer darker brush. The smaller isolated relief section toward the left with only the red drawing of an offering bearer (23.3.468c) is the easiest place to observe the drawing stages, from the spatter of snapping the rope, to the red centering line for the figure, to preliminary and then final drawings.

Once this was done, relief cutting began. This, too, involved two stages for any given figure. A first pass was made by artisans who cut straight back around the outlines of the figures and cutaway background, leaving cookie-cutter shaped figures. In a second pass fine relief carvers worked on the figures, rounding the carved edges of the figures and working out their details and modeling. The stages of cutting are particularly visible in the lower left and upper right of the wall displayed.

The wall presents clues to certain aspects of the work organization. It appears the teams of relief carvers were working across a register and that at least two teams were probably working simultaneously starting at opposite ends of two adjacent registers to stay out of each other’s way. Above the bottom registers seen here the wall is even less finished, indicating the workers began at the bottom.

The long use life of the tomb

Attached to a Middle Kingdom tomb whose courtyard was reused for a Third Intermediate Period burial in the centuries before Nespekashuty's tomb was built, Nespekashuty's tomb itself saw subsequent reuse already starting from the fifth century B.C. as indicated by the written ostraka discovered there and displayed nearby. By the Ptolemaic Period, demotic and Greek texts indicate the tomb was either associated with the nearby healing temple at Deir el Bahri, or possibly was itself thought to be the shrine of a revered individual, or Hsy. On the relief wall itself above the mourners on a boat may be seen a Greek text referring to addressing the gods in shrines. And from the last known stages of the tomb's use is a block exhibited nearby that displays a drawing (23.3.761) of a Late Antique saint from the sixth-seventh centuries when the tomb was inhabited by Coptic monks or asetics.
  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。