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)近距离头盔
品名(英)Close Helmet
入馆年号2014年,2014.282a–d
策展部门武器和盔甲Arms and Armor
创作者Gian Giacomo Negroli【1463 至 1543】
创作年份公元 1485 - 公元 1545
创作地区原产国: 意大利, 米兰(Country of Origin: Italy, Milan)
分类头盔(Helmets)
尺寸高 13 1/8 英寸 (33.3 厘米); 宽 8 1/2 英寸 (21.6 厘米); 深 12 英寸 (30.5 厘米); 重 4 磅 15 盎司 (2239.6 g)
介绍(中)作为唯一可以合理肯定地归因于Gian Giacomo Negroli(1463–1543)的已知作品,这顶以前未被记录的头盔是由15世纪和16世纪米兰著名的内格罗利家族成员标记或签名的小型作品集的主要补充,总共不超过20件,其中主要的例子在大都会博物馆的收藏中。吉安·贾科莫是文艺复兴时期欧洲最伟大的军械师之一菲利波·内格里(Filippo Negroi,约1510–1579年)和技艺精湛的大马士革工匠弗朗切斯科·内格里的父亲,他自己也是一位杰出的军械师。16世纪初,他活跃在米兰,是内格里家族中最成功的成员之一,菲利波和他的兄弟们在他的工作室里工作了很长时间,并可能获得了许多区别于他们作品的技能。到目前为止,吉安·贾科莫的作品都没有被鉴定出来,因此对他的所有了解都完全来自档案证据。这顶设计无与伦比、制作精良的头盔,为他的能力和成就提供了新的见解

作为菲利波(Filippo)和吉安·贾科莫(Gian Giacomo)的儿子和侄子乔万·保罗·内格里(Giovan Paolo Negroli,约1513–1569)及其兄弟为强大的意大利和外国赞助人(包括奥地利皇帝查理五世(1500–1558)和法国多芬·亨利二世(1519–1559))制作的壮观浮雕盔甲的先驱,考虑中的头盔在内格里斯的作品中占有独特的地位。在收购之前,在没有已知先例的情况下,菲利波和乔万·保罗的浮雕盔甲似乎没有直接的先行者。这顶头盔展现了他们作品的大胆设计和精湛工艺,有力地表明米兰的压花盔甲艺术早在一代人之前就开始了,这是吉安·贾科莫的作品。菲利波的第一件已知作品——他于1532年为乌尔比诺公爵弗朗切斯科·玛丽亚·德拉·罗弗尔(Francesco Maria della Rovere,1490–1538)制作的一件勃艮第(burgonet,头盔)——至少比菲利波的首件已知作品早了十年——这件头盔现在是内格里盔甲匠最早发现的浮雕作品。这是菲利波和吉奥万·保罗·内格里(Giovan Paolo Negroli)制作的雄心勃勃、备受推崇的浮雕盔甲迄今为止缺失的先例,也是一种奢侈盔甲风格历史发展的起点,这将为米兰尤其是内格里家族带来巨大的声誉

这顶头盔是内格里斯人的第一件作品,它将幻想融入了一个功能齐全、实用的头盔中,他们因此赢得了巨大的声誉,也许今天最令人难忘——在这个例子中,碗和面罩上浮雕着贝壳。虽然16世纪早期的意大利盔甲有时会在头盔碗的后部、护肘(肘部防御)和护膝(膝盖防御)上装饰浮雕的肋骨或贝壳,但Gian Giacomo头盔面罩上浮雕的贝壳是前所未有的,是大师创造力和胆识的明确体现

这也是一个罕见的德国风格意大利盔甲(alla tedesca)的例子,可能是为了阿尔卑斯山以北的出口,或是为了有北方口味的意大利客户。不同于标准类型的意大利骑兵头盔,它的颧骨铰接在碗的下边缘,它有一个遮阳板和一个贝弗,设计成可以在碗两侧的公共枢轴上旋转,这与当时大多数德国的例子一样。在这一点上,它可以与大都会博物馆收藏的带有弗朗切斯科·内格里(Francesco Negroli)标志的德国风格长笛装饰的背板相比较(编号2014.154)。
介绍(英)As the only known work that may be ascribed with reasonable certainty to Gian Giacomo Negroli (1463–1543), this previously unrecorded helmet is a major addition to the small corpus of works marked or signed by members of the celebrated Negroli family of fifteenth- and sixteenth-century Milanese armorers––no more than twenty pieces in total––of which key examples are in the Metropolitan Museum’s collection. The father of Filippo Negroli (ca. 1510–1579), one of the greatest armorers of Renaissance Europe, and of Francesco Negroli (ca. 1522–1600), a consummate damascener, Gian Giacomo was an eminent armorer in his own right. Active in Milan around the turn of the sixteenth century, he was one of the most successful members of the Negroli family, and it was in his workshop that Filippo and his brothers long worked and presumably acquired many of the skills that distinguish their works. Until now, none of Gian Giacomo’s works had been identified and all that was known about him was thus exclusively derived from archival evidence. This helmet, which is unparalleled in design and superbly crafted, offers new insights into his abilities and accomplishments.

As a precursor to the spectacular embossed armors made by Filippo and Giovan Paolo Negroli (ca. 1513–1569), Gian Giacomo’s son and nephew, respectively, and their brothers, for powerful Italian and foreign patrons, including the Emperor Charles V of Austria (1500–1558) and the Dauphin Henry II of France (1519–1559), the helmet under consideration occupies a unique place in the oeuvre of the Negrolis. Until its acquisition, and in the absence of known precedents, it had seemed that Filippo’s and Giovan Paolo’s embossed armors had no immediate forerunners. This helmet, which exhibits both the boldness of design and virtuosity of execution that characterize their works, strongly suggests that the art of embossing armor in Milan began a generation earlier, with the work of Gian Giacomo. Made at least a decade before Filippo’s first known work––a burgonet (helmet) that he made in 1532 for Francesco Maria della Rovere (1490–1538), duke of Urbino––this helmet now ranks as the earliest identified embossed work by any of the Negroli armorers. It is the hitherto missing precedent for the ambitious and highly regarded embossed armors made by Filippo and Giovan Paolo Negroli, and as such a point of departure in the historical development of a style of luxury armor that would bring great fame to Milan and the Negrolis in particular.

This helmet is the first work by the Negrolis to incorporate into an entirely functional and serviceable helmet the fantasy for which they earned great fame and are perhaps best remembered today––in this instance seashells embossed in relief on the bowl and visor. While early sixteenth-century Italian armor was sometimes decorated with embossed ribs or seashells on the rear of the helmet’s bowl, the couters (elbow defenses), and poleyns (knee defenses), the seashell embossed on the visor of Gian Giacomo’s helmet is unprecedented, and an unmistakable manifestation of the master’s creativity and audacity.

It is also a rare example of Italian armor made in the German style (alla tedesca), presumably for export north of the Alps or for an Italian client with northern tastes. Unlike the standard type of Italian cavalry helmet, which is constructed with cheekpieces hinged to the lower edge of the bowl, it has a visor and a bevor designed to rotate on common pivots at the sides of the bowl, in the manner of most German examples of the period. In this, it may be compared to a backplate decorated with flutes in the German fashion, which bears the marks of Francesco Negroli, in the Metropolitan Museum’s collection (acc. no. 2014.154).
  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。