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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)圣母玛利亚
品名(英)The Virgin Mary
入馆年号1960年,60.37.1
策展部门欧洲雕塑和装饰艺术European Sculpture and Decorative Arts
创作者Neroccio de' Landi【1447 至 1500】【意大利人】
创作年份公元 1485 - 公元 1499
创作地区
分类雕塑青铜(Sculpture-Bronze)
尺寸整体 (confirmed): 7 5/8 × 2 1/2 × 1 9/16 英寸 (19.4 × 6.4 × 4 厘米); 高 (base): 3 3/16 英寸 (8.1 厘米)
介绍(中)尽管展示了不同的风格和制作,但圣约翰的肖像(其中一幅与圣母玛利亚的肖像搭配在一起)值得一起讨论,因为它们提供了一个难得的机会来研究文艺复兴时期早期的同一作品。这三件青铜器都是几年前获得的,反映了15世纪锡耶纳雕塑流派的晚期哥特式构图习惯,该流派始于雅格波·德拉·奎尔西亚(Jacobo della Quercia),并一直延续到维奇耶塔(Vecchietta)和内罗克西奥·迪巴托洛梅奥·德兰迪(Neroccio di Bartolommeo de‘Landi)。这所学校的标志是牢固的长方形轮廓,通常包裹着非常激动的帷幔和热情的面部表情

所有人都是作为锡耶纳人获得的。圣母与圣约翰这一对曾一度被认为是来自尼洛西奥的工作室,而单身的圣约翰只是锡耶纳人。作为一名雕塑家,画家尼洛基奥很少被肯定,但他仍然提供了最好的整体风格对比。[1] 杰出的作品是他在锡耶纳的圣凯瑟琳(1474年)的演讲室中创作的多色木材,以及锡耶纳大教堂中的亚历山大圣凯瑟琳(Saint-Catherine of Alexandria)大理石,显然在他去世时仍未完工[2],但他的遗产遗书中记录了雕塑家使用的工具、材料和模型。与我们的青铜器相关的两个尼洛基奥雕塑的重要方面是,它们在圆润的轮廓内,紧张地垂下帷幔,这仍然是晚期哥特式和德拉奎尔西亚的传统。但尼洛西奥仍然只是一个出发点

长期以来,圣母和圣约翰这对雕像无疑是在十字架的两侧,十字架本身很可能是青铜的,圣母在基督的右边,约翰在他的左边。约翰,"敬爱的弟子",经常用右手托着他的右脸颊沉思。[3] 锡耶纳银匠Goro di Ser Neroccio(与画家雕刻家无关)在皮恩扎教区博物馆(Museo Diocesano,Pienza)的一个十字架,签名和日期为1430年,提供了一种暗示性的安排。[4] 十字架下方的弯曲茎支撑着圣母玛利亚的右侧;毫无疑问,失踪的约翰在基督的左边

在许多地方都有青铜制的主祭者出现在社团的侧翼;最著名的可能是两个,在阿什莫林下车,令人信服地归因于菲拉丽。[5] 在这种情况下,是圣母将脸颊放在一只手上。在锡耶纳大教堂(Siena Cathedral)附近,1482年的一份库存清单中列出了"一个青铜十字架(attone,即软凳,或黄铜/青铜),浮雕十字架,侧面有两个人物,镀金和搪瓷。";它甚至表现出与与之配对的圣母玛利亚的不同。这尊圣约翰有一个更为规则的六边形底座,背面的帷幔垂下部分经过打磨,以模仿布料的编织。圣母玛利亚的基地更小,角落也不那么清晰。圣约翰斯的浓郁火焰镀金不会出现在脸和手上,以抵消金色光芒中这些更具表现力的区域。两者似乎都没有光环

单身的圣约翰在形式上更苗条,在治疗上更线性。他也更瘦,站在一个普通的圆盘上作为自己的基地。他和这对情侣之间的显著区别在于,他的所有下摆和流苏都有冲压痕迹和切割线,并通过油镀金(除了后面的外套顶部)进行了进一步强调,这些痕迹已经严重磨损。他的头发和指甲比他的对手更仔细。他的头顶是扁平的,有一个洞作为光环

这些青铜器中没有一件质量最高,[7]但很可能都可以追溯到杰出的原型。这对情侣可爱的可塑性来自于对原始模特相对广泛的影响和对纪念性的渴望的欣赏。另一方面,单身汉更苗条的身材和珍贵的细节暗示,银匠希望在近距离内满足观众的审视
-JDD


脚注
(有关缩短参考文献的关键信息,请参见《大都会艺术博物馆的艾伦、意大利文艺复兴和巴洛克青铜器》。纽约:大都会艺术馆,2022年。)
1。我的结论要归功于Gertrude M.Helms,"大都会艺术博物馆中的三件锡耶纳文艺复兴青铜器",纽约大学美术学院硕士论文,1979年。她没有为这三个作品中的任何一个确定作者,但她的作品以其对锡耶纳雕塑的巧妙分析、丰富的对比、类型学引用和技术讨论为回报
2.Coor 1961,第177–78页,第182页,第41、46页,图23–25、48–50
3.Vavalà1929年
4.Elisabetta Cioni,《赛德尔》,2010年,第470–71页
5.斯宾塞1958年
6.Borghesi和Banchi 1898年,第265页,文件。164.
7。这三个小雕像是青铜合金,铅和微量杂质含量低,包括银。R.Stone/TR,2008年11月3日
8.它们的库存编号37553在棕色和黑色杂色黑色大理石底座背面的白色油漆中出现,在底座底部的墨水中出现。
介绍(英)Despite exhibiting different styles and factures, the likenesses of Saint John, one of which is paired with an image of the Virgin Mary, warrant discussion together, for they offer a rare opportunity to examine early Renaissance casts of the same composition. All three bronzes, acquired a few years apart, reflect the Late Gothic compositional habits of the fifteenth-century Sienese school of sculpture that began with Jacopo della Quercia and continued through Vecchietta and Neroccio di Bartolommeo de’ Landi. The hallmarks of the school are firm, oblong silhouettes often enclosing quite agitated draperies and fervent facial expressions.

All were acquired as Sienese. The Virgin–Saint John pair was for a time thought to be from the workshop of Neroccio, and the single Saint John merely Sienese. The painter Neroccio, only rarely encountered with certainty as a sculptor, still provides the best stylistic comparisons overall.[1] Outstanding productions are his polychrome wood Saint Catherine of Siena (1474), in the oratory of that saint, Siena, and a marble Saint Catherine of Alexandria in Siena Cathedral, apparently still unfinished at his death,[2] but the posthumous inventory of his estate registers the tools, materials, and models employed by sculptors. The important aspect of the two Neroccio sculptures in relation to our bronzes is their nervous falls of drapery within mellow contours, still in the tradition of the Late Gothic and della Quercia. But Neroccio remains a mere point of departure.

The Virgin and Saint John pair, by long-standing usage, undoubtedly flanked a crucifix, itself very likely of bronze, the Virgin to the right of Christ, John to his left. John, “the beloved disciple,” regularly rests his right cheek in his right hand in sorrowful contemplation.[3] A cross by the Sienese silversmith Goro di Ser Neroccio (unrelated to the painter-sculptor) in the Museo Diocesano, Pienza, signed and dated 1430, offers a suggestive arrangement.[4] Curved stems below the cross support the Virgin to its right; a missing John was no doubt to Christ’s left.

Bronze chief mourners flanking corpora existed in many locales; the best known may be two, dismounted in the Ashmolean, convincingly attributed to Filarete.[5] In this case, it is the Virgin who rests her cheek on one hand. Closer to home, a 1482 inventory of Siena Cathedral’s treasury lists “a cross in bronze [attone, i.e., ottone, or brass/bronze], with a Crucifix in relief, with two figures to the sides, gilt and enameled.”[6]

The paired and the single Saint John are of entirely different facture, the former more massively modeled and cast; it even exhibits differences from the Virgin with which it is paired. This Saint John has a more regular hexagonal base, and the fall of drapery in the back has been milled to imitate the weave of cloth. The Virgin’s base is smaller, its corners less defined. The rich fire gilding of the Saint Johns does not occur on faces and hands so as to offset these more expressive areas within the general glow of gold. Neither seems ever to have had a halo.

The single Saint John is slenderer in form and more linear in treatment. He is also more thinly cast and stands on a plain disk for a self-base. The outstanding difference between him and the pair is that all his hems and fringes are distinguished by punch marks and incised lines, emphasized further by touches of oil gilding (except on the top of his mantle in back), considerably worn. His hair and nails are more carefully indicated than those of his counterpart. The top of his head was flattened and has a hole for a halo.

None of these bronzes is of the highest quality,[7] but it is more than likely that all look back to distinguished prototypes. The endearing plasticity of the pair results from an appreciation of the original models’ relatively broad effects and aspirations toward monumentality. The slenderer build and precious adumbration of detail in the singleton, on the other hand, suggest a silversmith’s wish to satisfy a viewer’s scrutiny at close range.
-JDD


Footnotes
(For key to shortened references see bibliography in Allen, Italian Renaissance and Baroque Bronzes in The Metropolitan Museum of Art. NY: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2022.)
1. My conclusions are indebted to Gertrude M. Helms, “Three Sienese Renaissance Bronzes in The Metropolitan Museum of Art,” master’s thesis, Institute of Fine Arts, New York University, 1979. She does not decide on an author for any of the three, but her work repays close study for its deft analysis of Sienese sculpture, wealth of comparisons, typological citations, and technical discussions.
2. Coor 1961, pp. 177–78, 182, nos. 41, 46, figs. 23–25, 48–50.
3. Vavalà 1929.
4. Elisabetta Cioni in Seidel 2010, pp. 470–71.
5. Spencer 1958.
6. Borghesi and Banchi 1898, p. 265, doc. 164.
7. The three statuettes are bronze alloys with low levels of lead and trace impurities, including silver. R. Stone/TR, November 3, 2008.
8. Their inventory number 37553 appears in white paint on the back of the brown-and-black variegated black marble pedestal, and in ink on the bottom of the pedestal.
  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。