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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)银色眼睛坐着的色狼
品名(英)Seated satyr with silvered eyes
入馆年号1964年,64.101.1417
策展部门欧洲雕塑和装饰艺术European Sculpture and Decorative Arts
创作者Andrea Briosco, called Riccio【1470 至 1532】【意大利人】
创作年份公元 1525 - 公元 1550
创作地区
分类雕塑青铜(Sculpture-Bronze)
尺寸整体 (confirmed): 9 × 7 1/8 × 6 3/4 英寸 (22.9 × 18.1 × 17.1 厘米)
介绍(中)一只色狼坐在地上,用右手举起一盏灯。他的左手抓住一根排箫,前臂放在膝盖上保持平衡。他那闪闪发光的银色眼睛被他那编织的眉毛下的阴影所抵消。萨提尔向上的凝视和张开的嘴唇构成了对头顶观众的期待,就好像他刚刚在唱小夜曲时被打断了一样。在没有底座的情况下,萨提尔直接用屁股支撑自己,他伸出的山羊腿提供了稳定性。当他手中的器具发出光芒和歌声时,他轻盈的举止在召唤着触摸。接受这一邀请,转动或处理雕塑的观众会很快发现雕塑的各个方面都是精心制作的,一缕尾巴点缀着他背部打结的肌肉

当这种杂交生物遇到人手时,它的沉重感会让任何想举起它的冲动都感到惊讶。正如X射线照片所证实的那样,这种密度是由于色狼四肢(除了毛茸茸的大腿)的牢固铸造造成的。[1] 这是一个独特的雕塑,其制作为其作者提供了线索。许多面部特征,如胡须、耳朵和头发,都是在添加的蜡中渲染的,这些独特的元素在铸造过程中被破坏了。头部相对于身体来说很大,胡须被示意性地修剪成尖锐的对角线,脖子很粗,但很实用。手和属性都很笨拙。相比之下,躯干表现得很敏感,有着弯曲的肌肉组织和收紧的腰部,这表明它具有很强的解剖学知识。虽然在20世纪的大部分时间里,萨提尔一直被认为是巴东大师安德烈亚·里奇奥的杰作,但詹姆斯·大卫·德雷珀的建议值得一提,即它是以里奇奥(Riccio)的模型为基础,但由另一位雕塑家完成的。[2] 德雷珀正确地指出,表面处理过于精细,无法与里奇奥独特的锤击技术相匹配。其他特征也否定了里奇奥的直接作者身份。没有一个被广泛认为是他的独立人物雕塑有银色的眼睛。[3] Riccio的签名雕塑中的紫丁香有着非常光滑的芦苇,而我们萨提尔手中的紫丁香则点缀着更适合独立管道的小孔。[4] 多余的指孔与16世纪晚期青铜器中发现的其他指孔相匹配,其中包括Desiderio da Firenze工作室的几个。[5]

看起来,坐着的萨提尔的躯干和四肢很可能来源于里奇奥的原始模型,但其头部、手部和属性都是后来铸造它的雕塑家的。在帕多瓦、巴黎和维也纳的一组三个饮酒萨提尔中,对躯干的渲染几乎相同,这也支持了这种可能性,所有这些都声称是里奇奥的亲笔签名作品。[6] 这座雕塑很可能是由里奇奥的一位同事或他的工作室成员制作的,在里奇奥去世后,他可以接触到雕塑模型。Met的Seated Satyr的核心包含有机材料,其方式与Riccio的工作方法相似,这表明其制造商也与这位著名雕塑家分享了知识。与里奇奥之后的许多巴东青铜器一样,这种金属不是青铜,而是黄铜。[7]

我们的青铜展示了从靠近里奇奥中获利的潜力。这种人物类型还有其他四个有文献记载的版本:巴杰罗(图16a)、卢浮宫、巴黎安德烈美术馆,以及以前的巴尔迪尼收藏。[8] 每一个都有不同的实用属性,包括(分别):贝壳和花瓶、贝壳和排箫、海螺和排箫、盘子和烛台。虽然巴杰罗和前巴迪尼萨蒂尔与大都会歌剧院的萨蒂尔特别相似,但它们的角都不同,巴杰罗的角很短。[9] 这些青铜器有一系列的归属,但其中一些可能是一位雕塑家的作品。[10]

这些青铜satyr之间的差异也代表了它们的生产地威尼托对这些物品的高需求。在共和国范围内的书房和富人的私人房间里,充斥着周六的时光。[11] 对色狼属性的微小调整或添加银色眼睛可能会以合适的价格吸引不同的买家,而且有收集同一主题的多件青铜器的先例。[12] 当里奇奥第一次为帕多瓦的知识分子朋友制作这样的青铜器时,他肯定意识到萨蒂尔产生的哲学、文学、美学和神话联想。这说明了当地巴东人对自然哲学的兴趣,特别是通过对亚里士多德的研究,以及satyrs与热的性质的密切联系。[13] 虽然今天人们可能会发现象征着公开性行为的象形文字萨提尔,但在炼金术的背景下,这尊小雕像对自然生产和人类创造力至关重要的世代有着分层的理解

Satyrs,然而,有许多其他的文学协会。人文主义项目使人们能够接触到广泛的经典资料,其中包括萨提尔和相关人物,包括潘和玛西亚斯。例如,文艺复兴时期的读者不仅在维吉尔、提奥克里托斯和欧里庇得斯的作品中,而且在新的田园作品中也遇到了这样的人物,其中最著名的是雅各波·桑纳扎罗于1504年首次出版的《阿卡迪亚》。[14]这些文本提供了对萨蒂尔的一系列解读,无论是寓言的、滑稽的还是忧郁的。satyrs在意义上是无拘无束的,它广泛地唤起了威尼斯上层阶级通过建造私人花园和别墅在智力上培养的田园世界。[15]

收集刺激了进一步的收集。青铜萨提尔的流行也归功于威尼托人对文物的贪婪欲望,这些文物丰富了家庭收藏中的古代和现代雕塑,更不用说贝壳等自然奇观了
介绍(英)Seated on the ground, a satyr raises a lamp with his right hand. Grasping a panpipe in his left, his forearm rests on his knee for balance. His glinting silver eyes are offset by dark shadows beneath his knitted brow. The satyr’s upward gaze and parted lips form an expectant acknowledgment of a viewer overhead, as if he had just been interrupted while serenading. With no base underneath, the satyr supports himself directly on his buttocks, his outstretched goat legs lending stability. While the implements in his hands proffer light and song, his lithe bearing beckons touch. A viewer accepting this invitation to turn or handle the sculpture would quickly discover its deliberate workmanship on all sides, a wisp of a tail punctuating the knotty muscles along his back.

When this hybrid creature meets human hand, its heaviness surprises any impulse to lift it. Such density results from the solid casting of the satyr’s limbs (with the exception of the shaggy thighs), as X-radiographs confirm.[1] This is a singular sculpture, the making of which gives clues to its authorship. Numerous facial features such as the beard, ears, and hair were rendered in added wax, unique elements destroyed in the casting process. The head is large in relation to the body, the beard is schematically cropped in a sharp diagonal, and the neck is thick but serviceable. The hands and attributes are clumsy. The torso, by comparison, is sensitively rendered, with sinuous musculature and a nipped waist signaling strong anatomical knowledge. While the satyr maintained an attribution to the Paduan master Andrea Riccio for much of the twentieth century, it is worth developing the proposal of James David Draper that it was based on a model by Riccio but completed by another sculptor.[2] Draper rightly noted that the surface finish is too finely worked to match Riccio’s distinctive hammering technique. Other features also negate Riccio’s direct authorship. No independent figural sculpture widely attributed to him has silvered eyes.[3] And whereas the syrinxes in Riccio’s autograph sculptures bear properly smooth reeds, the syrinx in our satyr’s hand is punctuated with apertures better suited to independent pipes.[4] The superfluity of fingerholes matches this syrinx to others found in later sixteenth-century bronzes, including several attributed to the workshop of Desiderio da Firenze.[5]

It seems probable that the Seated Satyr bears a torso and limbs derived from an original model by Riccio, but the head, hands, and attributes were original to the later sculptor who cast it. Support for this possibility is found in the nearly identical rendering of the torso in a group of three drinking satyrs in Padua, Paris, and Vienna, all with strong claims to be autograph works by Riccio.[6] It may well be that the sculpture was made by an associate of Riccio or member of his workshop with access to sculptural models after his death. The Met’s Seated Satyr has a core that includes organic material in a manner similar to Riccio’s working methods, suggesting its maker also shared knowledge with the famed sculptor. As with many Paduan bronzes in the wake of Riccio, the metal is not bronze but brass.[7]

Our bronze reveals the potential to profit from proximity to Riccio. There are four other documented versions of this figural type: in the Bargello (fig. 16a), Louvre, Musée Jacquemart-André, Paris, and formerly the Bardini collection.[8] Each sports varying pairs of utilitarian attributes, including (respectively): a shell and vase, a shell and panpipe, a conch and panpipe, and a dish and candleholder. While the Bargello and ex-Bardini satyrs are especially similar to their Met counterpart, their horns are all different, and that in the Bargello has short ears.[9] These bronzes bear a range of attributions, but some of them could be the work of one sculptor.[10]

The differences among these bronze satyrs are also representative of the high demand for such objects in the Veneto, where they were produced. Satyrs abounded in the studioli and private chambers of wealthy men in the Republic’s reach.[11] Small adjustments to a satyr’s attributes or the addition of silvered eyes could have enticed a different buyer at the right price, and there was precedent for collecting multiple bronzes of the same subject.[12] When Riccio first made such bronzes for intellectual friends in Padua, many linked to its renowned university, he was surely aware of the philosophical, literary, aesthetic, and mythological associations engendered by satyrs. This spoke to the local Paduan interest in natural philosophy, particularly through the study of Aristotle, and the close association of satyrs with the property of heat.[13] While today one might find the ithyphallic satyr emblematic of overt sexuality, in an alchemical context the statuette carried a layered understanding of generation essential to natural production and human creativity.

Satyrs, however, bore many other literary associations. The humanist project made accessible a wide range of classical sources with satyrs and related characters including Pan and Marsyas. Renaissance readers encountered such figures not only in the works of Virgil, Theocritus, and Euripides, for example, but also in new pastoral writings, the most famous among them Jacopo Sannazaro’s Arcadia, first published in 1504.[14] Such texts furnished a constellation of interpretations of satyrs, whether allegorical, comical, or melancholic. Unbridled in meaning, satyrs were broadly evocative of a pastoral world that Venetian upper classes cultivated intellectually and through the physical building of private gardens and villas.[15]

Collecting spurred further collecting. The popularity of bronze satyrs also owed to the voracious appetite for antiquities in the Veneto, with these objects enriching ancient and modern sculptures in household collections, not to mention natural wonders such as shells sometimes displayed nearby.[16] And one cannot discount the fame of Riccio himself, whose Paschal Candelabrum in Padua’s Basilica del Santo—an intellectually intricate masterpiece—constituted a public repository of secular motifs translatable into independent sculptures, its bound satyrs looking down from just above eye level (see p. 00, fig. 13c).[17] To the extent that many surviving bronze satyrs bear the modern designation of “style of Riccio,” this feature may have been prized by Renaissance collectors after the death of one of Padua’s most talented sculptors.

Satyrs’ multivalence supports their sculptural prevalence in the Veneto, but specific features of our Seated Satyr offered particular stimuli for socialization and cogitation. Carrying his panpipes, the satyr bespeaks accompaniment to music produced with the voice, lute, or other instruments. Sixteenth-century Venice’s flourishing musical culture promoted genteel skills in performance (especially with the lute) and improvisation.[18] When lit, the small oil lamp of the Seated Satyr provided fleeting illumination of an intimate space and enlivened the figure’s silvered eyes. The lamp’s form, however, is enigmatic. Viewed from an oblique angle or behind, subtle whorls are visible at the apex of the vessel, suggesting a shell motif common to other functional bronzes. Shells matched powerfully with bronze satyrs, as containers for fluids for alchemical interaction with the satyr’s innate heat, as well as completing a literary allusion to Pan terrificus, whose sounding of a shell frightened the Titans.[19]

But the satyr’s lamp is less readily identifiable as a shell when viewed head-on or from the sculpture’s proper right side. Its main aperture is not wide like a shell but tapers narrowly to accommodate a runnel for the wick, and it has curved incisions, evocative of folds. When lit, the object reads most clearly as a lamp. But spent, it is a more ambiguous vessel that could hold any liquid. An erudite viewer might recall famous visual examples of satyrs with wineskins.[20] He or she might also have been aware of ancient pottery vessels with one or two apertures used to carry wine or oil, the modern name of which (askoi) derives from the ancient term for wineskins. Indeed, when spent, the satyr’s gesture could raise not the promise of light, but imagined wine for imbibing. Duty bound to Silenus, satyrs joined in Bacchic revelry that promoted ecstatic creation. Their propensity to fashion anything into a vessel with wine was celebrated in Angelo Poliziano’s Stanze (1475), in which they accompany Bacchus: “and with him it appears that satyrs and bacchants kick up the dust, and yell with raised voices: that one is seen swaying, those appear to stumble; that one drinks from a tambourine, those others laugh; that one fashions a cup from a horn and those from their hands; that one grabbed a nymph and that one spins.”[21] Riccio’s oil lamp in the Frick (see cat. 13) features Bacchic friezes that celebrate poetic ecstasy and spiritual ascent, which the lamp in the Seated Satyr externalizes through the identity of its bearer.[22]

The oil lamp borne aloft by the Seated Satyr would have functioned differently from other light sources around it. The minuscule lamp seems to fit the satyr’s self-contained activities more than the protracted human endeavors of a studiolo or bedchamber. It guarantees stability; even when filled to the brim, the lofted lamp makes no threat of overturning the baseless sculpture. In its diminutiveness, the lamp demarcates limited time before the oil burns out. In an environment where individuals could measure increasingly fine units of time with hourglasses, clocks, and other tools, this scale helps to portion a brief activity.[23] The satyr could have illuminated singing, socializing, scribbling, or simple admiration of his own novelty before darkness returned.
-RC

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. R. Stone/TR, January 17, 2011.
2. Untermyer 1962, pp. xvi, 8–9, pls. 14, 15. The Satyr entered The Met’s collection as an autograph work by Riccio, but Draper subsequently revised and expanded upon his attribution in MMA 1975, p. 231; Untermyer 1977, p. 159; Draper 1978a, pp. 176–77.
3. A seated Pan in the Ashmolean with silvered eyes was historically attributed to Riccio (with some doubts), but Warren 2001a has offered a compelling argument against his authorship, proposing instead an attribution to Desiderio da Settignano. See also Radcliffe 1986.
4. For Riccio’s shepherds with syrinxes, see Louvre, OA 6311; Walters Art Museum, Baltimore, 54.234.
5. See, for example, cat. 19A, as well as a perfume burner in the Ashmolean, WA2004.1.
6. Musei Civici, Padua, 197; Louvre, TH 89; Kunsthistorisches Museum, KK 5539. See the respective entries by Claudia Kryza-Gersch, Franca Pellegrini, and Philippe Malgouyres in Allen 2008a, pp. 158–73, cats. 10–12 (all with bibliography). See also Richard Stone on the technical features of the proximity of these sculptures in ibid., pp. 92–93. The similarity of the body to these sculptures is based on an observation by Denise Allen in ibid., pp. 148–49.
7. R. Stone/TR, January 17, 2011.
8. Louvre, OA 9962; Jacquemart-André, OA-2223. See Dimitrios Zikos in Bacchi and Giacomelli 2008, pp. 346–47; Malgouyres 2020, pp. 216–18, 451; Giannini 2007, p. 71, cat. 2.8; Christie, Manson & Woods, London, June 5, 1899, Collection of Signor Stephano Bardini, p. 64, pl. 2. See also Planiscig 1927, pp. 255, 354.
9. Attributions of these bronzes to Riccio have shifted over the years, including strong endorsements for some. See, for example, Pope-Hennessy 1963a, pp. 18–21.
10. The proximity of Riccio and Desiderio da Firenze, for example, has received different assessments. See Warren 2001a; Jestaz 2005.
11. See Malgouyres 2020, pp. 213–29; McStay 2014, pp. 323–37 (both with bibliography).
12. Renaissance inventories with definitive descriptions of small bronzes in a single collection are rare, but see Fletcher 1981, p. 467.
13. Blume 1985b, pp. 178–85. See also McStay 2014, pp. 325–26.
14. On the textual presence of satyrs in the Renaissance, see Lavocat 2005.
15. Cranston 2019.
16. Favaretto 1990; V. Mancini 1995; P. Brown 1996; Schmitter 1997.
17. Banzato 2008b (with bibliography).
18. Selfridge-Field 2018.
19. For a discussion of this topic with reference to The Met’s Seated Satyr, see Pierguidi 2006. 20. See especially the Bacchic sarcophagus displayed before Santa Maria Maggiore, Rome, during the Renaissance: British Museum, 1805,0703.130 (Rubinstein 1976). On satyrs and wineskins in ancient art, see Lissarrague 1990, pp. 68–76. A potent Renaissance example of a bronze oil lamp in the form of a wineskin with two apertures associated with Riccio is in the Walters Art Museum, 54.37.
21. Stanze 111:3–8; see Poliziano 1997, vol. 1, p. 27.
22. Allen in Allen 2008a, pp. 182–89.
23. Crosby 1997, pp. 75–94.
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