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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)安东尼斯·皮乌斯皇帝
品名(英)Emperor Antoninus Pius
入馆年号1965年,65.202
策展部门欧洲雕塑和装饰艺术European Sculpture and Decorative Arts
创作者Antico (Pier Jacopo Alari Bonacolsi)【1460 至 1528】【意大利人】
创作年份公元 1519 - 公元 1524
创作地区
分类雕塑青铜(Sculpture-Bronze)
尺寸整体 without base (confirmed): 高 25 1/4 x 宽 19 3/4 x 深 14 1/4 英寸 (64.1 x 50.2 x 36.2 厘米); 高 with base (confirmed): 29 7/8 英寸 (75.9 厘米)
介绍(中)Pier Jacobo Alari Bonacolsi是贡扎加家族的主要宫廷雕塑家,贡扎加是意大利北部曼图阿侯爵的王子统治者。当收集希腊和罗马的雕像、硬币和珍贵宝石是文艺复兴时期复兴古代的重要组成部分时,Pier Jacobo因其对古典雕塑的渊博知识而获得了l‘Antico("古人之一")的称号。[1] 他华丽的青铜器,比如这幅罗马皇帝安东尼努斯·庇护的真人肖像画,在风格上是如此令人信服的古典,以至于贡扎加人将其作为古代艺术收藏中的"替代古董"展出。[2]安蒂科的作品也为贡扎加所推崇的古典作家的作品提供了表现形式。例如,安东尼努斯·庇护(Antoninus Pius)令人回味地将老普林尼(Plini the Elder)对"黄金或白银[或]至少青铜"的模范人物肖像描述为"与我们对话的不朽灵魂"。[3]也许最重要的是,在曼图安宫廷充满政治色彩的古董文化中,安东尼努斯·庇护(Antoninus Pius)庆祝贡扎加人认同罗马帝国及其美德、荣耀和权力的统治传统

Antico完美的古典青铜器长期以来一直激发着学者们的想象力。如今,人们普遍认为,这位大师通过利用技术和正式专业知识的不同寻常的多样化组合,发展了他的开创性艺术。通过金匠的训练,他获得了成为自古以来第一位采用间接铸造青铜方法的雕塑家的能力。[4] 他的青铜器表面由抛光的金色、明亮的银色和天鹅绒般的黑色装饰而成,色彩鲜艳,展现了金匠广泛的技术创造力。[5] 通过研究古代雕像和修复罗马零碎的大理石雕像,安蒂科为他复兴青铜雕像和半身像等古典流派奠定了正式基础。[6] 大都会博物馆的精美藏品代表了这些类型,有三尊小雕像——Spinario、Paris和Satyr(猫。C9-C11)——以及Antoninus Pius的半身像。尽管这些作品在提高我们对这位大师在贡扎加赞助人的支持下的艺术发展的认识方面发挥了关键作用,但关于它们的基本问题仍然存在。例如,我们仍然不确定Antico为什么、何时或为谁制作半身像

安蒂科描绘了皇帝(公元前138年至161年在位)身着罗马服装,头戴镀金月桂叶王冠,右肩披垂斗篷。精致的特征,以丰富的卷发和浓密的胡须为框架,反映了皇帝大理石半身像长度的国家肖像中的特征,例如慕尼黑的最高级例子(图12a)。安蒂科罕见地两次描绘了皇帝,他对安东尼努斯官方大理石半身像的解读揭示了他作为肖像画家的发展变化。他最早的安东尼努斯青铜头像(图12b)于1511年为当选主教卢多维科·贡扎加完成,是对皇帝面相的直接记录。[7] 相比之下,在我们的半身像中,安蒂科关注的是皇帝的心理状态。通过青铜、白银和黄金的色彩切分,雕塑家增强了肖像的表现力。皇帝灼热的目光被巨大的浅棕色眼睛放大了,眼睛上镶嵌着白色的镶嵌银。皇帝的担忧体现在扬起的眉毛和皱起的额头的细微呈现上,再加上头部和肩膀的轻微转动,预示着会有初步的行动。在这部引人注目的作品中,安蒂科捕捉到了安东尼努斯的身体肖像,同时展现了一个被尊为罗马"好皇帝"之一的人的警觉智慧。
安蒂科对安东尼努斯短暂表情的强调是一种艺术选择,与皇帝被赞扬的一贯平静不同。根据他唯一幸存的古典传记《奥古斯塔史》,安东尼努斯平静地统治着,并因其对前任的孝顺而被授予"庇护"的特殊头衔。[8] 安东尼努斯在古典文本中所描述的君主沉着与安蒂科引人注目的青铜之间的差异是值得注意的,因为贡扎加人拥有一本《奥古斯塔历史》。[9] 此外,安蒂科的其他历史和神话人物半身像通常都是独立的,情绪平静。[10] 其中,安东尼努斯·庇护是一个引人注目的异类。尽管如此生动的动画可能源于雕塑家对一个异常精细的大理石原型的仔细研究,但它也可能暗示更多的东西。在安蒂科所服务的贡扎加统治者中,只有最后一位费德里科·二世要求他在1526年试图委托制作的著名军事领导人的半身像"尽可能真实"。[11]

1524年,安蒂科从费德里科的军火中收到了钢锉刀和凿子,以完成或追逐安东尼努斯·庇护的头像。"[12]但由于卢浮宫现在有另一个演员,简单地将大都会艺术博物馆的肖像认定为费德里科的委托,就变得复杂了。[13] 关于每尊半身像何时以及为谁制作的争论大致分为两个阵营。我们的肖像画的极端艺术精致使一些学者将其与费德里科的母亲伊莎贝拉·德埃斯特(Isabella d'Este)的品味相关联的同样精致的半身像归为一类,她是安蒂科在1510年代末的主要赞助人。因此,他们将其追溯到这些年左右,并将不太精致的卢浮宫版本与1524年的文件联系起来,或者将其放置在安蒂科去世后。[14] 其他学者将《大都会艺术博物馆》(The Met Antoninus Pius)定为1524年,因为它展现了最高超的技术。在一次精彩的浇注中铸造成一体,展示了卓越的工具和精加工,展现了大师精湛的技艺。[15] 相比之下,卢浮宫安东尼努斯·庇护的头部和胸部是分开铸造的。这种谨慎的铸造
介绍(英)Pier Jacopo Alari Bonacolsi was principal court sculptor to the Gonzaga family, princely rulers of the northern Italian marquisate of Mantua. When collecting Greek and Roman statuary, coins, and precious gems was an essential part of the Renaissance revival of antiquity, Pier Jacopo earned the name l’Antico (“one of the ancients”) for his profound knowledge of classical sculpture.[1] His opulent bronzes, such as this stunning lifesized portrait of the Roman emperor Antoninus Pius, were so convincingly classical in style that the Gonzaga displayed them as “surrogate antiques” among their magnificent collections of ancient art.[2] Antico’s works also gave expressive form to the writings of classical authors esteemed by the Gonzaga. Antoninus Pius, for example, evocatively manifests Pliny the Elder’s description of portraits of exemplary men “of gold or silver [or] at least of bronze” as “immortal spirits who speak to us.”[3] Perhaps most of all, within the politically charged antiquarian culture at the Mantuan court, Antoninus Pius celebrated the Gonzaga’s identification with Imperial Rome and its ruling traditions of virtue, splendor, and power.

Antico’s immaculately executed classicizing bronzes have long excited the imagination of scholars. Today it is generally agreed that the master developed his groundbreaking art by harnessing an unusually diverse combination of technical and formal expertise. Through training as a goldsmith, he acquired the abilities to become the first sculptor since antiquity to employ the indirect method of bronze casting.[4] His bronzes’ colorful surface embellishments of burnished gold, brilliant silver, and velvet black reveal a goldsmith’s wide-ranging technical inventiveness.[5] By studying ancient statuary and restoring fragmentary marble figures in Rome, Antico developed the formal foundation for his revival of classical genres such as the bronze statuette and portrait bust.[6] The Met’s superb collection represents these types with three statuettes—the Spinario, Paris, and Satyr (cats. C9–C11)—and the bust of Antoninus Pius. Although these works have played a key role in advancing our knowledge regarding the master’s artistic development under the aegis of his Gonzaga patrons, fundamental questions about them remain. For example, we are still uncertain why, when, or for whom Antico made the bust.

Antico depicts the emperor (r. 138–161 C.E.) in Roman costume wearing a crown of gilded laurel leaves and a draped mantle clasped at the right shoulder. The refined features, framed by abundant curls and a full beard, reflect those found in the emperor’s marble bust-length state portraits, such as the superlative example in Munich (fig. 12a). Antico unusually portrayed the emperor twice, and his interpretations of Antoninus’s official marble bust reveal a change in his development as a portraitist. His earliest bronze head of Antoninus (fig. 12b), completed by 1511 for Bishop-Elect Ludovico Gonzaga, is a straightforward record of the emperor’s physiognomy.[7] By contrast, in our bust Antico focused on the emperor’s psychological state. Through the coloristic syncopation of bronze, silver, and gold, the sculptor heightened the portrait’s expressive power. The emperor’s searing gaze is amplified by shockingly large, light brown eyes that are set off with whites of inlaid silver. The emperor’s concern is registered in the nuanced rendering of the raised brows and furrowed forehead that, combined with the slight turn of the head and shoulders, promise incipient action. In this remarkable work, Antico captured the physical likeness of Antoninus while at the same time projecting the alert intelligence of a man who was revered as one of Rome’s “Good Emperors.”
Antico’s emphasis on Antoninus’s transitory expression was an artistic choice that departs from the constant equanimity for which the emperor was praised. According to his sole surviving classical biography, in the Historia Augusta, Antoninus ruled serenely and was granted the exceptional title “Pius” for the filial devotion he showed to his predecessor.[8] The discrepancy between Antoninus’s sovereign composure described in the classical text and Antico’s compelling bronze is notable because the Gonzaga owned a copy of the Historia Augusta.[9] Moreover, Antico’s other portrait busts of historical and mythological figures are generally self-contained and calm in mood.[10] Among them, Antoninus Pius is a dramatic outlier. Although such unusually vivid animation could have sprung from the sculptor’s close study of an exceptionally fine marble prototype, it also could suggest something more. Of the Gonzaga rulers whom Antico served, only the last, Federico II, demanded that the portrait busts of famous military leaders—which he sought to commission in 1526—be as “true to life as possible.”[11]

In 1524, Antico received steel files and chisels from Federico’s munitions in order to finish or chase (netar) “the head of Antoninus Pius.”[12] But simply identifying The Met portrait as Federico’s commission is complicated by the existence of another cast now in the Louvre.[13] Arguments regarding when and for whom each bust was made roughly divide into two camps. The extreme artistic refinement of our portrait has led some scholars to group it with similarly exquisite busts associated with the taste of Federico’s mother, Isabella d’Este, who was Antico’s principal patron during the late 1510s. They accordingly date it to around these years and connect the less refined Louvre version to the document of 1524 or place it after Antico’s death.[14] Other scholars date The Met Antoninus Pius to 1524 because of its superlative display of techniques. Cast in one piece in a single bravura pour and exhibiting sublime tooling and finishing, it manifests the full range of the master’s virtuosic skills.[15] By contrast, the head and chest of the Louvre Antoninus Pius were cast separately. This cautious casting technique suggests a transitional work created sometime between Antico’s earliest portrait heads, completed by 1511, and our bust, finished in 1524. On the other hand, based on facture, the Louvre version could be a posthumous variant.[16] At present, documentary research, formal analysis, and the evidence presented in recent technical studies have not provided a definitive answer to the patronage/dating conundrum. Offered below are some further observations that might strengthen the case for Federico as the patron of The Met Antoninus Pius.

The initial phase of Federico’s reign (1519–24) challenged established artists at the Mantuan court to develop a new antiquarian style tailored to fit the sophisticated demands of an ambitious young ruler who had been schooled since childhood in the Gonzaga practice of targeting artistic commissions to advance political agendas.[17] Seeking to commission lifelike portraits of exemplary military men in 1526, for example, probably was a means by which Federico conveyed his reinvigoration of Gonzaga rule. Antico’s last documented work, the Antoninus Pius of 1524, could have been the first historical portrait made for Federico that communicated this animated message of renewal. Choosing Antoninus Pius as the portrait’s subject also celebrates the revitalization of Gonzaga tradition. The bust simultaneously embodies the family’s deep-rooted association with the heritage of Imperial Rome and identifies the young marquis with a newcomer to Mantua’s traditional pantheon of emperors.[18] One has to wait until 1511 for a portrait of Antoninus to appear among the eclectic selection of bronze and marble busts of famous men that Antico designed for display in the forecourt of Ludovico’s palace.19 Moreover, unlike the portrait of 1511 or any of the Roman marble prototypes, The Met Antoninus Pius is crowned with laurel leaves. Probably added to signal the bust’s association with Mantua’s new princely ruler, the laurel crown also provides a clue to a significant, unnoticed ancient source for the portrait.

When viewed in profile, Antoninus’s sharp features, elongated neck, and laurel-leaf crown unmistakably mirror the emperor’s official numismatic portraits (fig. 12c).[20] The depiction would have been well known to the Gonzaga, who amassed huge collections of ancient coins.[21] It was especially familiar to Antico, who had based the compositions of his four roundels depicting the Labors of Hercules on the reverses of a rare Alexandrian series of sestertii bearing the portrait of Antoninus.[22] In no other bust does Antico cleave so closely to a numismatic prototype. His faithful quotations add to the portrait another crucial dimension of classical authenticity, for Renaissance audiences believed that the images and inscriptions on ancient coins most accurately preserved the ancient historical record.[23] His extraordinary translation of a small-scale profile in relief into a lifesized bronze bust would have appeared to bring Antoninus powerfully and truthfully to life. The bust’s martial accoutrements—laurel victory crown, clasped military cloak—balance the Historia Augusta’s record of the emperor’s remarkably peaceful reign. The portrait bust thus brilliantly evokes the full scope of imperial history as handed down in Antoninus’s classical biography, numismatic imagery, and marble victory column in Rome.[24] By portraying an emperor who preserves peace through martial readiness, Antico created an ideal portrait of an exemplary ruler with whom Federico, a soldier-prince, could identify.

Federico probably exploited his physical similarity to Antoninus: both were famously vigorous, handsome, bearded men.[25] Federico’s resemblance to Antoninus on the obverse of the first gold coin minted during his reign, the two-ducat doppio d’oro, is notable.[26] By choosing Antoninus as his imperial avatar in portrait busts and on Mantuan coinage, the young marquis associated the character and conduct of his rule with that of the emperor’s. On the doppio d’oro, the intimate linkage between the two rulers’ principles of governance is conveyed in numismatic language. On the coin’s reverse, above an image of Mount Olympus symbolizing the highest aspirations, is inscribed FIDES. This ancient Roman pledge of mutual devotion between a ruler and his people resonates with the filial devotion celebrated by the honorific title “Pius” awarded to one of Rome’s greatest emperors.

Completed in 1524, The Met Antoninus Pius marks the watershed year that Federico turned away from the generation of court artists, Antico among them, who had served his parents and engaged Raphael’s foremost pupil, Giulio Romano, to become Mantua’s new artistic impresario. Against the grand backdrop of ancient Rome re-created through Giulio’s hyperbolic artistic lens at Federico’s new villa, the Palazzo Te, Antico’s philologically accurate, antiquarian sculptures took on the aura of historical artifacts. Outdated in style, they gained validity as “antiquities” to become symbolic foundation stones of Gonzaga rule. The possible display of the Louvre version of Antico’s Antoninus Pius and its companion portrait of the emperor’s wife Faustina above the main entrances to Giulio’s frescoed Sala di Troia (completed in the 1530s) testifies to the imperial couple’s importance to the Gonzaga’s self-fashioned role within a majestic historical narrative.[27] Antico’s Louvre portraits presided over a room decorated with grandiloquent frescoes commemorating the Trojan War, the transformational conflict that led to the foundation of Imperial Rome and ultimately to the establishment of the Gonzaga dynasty and its triumph under Federico II.[28]
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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. For Antico’s biography, see Luciano 2011, pp. 1–14. The documents related to Antico are published in full in Ferrari 2008, pp. 300–328.
2. V. Avery 2007b.
3. Pliny the Elder, Natural History, 25.2.9–10, as cited in Cohen 2002, p. 268.
4. For Antico’s bronze-casting technique, see Stone 1981; D. Smith and Sturman 2011.
5. For a technical study of Antico’s distinctive black patination, see Stone 2011.
6. See Kryza-Gersch 2011; Gasparotto 2011b.
7. Ancient Roman portrait busts most often survived as fragmentary heads; for example, see MMA, 33.11.3.
8. Historia Augusta, trans. David Magie (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1921), vol. 1, pp. 74.
9. Wardropper 2011, p. 56.
10. All of the portrait busts currently attributed to Antico are illustrated in color in Luciano 2011. 11. As cited in and translated by V. Avery 2007b, pp. 90, 106–7, doc. 2.
12. As cited and translated by Luciano 2011, p. 194. The document of July 19, 1524, is published in full in Ferrari 2008, p. 320, doc. 99.
13. Louvre, CAT 1922.849. The Louvre bust was cleaned before its presentation in the Mantua 2008 exhibition, leading to a reassessment of its quality, which previously had been considered mediocre at best. Marc Bormand provides an excellent summary of the complicated issues of dating presented by The Met and Louvre busts in Trevisani and Gasparotto 2008, pp. 266–69, cat. VII.5.
14. For this dating, see Wardropper 2011, pp. 56, 59.
15. For a casting diagram, see Luciano 2011, p. 183.
16. For the discussion outlined here of how the facture and finish of the Louvre and Met busts could suggest their dating, see D. Smith and Sturman 2011, pp. 158–63.
17. The importance of Federico’s innovative artistic agenda during the early or so-called transitional phase of his rule is treated in Mattei 2016.
18. Antoninus Pius, for example, is conspicuously absent from the eight fictive marble busts of the Caesars, derived from Suetonius’s Lives, that decorate the ceiling of the famous audience chamber (camera picta) in the Castello di San Giorgio, Mantua, that Andrea Mantegna frescoed between 1465 and 1474.
19. For this series, see Trevisani 2008.
20. Significantly, the emperor’s iconic numismatic profile portrait was illustrated in Andrea Fulvio’s Illustrium imagines (Rome, ca. 1517), pl. LXXI, shortly before Antico designed the bust of Antoninus Pius. For the relationship between ancient numismatic portraits and Renaissance busts, see Marcello Calogero’s forthcoming doctoral thesis, Scuola Normale di Pisa.
21. See Luciano 2011, p. 2.
22. Antico’s reliance on the reverses of ancient coins to design two of the four Labors of Hercules roundels was first noted in Luciano 2011, pp. 4–6. However, all four roundels derive from the rare Labors of Hercules series bearing the emperor’s portrait. For the series, see Toynbee 1925; Milne 1950.
23. See Scher 2019, pp. 15–17.
24. Until 1703, one of the most important surviving Imperial monuments in Rome, the marble victory column of Marcus Aurelius, was misidentified as the column of Antoninus Pius; see Ridley 2018, p. 240.
25. First noted by Allison 1993–94. See Wardropper 2011, pp. 56–59.
26. See Balbi de Caro 1995, p. 239, R20 and 21, p. 256, pl. 47.
27. Allison 1993–94 first suggested that the Louvre portraits were displayed in the Sala di Troia; see Bormand in Trevisani and Gasparotto 2008, pp. 266–69.
28. For an iconographic interpretation, see Talvacchia 1986.
  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。