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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)桌子
品名(英)Table
入馆年号1986年,1986.38.1
策展部门欧洲雕塑和装饰艺术European Sculpture and Decorative Arts
创作者Pierre Gole【1620 至 1684】
创作年份公元 1655 - 公元 1665
创作地区
分类木工家具(Woodwork-Furniture)
尺寸30 7/8 x 41 1/8 x 27 英寸 (78.4 x 104.6 x 68.6 厘米)
介绍(中)1977年,当它从白金汉郡的Mentmore Towers出售时,这张特殊的桌子被描述为莱昂纳多·范德文的风格。范德文是一位才华横溢的佛兰德或荷兰裔艺术家,17世纪下半叶,他在佛罗伦萨的美第奇宫廷制作了镶嵌家具。[1] 然而,在20世纪80年代中期,根据文献证据,并在与一些被认为是同一个人的现存作品进行比较后,该表被重新献给了Pierre Gole

Gole出生于荷兰阿尔克马尔附近的卑尔根,1643年左右前往巴黎,在那里师从阿德里安·加布兰德(Adrien Garbrant),他是一位以乌木闻名的橱柜制造商。[3] 1645年与加布兰德的女儿安妮结婚后,戈勒最终接管了这家作坊。他继续以他岳父的方式,制作用乌木贴面的大而精致的橱柜。[4] 1651年9月26日,戈勒被命名为menuisier en esbène ordinaire du roi(乌木家具制造商,或ébéniste,献给国王)。[5] 直到16世纪50年代中期,这位才华横溢的大师才开始专门从事精致的花卉镶嵌,这是一种新的彩色单板装饰,终结了庄严的乌木家具的时尚。Gole是最早采用这项新技术的橱柜制造商之一,事实上,他可能已经在巴黎引入了这项技术。戈勒向红衣主教朱尔斯·马扎林(1602-1661)提供了两个用象牙、龟甲和各种木材装饰的花、鸟和昆虫的橱柜。马扎林去世后,在一份清单中提到了它们,其中最例外的是,包括制造商的名字。[6] 马扎林是路易十四(1638-1715)的首席大臣,是一位伟大的鉴赏家,他收藏了大量令人印象深刻的艺术品。红衣主教显然喜欢戈勒的作品,因为在他去世前不久,他委托这位艺术家制作了两个重要的橱柜作为礼物送给国王,以纪念他自己。[7]

戈勒主要在阿尔布雷-塞克街自己的商店工作,有时也在戈贝林酒店的库龙皇家制造厂工作,从1662年开始,在那里为王室住宅生产家具,戈勒收到了王室的许多委托。1667年10月15日,凡尔赛城堡(Château de Versailles)的一幅著名挂毯记录了王室对该工厂的访问,画中的首席艺术家展示了他们的作品。[8] 在前景中,三名工匠正拿着一张珍贵的桌子供国王检查。这张桌子被认为是戈勒的作品,他本人几乎可以肯定地被描绘在桌子后面。挂毯中的桌子可能是戈勒运往凡尔赛宫的众多作品之一,路易十四扩建并改建为其主要居所的狩猎小屋,1682年成为其宫廷和政府所在地

由于对博物馆桌子的早期历史一无所知,人们只能猜测它是戈勒为王冠制作的一百多张桌子之一,这些桌子通常配有一对配套的烛台。[9] 它的矩形顶部饰有龟甲,并用象牙和乌木装饰带分成不同的部分,就像硬石马赛克作品一样,它可能受到了启发(图24)。中心图案由一个四叶形的卡通图案组成,其中包含一束用蝴蝶结丝带系着的风格化花束。这些花在不同的木头和象牙中,没有重叠,几乎对称排列。为了增强自然主义的感觉,并丰富生动的配色方案,以增强与馅饼的相似性,树叶选择了绿色象牙色。戈勒是唯一一位为法国王室工作的橱柜制造商,他如此广泛地使用这种奇异的材料,无论是彩色的还是自然状态的。[10]

一些装饰边框似乎是艺术家作品的特色。例如,沿着桌面边缘的象牙和龟甲月桂树叶带,以及雕带上和连接腿的双Y形担架两侧的象牙和乌木的大小圆圈。[11] 担架上的乌木和象牙装饰似乎是由雕带上装饰物的残留物组成的,这些装饰物更漂亮、更清晰,这表明贝尼斯特人节约使用了昂贵的材料。四个逐渐变细的柱状支腿,也被认为是戈勒作品的典型,末端是用象牙串装饰的乌木发髻脚。它们上面展示了象牙色的模拟长笛,下面展示了花卉镶嵌。托斯卡纳的柱头、环形饰条或所谓的Astralgal和底座——所有这些都是由镀金青铜制成的——肯定是在其他地方订购的,因为Gole的车间没有铸造厂

博物馆的桌子被认为可以追溯到1660年左右,因为马扎林1661年的库存中列出了一张非常相似的桌子。由于1653年编制的红衣主教财产清单中没有提到这一点,该表一定是在那一年之后进入他的收藏的。马扎林桌子的描述中提到了中央花束上方的一只蝴蝶,可能即将落在其中一朵花上。[12] 这种生物没有出现在博物馆的作品中,但在其中一个外部边界上有一种类似蛾的昆虫

在19世纪,这件装饰华丽的家具位于Mentmore Towers,这是建筑师约瑟夫·帕克斯顿(1801–1865)为梅耶·阿姆斯切尔·德·罗斯柴尔德男爵(1818–1874)建造的庄严的豪宅。这可能是男爵为Mentmore购买的众多法国家具之一,但这一点没有记录在案。1874年,他唯一的女儿Hannah(1851-1990)继承了这所房子以及她已故父亲的财产。她和她
介绍(英)When it was sold from Mentmore Towers, Buckinghamshire, in 1977, this exceptional table was described as in the manner of Leonardo van der Vinne. A talented artist of Flemish or Dutch origin, Van der Vinne made marquetry furniture at the Medici court in Florence during the second half of the seventeenth century.[1] In the mid-1980s, however, the table was reattributed to Pierre Gole,[2] based on documentary evidence and after comparison with a few extant pieces thought to be by the same hand.

Gole, who was born in Bergen, near Alkmaar, the Netherlands, went to Paris about 1643 and there was apprenticed to Adriaan Garbrand (also recorded as Adrien Garbrant), a cabinetmaker known for his work in ebony.[3] Having married Garbrand's daughter Anne in 1645, Gole eventually took over the workshop. He continued in the manner of his father-in-law, making large, elaborate cabinets veneered with ebony.[4] On 26 September 1651 Gole was named menuisier en esbène ordinaire du roi (maker of ebony furniture, or ébéniste, to the king).[5] It was not until the mid-1650s that this talented master began to specialize in exquisite floral marquetry, a new and colorful type of veneer decoration that put an end to the fashion for solemn ebony furniture. Gole was one of the first cabinetmakers to work in this new technique and may, in fact, have introduced it in Paris. Gole supplied two cabinets decorated with flowers, birds, and insects in ivory, tortoiseshell, and various kinds of woods to Cardinal Jules Mazarin (1602–1661). They were mentioned in the inventory drawn up after Mazarin's death in an entry that, most exceptionally, included the maker's name.[6] Chief minister to Louis XIV (1638–1715), Mazarin was a great connoisseur who amassed an impressive art collection. The cardinal clearly favored Gole's work because, not long before his death, he commissioned the artist to make two important cabinets as gifts to the king in memory of himself.[7]

Working primarily at his own shop in the rue de l'Arbre-Sec but at times also at the Manufacture Royale des Meubles de la Couronne, in the Hôtel des Gobelins, where, beginning in 1662, furnishings for the royal residences were produced, Gole received many commissions from the crown. A well-known tapestry at the Château de Versailles recording a royal visit to the manufactory on 15 October 1667 shows the chief artists employed there displaying examples of their work.[8] In the foreground three craftsmen are carrying a precious table for inspection by the king. Decorated with elaborate marquetry in a tortoiseshell ground, the table is thought to be the work of Gole, who himself is, almost certainly, depicted behind it. The table in the tapestry may have been one of the many pieces by Gole that were destined for Versailles, a hunting lodge that Louis XIV enlarged and transformed into his principal residence and in 1682 made the seat of his court and government.

Since nothing is known about the early history of the Museum's table, one can only guess that it was among the more than one hundred tables, often supplied with a pair of matching candlestands (guéridons), that Gole made for the crown.[9] Its rectangular top is veneered with tortoiseshell and divided by decorative bands of ivory and ebony into different segments, in the manner of pietre dure (hardstone) mosaic works, by which it may have been inspired (fig. 24). The central motif consists of a four-lobed cartouche containing a stylized bouquet tied with a bow-knotted ribbon. The flowers, executed in different woods and ivory, do not overlap and have been almost symmetrically arranged. In an attempt to heighten the sense of naturalism–and to enrich the vivid color scheme that intensifies the resemblance to pietre dure–green-tinted ivory was chosen for the leaves. Gole was the only cabinetmaker working for the French crown to make such extensive use of this exotic material, both colored and in its natural state.[10]

Several of the ornamental borders appear to be characteristic features of the artist's oeuvre. Examples are the band of ivory and tortoiseshell laurel leaves running along the edge of the tabletop and the large and small circles of ivory and ebony on the frieze and along the sides of the double-Y-shaped stretcher that joins the legs.[11] The ebony and ivory decoration on the stretcher seems to be composed of the leftovers from the decorations on the frieze, which are more beautiful and legible, suggesting that the ébéniste made frugal use of the expensive materials. The four tapering, columnar legs, which are also considered to be typical of Gole's work, end in ebony bun feet decorated with ivory stringing. They display simulated fluting of ivory above and floral marquetry below. The Tuscan capitals, the ring moldings or so-called astragals, and the bases–all of which are crafted of gilded bronze–must have been ordered elsewhere, for Gole's workshop did not have a foundry.

The Museum's table is thought to date about 1660 because a very similar table was listed in Mazarin's inventory of 1661. Since it was not mentioned in an inventory of the cardinal's possessions drawn up in 1653, the table must have entered his collection after that year. The description of Mazarin's table includes a reference to a marquetry butterfly above the central bouquet, possibly about to alight on one of the flowers.[12] This creature is not present on the Museum's piece, which does, however, include a mothlike insect in one of the outer borders.

During the nineteenth century this richly decorated piece of furniture was at Mentmore Towers, the stately mansion built by the architect Joseph Paxton (1801–1865) for Baron Mayer Amschel de Rothschild (1818–1874). It was probably among the many French furnishings that the baron acquired for Mentmore, but this is not documented. In 1874 his only daughter, Hannah (1851–1890), inherited the house as well as her late father's fortune. She and her husband, Archibald Philip Primrose, the fifth earl of Rosebery (1847–1929), a liberal politician who served as England's prime minister in 1894–95, added considerably to the Mentmore collections, making them world renowned.[13] The table could have been one of their purchases. A catalogue of the contents of Mentmore published in 1884 listed in the library a French "table inlaid with marqueterie" of "the Louis XIII period." This may possibly have been the one now attributed to Gole.[14]

Footnotes

1. Catalogue of a sale by Sotheby Parke Bernet on behalf of the executors of the sixth earl of Rosebery, Mentmore, Buckinghamshire, vol. 1, 18–20 May 1977, pp. 276–77, lot 875.
2. Lunsingh Scheurleer 1984, pp. 336–37, figs. 17, 18. The table was first published in an entry by James Parker in Metropolitan Museum of Art 1986, pp. 28–29, and most recently in Lunsingh Scheurleer 2005, pp. 81, 90–91, 251, figs. 44, 50, 51.
3. For information about Gole, see Lunsingh Scheurleer 2005.
4. One of these pieces is thought to be in the collection of the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam. See Lunsingh Scheurleer 1993, pp. 82, 84, fig. 2; and Baarsen 2000b, pp. 48–53, figs. 55–59.
5. Ronfort 1985, pp. 36, 38.
6. Lunsingh Scheurleer 1980, p. 380.
7. Ibid., pp. 380, 384. These cabinets have not been preserved.
8. The tapestry belongs to the ambitious Story of the King series woven at the Gobelins Manufactory starting in 1665; Meyer 1980a, pp. 109–16.
9. A list of furnishings supplied by Gole to the crown is given in Lunsingh Scheurleer 2005, pp. 231–38.
10. A list of furnishings supplied by Gole to the crown is given in Lunsingh Scheurleer 2005, pp. 231–38.
11. These borders are also found on a cabinet on stand attributed to Gole in the collection of the Victoria and Albert Museum, London; see Wilk 1996, pp. 66–67 (entry by Carolyn Sargentson). See also a cabinet in the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam; Baarsen 2000b, pp. 52–55, figs. 60–62.
12. "Une table d'escaille de tortue profilée et presque toute couverte d'ornemens d'ivoire, au milieu de laquelle est un grand ovale à quatre angles dans lequel est un bouquet de diverses fleurs de bois et d'ivoire liez d'un ruban de bois au dessus duquel est un papillon aussy de bois; avecq son pied à quatre collomnes d'escaille de tortue profilées d'ivoire par la moitié et l'autre moitié de fleurs de bois, dont les bases, astragalles et chappitaux sont de cuivre doré. Longue de trois pieds six poulces, large de deux pieds quatre poulces." This description of Mazarin's table in the 1661 inventory is quoted in Lunsingh Scheurleer 1984, p. 336.
13. See Sir Francis Watson's introduction to the Mentmore sale catalogue, vol. 1, pp. ix–xiii.
14. Mentmore 1884, vol. 2, p. 63, no. 72. In addition, "numerous tables of marqueterie and boule" stood against the walls of the Gallery; Mentmore 1884, vol. 2, p. 152.
  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。