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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)亚历山大·达尼洛维奇·门希科夫(1673-1729)
品名(英)Alexander Danilovich Menshikov (1673–1729)
入馆年号1996年,1996.7
策展部门欧洲雕塑和装饰艺术European Sculpture and Decorative Arts
创作者
创作年份公元 1685 - 公元 1704
创作地区
分类雕塑(Sculpture)
尺寸整体 (confirmed): 31 × 19 3/8 × 12 1/2 英寸 (78.7 × 49.2 × 31.8 厘米)
介绍(中)精致的盔甲,飘动的Jabot和奢华梳理的假发衬托出这尊木制半身像中描绘的军事指挥官光滑抛光的脸。他的胸甲被胸甲的舀截强调了他的直接目光,胸甲在它下面积极地向前切开。头部微微转动,逆着蕾丝花边的流动,给人一种运动感。在蕾丝和头发的柔软元素下,胸甲上出现了锐利的雕刻图像。圆环椭圆形已被确定为亚历山大大帝和他的密友赫菲斯提翁在大流士国王(观众左侧)和图拉真法官(略微模糊,观众右侧)帐篷的场景。亚历山大大帝(左)和图拉真皇帝(右)的肩章重复了椭圆形中看到的主要军事人物。奥古斯都·凯撒的妻子利维亚·德鲁西拉(与亚历山大错误地配对)和图拉真的妻子普洛蒂娜占据了胸甲背面的轿子。

这个特殊的半身像的主题及其制作者的身份使学者们感到困惑,直到沃尔夫拉姆·科普(Wolfram Koeppe)和玛丽娜·努德尔(Marina Nudel)的研究解决了它的一些谜团。1]这种介质最初似乎是黄杨木,实际上是红松染色成黄杨木的样子。[2]半身像的各个部分是用金属夹组装的,这是习惯于使用黄杨木或象牙等致密材料的工匠使用的一种技术,这些材料只能以小块的形式提供。虽然红松原产于北欧、波罗的海地区和俄罗斯,但这种建筑方法通常与德国南部和奥地利的木工有关。对这种差异的解释可以在被确定为半身像主题的Koeppe和Nudel的传记中找到:众所周知,他雇用了德国和奥地利艺术家亚历山大·丹尼洛维奇·缅希科夫(Alexander Danilovich Menshikov)。缅希科夫出身不大,二十岁左右就引起了沙皇彼得大帝的注意。他迅速晋升为俄罗斯军队的陆军元帅,并最终被任命为圣彼得堡总督。[3]他的军事才能使他与众不同,他与沙皇的亲密友谊使他达到了财富和权力的顶峰。他于1702年被封为伯爵,1705年被封为王子,并在彼得于1725年去世后成为该国的几年实际统治者。但在1729年,他的敌人,俄罗斯老贵族成功地将他流放,同年他在西伯利亚去世。

正如Koeppe和Nudel所指出的那样,木制肖像与缅希科夫的绘画,蚀刻,雕刻和建模图像具有惊人的相似之处。4] 十八世纪初流行的夸张假发出现在他的所有肖像中,高额头、大鼻子和下巴裂也是如此。从其他肖像中正面识别人物是出了名的困难,但其他证据表明缅希科夫是这里的主题。他自然会喜欢与历史上最伟大的军事领袖之一交往,尤其是与他同名的亚历山大。亚历山大和他的朋友兼顾问赫菲斯提翁的场景会让每个人都想起缅希科夫与彼得大帝的亲密关系。俄罗斯指挥官也会欣赏罗马皇帝图拉真,他在战斗中的许多胜利为罗马帝国历史上带来了一个吉祥的时刻。[5]胸甲上的两个椭圆形场景都显示出统治者的宽宏大量,对任何领导人的赞美都是奉承的。此外,缅希科夫欣赏木雕的灵巧性:他的私人书房胡桃木室以镶嵌为特色,他在圣彼得堡的宫殿里安装了一个用于加工木材和其他材料的车手。该建筑是该市第一座石头建筑,装饰华丽。我们还知道,一位名叫弗朗茨·路德维希·齐格勒(Franz Ludwig Ziegler)或辛格勒(Zingler)的雕塑家,可能是瑞士人,居住在俄罗斯,他以缅希科夫的代价前往西欧,并于1703年在三名雕塑家(两名奥地利和一名德国人)的陪同下返回俄罗斯。没有书面证据表明他们中的任何人或齐格勒雕刻了半身像,但他们可以完成这项任务。有人提出,半身像可以追溯到那个时候,因为在 1703 年之后,它可能会包含圣安德鲁勋章的徽章,这是俄罗斯最高的军事荣誉,缅希科夫当年获得了该勋章。1702年,他在施吕塞尔堡(Schlüsselburg)军事上战胜瑞典军队后被授予贵族称号,这可能是委托半身像的机会。虽然我们的证据是间接的,但有充分的理由将这张引人注目的形象与俄罗斯的伟大英雄之一联系起来。

[伊恩·沃德罗珀。欧洲雕塑,1400-1900,大都会艺术博物馆。纽约,2011年,第51期,第154–55页。

脚注

1.沃尔夫拉姆·科普和玛丽娜·努德尔。"亚历山大·缅希科夫的意外半身像。"大都会博物馆杂志35(2000),第161-77页。2. J
. Thomas Quick,美国农业部,威斯康星州麦迪逊,于 1996 年 3 月 17 日将这种木材确定为樟子松。木材的碳测年由苏黎世高等技术学院粒子物理研究所的George Bonani博士于1996年3月28日进行;他得出的结论是,作为木材来源的树木不迟于1667年被砍伐。由于在加工木材之前长时间固化木材是常见的做法,因此制作这件半身像的碎片肯定可以在商店中调味三十五年,然后才能投入使用,大约在 1703 年。
3. 见尼古拉·伊万诺维奇·帕夫连科。亚历山大·丹尼洛维奇·缅希科夫。莫斯科,1981年,以及Koeppe和Nudel 2000年引用的其他传记研究,第176页,第19、20、25页。
4. Koeppe and Nudel 2000, 图 6 – 9, 11 – 13.
5. 关于经典参考文献的完整讨论,见同上,第170-73页。
介绍(英)Finely detailed armor, a fluttering jabot, and an extravagantly combed wig set off the smoothly burnished face of the military commander portrayed in this wooden bust. His direct gaze is emphasized by the scooped truncation of his cuirass, which slices aggressively forward beneath it. The head turns slightly, against the flow of the lace cravat, imparting a sense of movement. Beneath the soft elements of lace and hair, sharply engraved images appear on the breastplate. The enwreathed ovals have been identified as scenes of Alexander the Great and his close friend Hephaestion at the tent of King Darius (to the viewer’s left) and the Justice of Trajan (slightly obscured, to the viewer’s right). Medallions on the pauldrons of Alexander the Great (left) and of the emperor Trajan (right) repeat the principal military figures seen in the ovals. Livia Drusilla, wife of Augustus Caesar (erroneously paired with Alexander), and Plotina, Trajan’s wife, occupy the pauldrons on the back of the cuirass.

The identity of this exceptional bust’s subject and of its maker puzzled scholars until research by Wolfram Koeppe and Marina Nudel resolved some of its mysteries.[1] The medium, which at first appeared to be boxwood, is in fact red pine stained to look like boxwood.[2] Sections of the bust were assembled with metal clips, a technique used by craftsmen accustomed to working with dense materials like boxwood or ivory that were only available in small pieces. While red pine is native to northern Europe, the Baltic region, and Russia, this method of construction is most often associated with woodworking in southern Germany and Austria. An explanation for this discrepancy is found in the biography of the man Koeppe and Nudel identified as the subject of the bust: a Russian known to have employed German and Austrian artists, Alexander Danilovich Menshikov. Of modest background and beginnings, Menshikov caught the eye of Czar Peter the Great when he was about twenty. He rose quickly through the ranks to become Commanding General Field Marshal of the Russian armies and was eventually appointed governor of Saint Petersburg. [3] His military prowess distinguished him, and his close friendship with the czar brought him to the pinnacle of wealth and power. He was made a count in 1702 and a prince in 1705 and became virtual ruler of the country for several years after Peter’s death in 1725. But in 1729 his enemies, the old Russian nobility, succeeded in having him exiled, and he died in Siberia that same year.

As Koeppe and Nudel noted, the wooden portrait bears a striking similarity to painted, etched, carved, and modeled images of Menshikov.[4] The exaggerated wig fashionable in the early eighteenth century appears in all of his portraits, as do the high forehead, large nose, and cleft chin. Positive identification of a figure from other portraits is notoriously difficult, but other evidence points to Menshikov as the subject here. He would naturally appreciate association with one of history’s greatest military leaders and especially Alexander, his namesake. The scene of Alexander with his friend and counselor Hephaestion would have reminded everyone of Menshikov’s close relationship with Peter the Great. The Russian commander would also have appreciated the reference to the Roman emperor Trajan, whose many victories in battle brought about an auspicious moment in the Roman Empire’s history.[5] Both of the oval scenes on the cuirass show a ruler’s magnanimity, flattering compliments to any leader. Furthermore, Menshikov appreciated dexterity in wood carving: his private study, the Walnut Room, featured marquetry, and he installed a turnery for working wood and other materials in his Saint Petersburg palace. The first in the city made of stone, that building was richly decorated. We also know that a sculptor, probably Swiss, named Franz Ludwig Ziegler, or Zingler, residing in Russia, made a trip at Menshikov’s expense to western Europe and returned to Russia in 1703 accompanied by three sculptors, two Austrian and one German. There is no documentary evidence that any of them or Ziegler carved the bust, but they were available for the task. It has been proposed that the bust dates from that time, since after 1703 it probably would have incorporated the insignia of the Order of Saint Andrew, Russia’s highest military honor, which Menshikov received that year. His ennoblement in 1702 in the wake of his military victory over the Swedish army at Schlüsselburg may have been the occasion for commissioning the bust. Although our evidence is circumstantial, a strong case is made for identifying this striking image with one of Russia’s great heroes.

[Ian Wardropper. European Sculpture, 1400–1900, In the Metropolitan Museum of Art. New York, 2011, no. 51, pp. 154–55.]

Footnotes

1. Wolfram Koeppe and Marina Nudel. "An Unsuspected Bust of Alexander Menshikov." Metropolitan Museum Journal 35 (2000), pp. 161-77.
2. J. Thomas Quick, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Madison, Wisconsin, identified the wood as pinus sylvestris on March 17, 1996. Carbon dating of the wood was conducted by Dr. George Bonani, Institute of Particle Physics, Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule, Zurich, on March 28, 1996; he concluded that the tree that was the source of the wood was felled no later than 1667. As it was common practice to cure wood for long periods of time before working it, the pieces from which this bust was made could certainly have been seasoned in a shop for thirty-five years before they were put to use, about 1703.
3. See Nikolai Ivanovich Pavlenko. Aleksandr Danilovich Menshikov. Moscow, 1981 and the other biographical studies cited in Koeppe and Nudel 2000, p. 176, nn. 19, 20, 25.
4. Koeppe and Nudel 2000, figs. 6 – 9, 11 – 13.
5. For a full discussion of the classical references, see ibid., pp. 170 – 73.
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