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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)朱庇特的统治
品名(英)The Reign of Jupiter
入馆年号1997年,1997.23
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 1545 - 公元 1575
创作地区
分类雕塑(Sculpture)
尺寸整体 (confirmed): 高 14 7/8 x 宽 19 x 深 1 1/2 英寸 (37.8 x 48.3 x 3.8 厘米)
介绍(中)这幅精致的浮雕,巧妙地雕刻和承载着意义,反映了法国文艺复兴时期的所有魅力和神秘感。六个离散的场景填满了矩形大理石板,三个在上面,三个在下面。木星占据了顶部中心的主要位置。在他的鹰的陪伴下,他坐在岩石壁架上,拿着一根权杖和一本书——这对这位罗马神来说很不寻常。从他块状的宝座中涌现出三条溪流,这些溪流看似但实际上并没有流向森林中喷泉的圆盘状图像。精心装饰,这个水景以海豚支撑一个盆地为特色,从盆地升起方尖碑。环境是理想的,而不是未驯服的自然或花园。人们发现棕榈树和落叶树。在木星的右边,水星神的身影带着精心描绘的caduceus飞向首席奥林匹斯人,似乎在与他交谈。在水星下方,一对赤裸裸的孩子拥抱着。浮雕的右上方代表一个理想的城市,在完工和废墟的建筑物前面有一个圆形的寺庙。下方,一只挥舞着弓箭的雄性半人马向中心后方。

这种浮雕的图形质量增加了雕塑家遵循绘制的一个或多个模型的可能性。在法国文艺复兴时期,弗朗切斯科·普里马蒂西奥(Francesco Primaticcio)等画家和让·布兰特(Jean Bullant)等建筑师经常向雕塑家提供坟墓或建筑外墙的图纸。这种浮雕的各个部分之间缺乏流畅的联系,让人怀疑雕塑家是否从不同来源组装了图画和版画,可能遵循诗人或作家的口头程序。例如,森林中喷泉的圆形描绘可能是插图书的摘录。它让人想起 1546 年在法国出版的威尼斯 Hypnerotomachia Poliphili 中的木刻插图。[1] 理想的城市让人想起让·库辛(Jean Cousin)的绘画和素描。[2] 此类主题在 1540 年代和 1550 年代的图形和绘画作品中的盛行支持了大约那个时候的年代。

低浮雕人物的优雅和流畅的雕刻使学者们认为它们是该时期最重要的雕塑家之一,也许是让·古洪或日耳曼·皮隆。然而,这些艺术家似乎都没有对此负责。相反,它与1549年至52年在巴黎南部阿内城堡教堂雇用的身份不明的雕刻师或工作室的作品最相似。人物的伸长,拥抱putti的宫廷姿态,周围空气中帷幔的旋转图案以及对装饰图案的强调都是Anet教堂浮雕和这块小大理石的共同特征。宫廷精致的气息和装饰图案的喜悦让人想起著名的阿内特戴安娜(约1549年,巴黎卢浮宫博物馆),这是一个巨大的喷泉人物,由一个图案精美的石棺形基座支撑。

浮雕上不同寻常的数字和标志组合引起了不同的解释,其中迈克尔·梅扎特斯塔(Michael Mezzatesta)的是最全面和仔细考虑的。3] 拥抱婴儿和半人马被Mezzatesta和其他人视为双子座和射手座的黄道十二宫。它们可能指的是特定人的出生日期,尽管Mezzatesta将它们解读为木星排列的星座的组合,以与诗意的灵感相吻合,正如它们之间的喷泉所表示的那样。水星是雄辩和艺术的信使之神。梅扎泰斯塔在这里将他等同于洛林红衣主教查尔斯,一位以雄辩而闻名的政治家,以及朱庇特与亨利二世国王的形象。在他看来,整个浮雕与红衣主教在巴黎郊外现已被摧毁的格罗特德默东有关,这是一个诗意和艺术灵感的场所,皮埃尔·德·龙萨尔和其他人为此写作。

在对博物馆大理石碑的另一项分析中,科林·艾斯勒(Colin Eisler)将其与当代心脏纪念碑(伴随埋葬人类心脏的雕塑)上的标志性浮雕联系起来,例如在圣但尼大教堂献给弗朗西斯一世的浮雕,强调艺术在我们的创造力中的作用。[4] 在艾斯勒看来,现在浮雕的尺寸、质量和图像都表明它是为法国皇家心脏纪念碑而设计的。虽然没有书面证据支持这个想法,但他想知道它是否是为查理九世(他死于 1571 年,不知道这样的纪念碑)委托的,并暗示了雅克奥特庞塞雕刻它的可能性。虽然这些都是诱人的建议,但几乎没有证据支持这项工作与心脏纪念碑的联系。庞塞的灰泥作品——这是证明他的浮雕风格的全部——与这幅大理石浮雕几乎没有亲和力。三个边缘的锯齿状——底部边缘已被重新切割——表明浮雕是打算装裱的,因此可能是为了镶嵌在纪念碑或墙壁的织物上。可以肯定的是,这种雕刻精美的大理石一定是为特定地点设计的,如果不是皇家建筑群,肯定也是为贵族设计的。它遵循一个特定的程序,很可能是由诗人或作家建议的;它的图案和风格表明日期约为 1550 – 70 年。

[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21期,第71–73页。

脚注:
1.见亨利·泽纳。法国文艺复兴艺术:古典主义的发明。巴黎,1996年,图。320.2
.例如,参见表哥的孩子在废墟中玩耍(1540 – 70,巴黎卢浮宫博物馆);同上,图。272.3
.迈克尔·"国王、诗人和民族:法国十六世纪的浮雕和普莱亚德。"在IL 60:纪念欧文·拉文六十岁生日的论文中,玛丽莲·阿伦伯格·拉文编辑,第227-52页。1990年,纽约。
4. 科林·艾斯勒。"适合皇家之心?:大都会艺术博物馆的法国文艺复兴时期浮雕"。大都会博物馆杂志38(2003),第145-56页。
介绍(英)This sophisticated relief, adroitly carved and freighted with meaning, reflects the French Renaissance in all its charm and mystery. Six discrete scenes fill the rectangular marble slab, three above and three below. Jupiter occupies the prime position at top center. Accompanied by his eagle, he sits on a rocky ledge, holding —  unusually for this Roman god —  a scepter and a book. From his blocky throne emerge three streams, which seemingly but not physically flow down into a disklike image of a fountain in a forest. Elaborately decorated, this watery scene features dolphins supporting a basin, from which rises an obelisk. The setting is ideal, rather than untamed nature or a garden. One spots a palm tree as well as deciduous trees. To Jupiter’s right, the figure of the god Mercury with a carefully delineated caduceus flies toward the chief Olympian, seeming to engage him in speech. Below Mercury, a pair of naked children embrace. The upper right section of the relief represents an ideal city with a circular temple in front of finished and ruined buildings. Below, a bow-wielding male centaur rears toward the center.

The graphic quality of this relief raises the possibility that the sculptor followed a drawn model or models. In the French Renaissance, painters such as Francesco Primaticcio and architects such as Jean Bullant routinely furnished drawings to sculptors for tombs or building facades. The lack of fluid connection between the parts of this relief makes one wonder if the sculptor assembled drawings and prints from different sources, possibly following the verbal program of a poet or writer. The circular depiction of a fountain in the forest, for instance, could be an excerpt from an illustrated book. It is reminiscent of woodcut illustrations in the Venetian Hypnerotomachia Poliphili, published in France in 1546.[1] The ideal city recalls paintings and drawings by Jean Cousin.[2] The prevalence of such themes in graphic and painted work of the 1540s and 1550s supports a dating about that time.

The elegance and fluid carving of the low-relief figures have led scholars to suggest that they are by one of the foremost sculptors of the period, perhaps Jean Goujon or Germain Pilon. Yet neither of those artists seems to have been responsible. Instead, it resembles most closely the work of the unidentified carver or atelier employed about 1549 – 52 at the chapel of the Château d’Anet, south of Paris. The elongation of the figures, the courtly gestures of the embracing putti, the swirling patterns of drapery in the air around them, and the emphasis on decorative pattern are all traits shared by the Anet chapel reliefs and this small marble. The air of courtly refinement and delight in decorative pattern bring to mind the famous Diana of Anet (ca. 1549, Musée du Louvre, Paris), a monumental fountain figure supported by a brilliantly patterned sarcophagus-shaped pedestal.

The unusual combination of figures and emblems on the relief has invited varied interpretations, of which Michael Mezzatesta’s is the most comprehensive and carefully considered.[3] The embracing infants and the centaur are seen by Mezzatesta and others as the zodiacal signs of Gemini and Sagittarius. They may refer to the birth date of a specific person, though Mezzatesta reads them as a conjunction of constellations arranged by Jupiter to coincide with poetic inspiration, as signified by the fountain between them. Mercury is the messenger god of eloquence and the arts. Mezzatesta equated him here with Charles, cardinal of Lorraine, a statesman famous for his eloquence, and the figure of Jupiter with King Henry II. In his view, the whole relief is connected with the cardinal’s now-destroyed Grotte de Meudon outside of Paris, a site of poetic and artistic inspiration about which Pierre de Ronsard and others wrote.

In another analysis of the Museum’s marble tablet, Colin Eisler relates it to emblematic reliefs seen on contemporary heart monuments (sculptures accompanying the burial of a human heart), such as the one dedicated to Francis I at the cathedral of Saint-Denis, that emphasize the role of the arts in our creative nature.[4] In Eisler’s view, the dimensions, quality, and iconography of the present relief all indicate that it was designed for use on a French royal heart monument. Although there is no documentary evidence to support the idea, he wonders whether it was commissioned for Charles IX (who died 1571 and for whom no such memorial is known) and suggests the possibility that Jacquiot Ponce carved it. While these are tempting suggestions, there is little evidence to support this work’s connection with a heart monument. Ponce’s stuccowork —  which is all that remains to testify to his relief style —  shows little affinity with this marble relief. The rabbeting of three edges —  the bottom edge has been recut —  indicate that the relief was intended to be framed and thus was probably meant to be set into a monument or into the fabric of a wall. What can be said for sure of this exquisitely carved marble is that it must have been intended for a particular location, and surely for a noble if not a royal complex; that it followed a specific program, most likely suggested by a poet or writer; and that its motifs and style suggest a date of about 1550 – 70.

[Ian Wardropper. European Sculpture, 1400–1900, In the Metropolitan Museum of Art. New York, 2011, no. 21, pp. 71–73.]

Footnotes:
1. See Henri Zerner. L’Art de la Renaissance en France: L’Invention du classicism. Paris, 1996, fig. 320.
2. See, for example, Cousin’s Children Playing among Ruins (1540 – 70, Musée du Louvre, Paris); ibid., fig. 272.
3. Michael P. Mezzatesta. "The King, the Poet, and the Nation: A French Sixteenth-Century Relief and the Pléiade." In IL 60: Essays Honoring Irvin Lavin on His Sixtieth Birthday, edited by Marilyn Aronberg Lavin, pp. 227–52. New York, 1990.
4. Colin Eisler. "Fit for a Royal Heart?: A French Renaissance Relief at the Metropolitan Museum of Art." Metropolitan Museum Journal 38 (2003), pp. 145–56.
  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。