微信公众号 
图码生活

每天发布有五花八门的文章,各种有趣的知识等,期待您的订阅与参与
搜索结果最多仅显示 10 条随机数据
结果缓存两分钟
如需更多更快搜索结果请访问小程序
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)
读取中
读取中
读取中
品名(中)带鞘匕首
品名(英)Dagger with Sheath
入馆年号1936年,36.25.666a, b
策展部门武器和盔甲Arms and Armor
创作者
创作年份公元 1650 - 公元 1700
创作地区可能来自: 土耳其(Possibly from: Turkey)
分类匕首(Daggers)
尺寸长 17 英寸 ( 43.18 厘米)
介绍(中)从16世纪开始,穿孔刀片在土耳其、阿拉伯、伊朗和印度很流行,大都会博物馆的藏品中有很多例子。在几个方面,这把匕首的刀片与十八至十九世纪的登录号22.107a,b的刀片相似,尤其是在叶形部分下方的穿孔叶片中,叶形部分包含一个用于"滚动球"的槽——这里是微小的抛光红宝石和祖母绿,它们串在一根金属丝上,在柄脚焊接之前穿过叶片顶部的一个孔。同样的特征也出现在符腾堡州国家博物馆的一把16世纪末或17世纪初的奥斯曼匕首上,斯图加特,以及德累斯顿国家美术馆的Rüstkammer的另一个几乎相同的例子,所有这些都表明这种风格的匕首刀片可能是在很长一段时间内生产的。目前尚不确定这些穿孔刀片——与它们的配件相反——是在哪里制作的,它们是否来自伊朗或土耳其的一个生产中心,或者这种风格是否被广泛模仿。这把匕首的刀刃上装饰着一个连贯的阿拉伯式花纹设计,在后来的十八至十九世纪的例子中,这种设计退化为不连贯的花卉图案,这表明这种加工更精细的刀刃可能是十七世纪的

原产于印度,装有这种刀柄的匕首被称为chilanum,其特点是有细长的八字柄和护手,有时呈人字形或弯曲,形成双新月形,通常带有栏杆状的握把;在一些示例中,前套筒向上弯曲以形成转向节防护装置。刀柄类型可能起源于德干时代。该类型最早的代表出现在1555年左右的德卡尼微缩模型中,该微缩模型描绘了艾哈迈德纳格尔的苏丹侯赛因·尼扎姆·沙阿一世(1553–65年在位),腰带上戴着一个chilanum(辛辛那提美术馆,约翰·J·埃默里捐赠基金会,1983.3110)。阿克巴一世时期的莫卧儿微缩模型中也出现了许多例子(1556–1605年在位),大多数刀柄看起来是镀金金属的,握把中心有球状元素,但在其他方面没有镶嵌。在17世纪,匕首通常是用软玉制作的,而且装饰得更为精致,通常是用彩色宝石装饰的

这把匕首的刀柄和刀刃一样,似乎年代相对较早,可能也是17世纪的。它装饰得克制而清晰,与后来在刀柄上发现的切割不当的宝石形成鲜明对比。与许多印度珠宝和珠宝匕首一样,这个例子的刀柄很难归属于特定的中心,因为没有精确的年代对比。然而,它在结构和形式上(但不是装饰)与瓦杜兹Furusiyya艺术基金会的匕首相似,该匕首也由几个部分组成,并有一个八边形的栏杆形把手(编号R-59)。与圣彼得堡的一件类似作品(国立埃尔米塔什博物馆,编号OR-452)相比,Furusiyya匕首的年代可以追溯到1730年之前。此外,在昆丹的背景下,还有许多用一排排石头装饰的软玉剑和匕首柄,所有这些在概念上都与大都会博物馆匕首的装饰非常相似。曼努埃尔·基恩最近将这些藏品的年代确定为17世纪中后期(见《世界宝库:莫卧儿时代的印度珠宝艺术》)。Exh.cat,伦敦大英博物馆;纽约MMA;克利夫兰艺术博物馆;休斯顿美术馆;以及洛杉矶县艺术博物馆,2001-2002。纽约:泰晤士和哈德逊与萨巴赫收藏馆合作,Dar al-Athar al-Islamiyyah,科威特国家博物馆,2001年。Manuel Keene与Salam Kaoukji的目录)。因此,博物馆的匕首在这里被暂时归因于大约这个时期。
介绍(英)From the sixteenth century on, pierced blades were popular in Turkey, Arabia, Iran, and India, and there are a number of examples in the Metropolitan Museum's collection. In several respects the blade of this dagger is similar to that of accession number 22.107a, b, dated to the eighteenth–nineteenth century, notably in the pierced leaf forms below the lobed section that contains a slot for the "rolling balls"––which here are tiny polished rubies and emeralds that were strung on a wire dropped through a hole at the top of the blade before the tang was welded on. The same feature also occurs on a late sixteenth- or early seventeenth-century Ottoman dagger in the Landesmuseum Württemberg, Stuttgart, and on another almost identical example in the Rüstkammer of the Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden, all of which indicates that dagger blades in this style were probably produced over a long period of time. It is uncertain where these pierced blades––as opposed to their fittings––were crafted, whether they originated from one center of production in Iran or Turkey or whether the style was widely imitated. The blade of this dagger is embellished with a coherently executed arabesque design, which in later examples of the eighteenth to nineteenth century degenerates into disconnected floral motifs, suggesting that this more finely worked blade is probably of the seventeenth century.

Indigenous to India, daggers fitted with hilts of this type are known as chilanum and are characterized by an elongated splayed pommel and guard, sometimes chevronlike or curved to create a double crescent, usually with baluster-shaped grips; in some examples the forward quillon is curved upward to form a knuckle guard. The hilt type probably originated in the Deccan. Among the earliest representations ot the type appears in a Deccani miniature dated about 1555, which portrays Sultan Husain Nizam Shah I of Ahmadnagar (r. 1553–65) wearing a chilanum in his belt (Cincinnati Art Museum, John J. Emery Endowment, 1983.3110). Numerous examples also appear in Mughal miniatures from the time of Akbar I (r. 1556–1605), where most of the hilts appear to be of gilt metal and have globular elements in the center of the grips, but are otherwise unembellished. In the seventeenth century the daggers were often worked in nephrite and were more elaborately decorated, usually with colored gems.

The hilt of this dagger, like the blade, seems to be relatively early in date, presumably also of the seventeenth century. It is decorated with restraint and clarity, in contrast to the ovrabundance of ill-cut gems found on later hilts. As with much Indian jewelry and jeweled daggers, the hilt of this example is difficult to attribute to a particular center because there are no precisely dated parallels. It is, however, similar in construction and form (but not decoration) to a dagger in the Furusiyya Art Foundation, Vaduz, that is also consctructed in several parts and has a baluster-shaped grip that is octagonal in section (no. R-59). The Furusiyya dagger can be dated to before 1730 by comparison with a similar piece in Saint Petersburg (State Hermitage Museum, no. OR-452). In addition, there are a number of nephrite sword and dagger hilts decorated with rows of stones in kundan settings all very similar in conception to the decoration of The Met's dagger. These have recently been dated by Manuel Keene to the mid- to late seventeenth century (see Treasury of the World: Jewelled Arts of India in the Age of the Mughals. Exh. cat., British Museum, London; MMA, New York; Cleveland Museum of Art; Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; and Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 2001–2. New York: Thames and Hudson in association with The al-Sabah Collection, Dar al-Athar al-Islamiyyah, Kuwait National Museum, 2001. Catalogue by Manuel Keene with Salam Kaoukji.). Consequently, the Museum's dagger is tentatively attributed here to approximately this period.
  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。