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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)象牙镶嵌青铜战车
品名(英)Bronze chariot inlaid with ivory
入馆年号1903年,03.23.1
策展部门希腊和罗马艺术Greek and Roman Art
创作者
创作年份公元前 575 - 公元前 525
创作地区
分类青铜器(Bronzes)
尺寸total 高 51 9/16 英寸 (130.9 厘米) length of pole 82 1/4 英寸 (209 厘米)
介绍(中)希腊英雄阿喀琉斯的生活场景

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1902年,一位在其土地上工作的土地所有者意外发现了一座被土丘覆盖的地下坟墓。他的调查发现了一辆游行战车的残骸,以及青铜、陶瓷和铁制器皿以及其他陪葬品。在这一发现之后,这些发现通过了几位意大利车主和经销商的手中,他们对这辆战车和相关材料在巴黎艺术品市场上的出现负有责任。1903年,大都会艺术博物馆首任馆长路易吉·帕尔玛·迪·塞斯诺拉将军在那里购买了这些战车。蒙特利昂战车是罗马时期之前古意大利保存最完好的战车。它的主要部件——汽车面板、电线杆和车轮——相对良好的状况使它有可能在最新的奖学金基础上进行新的重建。此外,一些幸存的象牙碎片现在可以合理确定地放置。与战车一起获得的其他陵墓家具在这个画廊的南墙上分两个案例展出

战车的形式和功能
公元前两千年早期,战车起源于古代近东,向西传播到埃及、塞浦路斯和希腊世界。在早期占主导地位的车型中,该车基本上由一个前部有光栅的平台组成
在意大利半岛上,来自伊特鲁里亚及周边地区的战车数量最多。它们可以在公元前八世纪后半叶至公元前五世纪之间进行数据采集,代表了几个品种。似乎没有一个被用于战斗。大多数是在坟墓里被发现的;在服役后,它们被埋葬在主人身边,有男有女。蒙特利昂战车属于一组阅兵式战车,之所以这么叫,是因为它们被重要人物在特殊场合使用。它们有两个轮子,由两匹马牵着,两匹马站在相距约49英寸(122厘米)的地方,轭放在它们的脖子上。这辆车本来可以容纳司机和尊贵的乘客的。这辆车的形状,前面有一块高面板,两边都有一块低面板,为装饰提供了广阔的表面,在重新组装时进行。车轴上的饰带、杆与汽车的连接以及杆和轭的末端都有额外的图形装饰

战车材料
尽管原始战车的下部结构除了一个轮子外没有一个幸存下来,但可以从青铜件、其他保存的战车和古代战车描绘的细节中收集到很多信息。请注意,战车出现在汽车的左侧面板上。这辆车保存完好的青铜部件最初安装在一个木制底座上。支撑三个主要人物面板的栏杆是由紫杉或野生无花果等树木制成的。地板由木板条组成。木制车轮上饰有青铜,这是一种特殊的做法,可能只为最精致的战车保留。保存下来的一部分果核已被鉴定为橡木。轮胎是铁的。电线杆的各部分安装在笔直的树枝上。原车的一个主要部件是木制底座上的皮革。电线杆与汽车的连接将通过收集在野猪头下的生皮带子来加强,轭将被绑在电线杆上。杆子的上端有皮带的痕迹。此外,所有的马具都是皮革的。此外,带有脂肪的猪皮环有助于减少车轮运动部件之间的摩擦。蒙特利昂战车的与众不同之处不仅在于青铜面板的非凡执行,还在于象牙镶嵌。大象和河马的象牙都是如此零碎,以至于只有野猪的象牙和汽车后部的象牙被放在了原来的位置。剩下的作品在南墙上的一个箱子里展出。一系列细长的条带用作边缘,可能围绕着汽车的面板或杆的下侧。可能是其他碎片填充了汽车中央面板中人物之间的空间。关于这些辅料的一个主要问题是它们的附着方法,需要使用粘合剂。另一个问题是象牙是否被画过

战车上的人物
肖像画代表了一个经过深思熟虑的程序。汽车的三个主要面板描绘了特洛伊战争中的希腊英雄阿喀琉斯的生活片段。在壮丽的中心场景中,右边的阿喀琉斯从左边的母亲特提斯那里得到了一个盾牌和头盔,以取代阿喀琉s送给他的朋友帕特洛克洛斯的盔甲,用于对抗特洛伊赫克托。帕特洛克洛斯被杀,让赫克托获得了阿喀琉斯的盔甲。由于荷马的《伊利亚特》中的描述和希腊艺术中的许多表现,这个主题广为人知。左边的面板显示了两名战士之间的战斗,通常被认为是希腊的阿喀琉斯和特洛伊的梅农。在右边的面板中,阿喀琉斯的神化展示了他乘坐有翼马拉的战车上升。部分被轮子覆盖的辅助浮雕被解释为,阿喀琉斯是一个由半人马Chiron照顾的年轻人,阿喀琉斯是一头正在砍杀敌人的狮子,在本例中是一头雄鹿和一头公牛。战车的中轴由野猪的头部和前腿在杆子和汽车的连接处加固。阿喀琉斯盾下的鹿似乎正挂在野猪的背上。杆前的鹰头重复了中央面板顶部的两只攻击鹰,轭上的狮子头与
介绍(英)Scenes from the life of the Greek hero Achilles

The Acquisition
In 1902, a landowner working on his property accidentally discovered a subterranean built tomb covered by a tumulus (mound). His investigations revealed the remains of a parade chariot as well as bronze, ceramic, and iron utensils together with other grave goods. Following the discovery, the finds passed through the hands of several Italian owners and dealers who were responsible for the appearance of the chariot and related material on the Paris art market. There they were purchased in 1903 by General Luigi Palma di Cesnola, the first director of The Metropolitan Museum of Art. The Monteleone chariot is the best preserved example of its kind from ancient Italy before the Roman period. The relatively good condition of its major parts--the panels of the car, the pole, and the wheels--has made it possible to undertake a new reconstruction based on the most recent scholarship. Moreover, some of the surviving ivory fragments can now be placed with reasonable certitude. The other tomb furnishings acquired with the chariot are exhibited in two cases on the south wall of this gallery.

The Form and Function of the Chariot
Chariots originated in the Ancient Near East during the early second millennium B.C. and spread westward through Egypt, Cyprus, and the Greek world. In the predominant early type, the car consisted essentially of a platform with a light barrier at the front.
On the Italian peninsula, the largest number of chariots come from Etruria and the surrounding regions. They are datable between the second half of the eighth and the fifth centuries B.C. and represent several varieties. None seems to have been used for fighting in battle. Most came to light in tombs; after serving in life, they were buried with their owners, male and also female. The Monteleone chariot belongs to a group of parade chariots, so called because they were used by significant individuals on special occasions. They have two wheels and were drawn by two horses standing about forty-nine inches (122 centimeters) apart at the point where the yoke rests on their necks. The car would have accommodated the driver and the distinguished passenger. The shape of the car, with a tall panel in front and a lower one at each side, provided expansive surfaces for decoration, executed in repoussé. The frieze at the axle, the attachment of the pole to the car, and the ends of the pole and yoke all have additional figural embellishment.

The Materials of the Chariot
Although none of the substructure of the original chariot survives, except in one wheel, much information can be gleaned from details on the bronze pieces, other preserved chariots, and ancient depictions of chariots. Note that a chariot is represented on the proper left panel of the car. The preserved bronze elements of the car were originally mounted on a wooden substructure. The rails supporting the three main figural panels were made from a tree such as a yew or wild fig. The floor consisted of wooden slats. The wooden wheels were revetted with bronze, an exceptional practice probably reserved only for the most elaborate chariots. A bit of the preserved core has been identified as oak. The tires are of iron. The sections of the pole were mounted on straight branches. A major component of the original vehicle was leather applied to the wooden substructure. The connection of the pole to the car would have been reinforced by rawhide straps gathered beneath the boar's head, and the yoke would have been lashed to the pole. The upper end of the pole shows traces of the leather bands. In addition, all of the horses' harness was of leather. Moreover, rings of pigskin with the fat attached helped reduce friction between the moving parts of the wheels. The Monteleone chariot is distinguished not only by the extraordinary execution of the bronze panels but also by the inclusion of ivory inlays. The ivories, from both elephant and hippopotamus, are so fragmentary that only the tusks of the boar and the finials at the back of the car have been placed in their original positions. The remaining pieces are exhibited in a case on the south wall. A series of long narrow strips served as edging, perhaps around the panels of the car or on the underside of the pole. It is possible that other fragments filled the spaces between the figures in the central panel of the car. A major question concerning these adjuncts is the method of their attachment, requiring the use of an adhesive. Another question is whether the ivories were painted.

The Figures on the Chariot
The iconography represents a carefully thought-out program. The three major panels of the car depict episodes from the life of Achilles, the Greek hero of the Trojan War. In the magnificent central scene, Achilles, on the right, receives from his mother, Thetis, on the left, a shield and helmet to replace the armor that Achilles had given his friend Patroklos, for combat against the Trojan Hektor. Patroklos was killed, allowing Hektor to take Achilles' armor. The subject was widely known thanks to the account in Homer's Iliad and many representations in Greek art. The panel on the left shows a combat between two warriors, usually identified as the Greek Achilles and the Trojan Memnon. In the panel on the right, the apotheosis of Achilles shows him ascending in a chariot drawn by winged horses. The subsidiary reliefs partly covered by the wheels are interpreted as showing Achilles as a youth in the care of the centaur Chiron and Achilles as a lion felling his foes, in this case a stag and a bull. The central axis of the chariot is reinforced by the head and forelegs of the boar at the join of the pole to the car. The deer below Achilles' shield appears slung over the boar's back. The eagle's head at the front of the pole repeats the two attacking eagles at the top of the central panel, and the lion heads on the yoke relate to the numerous savage felines on the car. While the meaning of the human and animal figures allows for various interpretations, there is a thematic unity and a Homeric quality emphasizing the glory of the hero.

The Artistic Origin of the Chariot
The three panels of the car represent the main artistic achievement. Scholarly opinion agrees that the style of the decoration is strongly influenced by Greek art, particularly that of Ionia and adjacent islands such as Rhodes. The choice of subjects, moreover, reflects close knowledge of the epics recounting the Trojan War. In the extent of Greek influence, the chariot resembles works of virtually all media from Archaic Etruria. Contemporary carved ambers reflect a similar situation. The typically Etruscan features of the object begin with its function, for chariots were not significant in Greek life of the sixth century B.C. except in athletic contests. Furthermore, iconographical motifs such as the winged horses in Achilles' apotheosis and the plethora of birds of prey reflect Etruscan predilections. The repoussé panels may have been produced in one of the important metal-working centers such as Vulci by a local craftsman well familiar with Greek art or possibly by an immigrant bronze-worker. The chariot could well have been made for an important individual living in southern Etruria or Latium. Its burial in Monteleone may have to do with the fact that this town controlled a major route through the Appenine Mountains. The vehicle could have been a gift to win favor with a powerful local authority or to reward his services. Beyond discussion is the superlative skill of the artist. His control of the height of the relief, from very high to subtly shallow, is extraordinary. Equally remarkable are the richness and variety of the decoration lavished on all of the figures, especially those of the central panel. In its original state, with the gleaming bronze and painted ivory as well as all of the accessory paraphernalia, the chariot must have been dazzling.

The Reconstruction
After the parts of the chariot arrived in the Museum in 1903, they were assembled in a presentation that remained on view for almost a century. During the new reconstruction, which took three years' work, the chariot was entirely dismantled. A new support was made according to the same structural principles as the ancient one would have been. The reexamination of many pieces has allowed them to be placed in their correct positions. Moreover, the bronze sheathing of the pole, which had been considered only partially preserved, has been recognized as substantially complete. The main element that has not been reconstructed is the yoke. Although the length is correct, the wooden bar simply connects the two bronze pieces.
  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。