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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)狐狸头瓶
品名(英)Bottle with fox head
入馆年号1963年,63.226.6
策展部门迈克尔·洛克菲勒之翼The Michael C. Rockefeller Wing
创作者
创作年份公元 500 - 公元 800
创作地区秘鲁(Peru)
分类陶瓷容器(Ceramics-Containers)
尺寸高 12 1/2 × 宽 6 1/2 × 深 8 英寸 (31.8 × 16.5 × 20.3 厘米)
介绍(中)这个戴着头巾的狐狸头形状的陶瓷马镫嘴瓶是由秘鲁北海岸莫切文化的艺术家制作的。容器使用红色和白色滑条(粘土和/或其他着色剂在水中的悬浮液)进行涂漆。狐狸戴着典型的莫切头巾,头巾延伸到脖子后面,由一条带子固定,该带子越过头顶并系在下巴下方。头巾的边缘有一个重复的、程式化的鲶鱼头设计。该生物的脸部中心涂有一条宽阔的垂直白色条纹,两侧是两条红色条纹,模仿人类战士陶瓷肖像上的面部油漆类型。

拟人化的动物,包括狐狸战士,经常被描绘在莫切陶瓷中——包括建模和绘画(大都会收藏中的其他例子见 82.1.29 和 1983.546.4)——以及壁画(唐南和麦克莱兰,1999 年;特雷弗,2017 年)。这种表现的意义尚不清楚,但它可能说明了莫切对这些动物的崇拜,这些动物可能被认为具有特殊能力。狐狸狩猎和捕获小型猎物,就像战士会战斗和捕获俘虏一样。狐狸也可能与死者的世界有关,因为它们主要是夜间活动的,生活在地下洞穴中。

马镫壶嘴容器——喷口的形状让人想起马鞍上的马镫——在秘鲁北部海岸是一种非常受欢迎的形式,已有大约 2,500 年的历史。尽管这种独特形状的重要性和象征意义仍然令学者们感到困惑,但双分支/单喷口配置可能阻止了液体蒸发,和/或便于携带。早在公元一千年,莫切人就将马镫嘴瓶制作成雕塑形状,描绘了广泛的主题,包括人物、动物和植物,并带有大量的自然主义。大约500年后,瓶室主要变成球形,为绘制复杂的,通常是多人物的场景提供了大表面。

Moche(也称为Mochicas)于公元200-850年在秘鲁北海岸蓬勃发展,比印加人崛起早几个世纪。在大约六个世纪的时间里,莫切人建立了繁荣的区域中心,从南部的内佩尼亚河谷到北部的皮乌拉河,靠近与厄瓜多尔的现代边界,将沿海沙漠发展成肥沃的农田,并利用太平洋洪堡洋流丰富的海洋资源。尽管莫切政治组织的确切性质是一个有争议的话题,但这些中心具有统一的文化特征,如宗教习俗(Donnan,2010)。

出版参考

耶,艾伦R.古代秘鲁陶瓷:内森卡明斯收藏(纽约:大都会艺术博物馆,1966年),第44页。

瓦瑟曼-圣布拉斯,布鲁诺·约翰。《秘鲁瓦瑟曼-圣布拉斯的安提瓜案》(布宜诺斯艾利斯:布鲁诺·约翰·瓦瑟曼-圣布拉斯,1938年),第99页。

参考文献和进一步阅读

Donnan,Christopher B."Moche State Religion",在Moche政治组织的新视角中,由Jeffrey Quilter和Luis Jaime Castillo编辑(华盛顿特区:敦巴顿橡树研究图书馆和收藏,2010年),第47-69页。唐

南,克里斯托弗B.和麦克莱兰,唐娜。Moche Fineline Painting: Its Evolution and its Artists(洛杉矶:福勒文化历史博物馆,加州大学,1999年)。

特雷弗,丽莎。秘鲁帕纳马卡壁画考古学,豪尔赫·甘博亚、里卡多·托里比奥和里卡多·莫拉莱斯的贡献(华盛顿特区:敦巴顿橡树研究图书馆和收藏,2017 年)。
介绍(英)This ceramic stirrup-spout bottle in the shape of a fox head dressed in a turban was made by artists of the Moche culture of Peru’s North Coast. The vessel is painted using red and white slip (a suspension of clay and/or other colorants in water). The fox wears a typical Moche turban that extends over the back of his neck and is held on by a band that goes over the top of the head and ties under the chin. The edge of the turban has a repeating, stylized catfish head design. The creature’s face is painted with a broad, vertical white stripe in the center, flanked by two red stripes, emulating the type of face paint seen on ceramic portraits of human warriors.

Anthropomorphic animals, including fox warriors, are often depicted in Moche ceramics—both modelled and painted (for other examples in the Met’s collection see 82.1.29 and 1983.546.4)—as well as in mural painting (Donnan and McClelland, 1999; Trever, 2017). The significance of this type of representation is unclear but it may illustrate the Moche’s veneration of these animals, who may have been thought to possess have special powers. Foxes hunt and capture small prey, much as warriors would fight and capture prisoners. Foxes also may have been associated with the world of the dead, as they are primarily nocturnal and live in underground burrows.

The stirrup-spout vessel—the shape of the spout recalls the stirrup on a horse's saddle—was a much favored form on Peru's northern coast for about 2,500 years. Although the importance and symbolism of this distinctive shape is still puzzling to scholars, the double-branch/single-spout configuration may have prevented evaporation of liquids, and/or that it was convenient for carrying. Early in the first millennium A.D., the Moche elaborated stirrup-spout bottles into sculptural shapes depicting a wide range of subjects, including human figures, animals, and plants worked with a great deal of naturalism. About 500 years later, bottle chambers became predominantly globular, providing large surfaces for painting complex, often multi-figure, scenes.

The Moche (also known as the Mochicas) flourished on Peru’s North Coast from 200-850 AD, centuries before the rise of the Incas. Over the course of some six centuries, the Moche built thriving regional centers from the Nepeña River Valley in the south to perhaps as far north as the Piura River, near the modern border with Ecuador, developing coastal deserts into rich farmlands and drawing upon the abundant maritime resources of the Pacific Ocean’s Humboldt Current. Although the precise nature of Moche political organization is a subject of debate, these centers shared unifying cultural traits such as religious practices (Donnan, 2010).

Published reference

Sawyer, Alan R. Ancient Peruvian Ceramics: The Nathan Cummings Collection (New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1966), p. 44.

Wassermann-San Blás, Bruno John. Céramicas del antiguo Perú de la colección Wassermann-San Blás (Buenos Aires: Bruno John Wassermann-San Blás, 1938), p. 99.

References and further reading

Donnan, Christopher B. “Moche State Religion,” in New Perspectives on Moche Political Organization, edited by Jeffrey Quilter and Luis Jaime Castillo (Washington D.C.: Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection, 2010), pp. 47-69.

Donnan, Christopher B. and McClelland, Donna. Moche Fineline Painting: Its Evolution and Its Artists (Los Angeles: Fowler Museum of Cultural History, University of California, 1999).

Trever, Lisa. The Archaeology of Mural Painting at Pañamarca, Peru, with contributions by Jorge Gamboa, Ricardo Toribio, and Ricardo Morales (Washington, DC: Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection, 2017).
  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。