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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)奥巴马总统
品名(英)Head of an Oba
入馆年号1979年,1979.206.86
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 1500 - 公元 1600
创作地区尼日利亚(Nigeria)
分类金属雕塑(Metal-Sculpture)
尺寸高 9 1/4 x 宽 8 5/8 x 深 9 英寸 (23.5 x 21.9 x 22.9 厘米)
介绍(中)这件纪念铸造黄铜雕塑描绘了奥巴或国王的理想化形象,戴着珊瑚珠编织帽,两侧悬挂着珊瑚侧链。一颗珠子从头饰延伸到前额,与鼻梁对齐,形成双侧对称。年轻的脸蛋圆圆的,以精确的自然主义呈现。卷起的衣领戴在脖子上,是与贝宁统治者相关的图像的特征。头部顶部的圆形开口将容纳雕刻的大象象牙。在十六世纪上半叶,这座雕塑将在贝宁王国(今尼日利亚)宫殿的祭坛上占有一席之地。

贝宁的奥巴斯可以追溯到十四世纪开始的统治王朝。奥巴的头衔在统治者去世时传给长子。新国王的首要义务是建造一座神殿,献给他的前任,并作为活着的君主与他的祖先或父亲交流的地方。为了确保王朝的连续性,神社拥有各种雕刻和铸造的文物,包括像这样的独立式黄铜头像。头像一个容器,已故国王通过它将其权力移交给新国王,后者承担了成功指导和定义他生活的责任。江户人认为头是一个人的性格、知识、权威、成功和家庭领导的场所。这些雕塑头像是统治者与统治者之间一致的视觉参考点,强化了跨一个朝代的家族继承理念。奥巴经常被他的赞美名字称为"伟大的头",强调活着的领袖的头是王国的责任中心。十六世纪上半叶的黄铜头,例如这个,以其自然主义和黄铜铸件的薄壁而著称。用于制作这种灯光投射的黄铜数量相对较少,并且描绘的比例很少,这表明头部是很早就创建的。艺术史学家认为,几个世纪以来,随着黄铜数量的出现,脚轮对这种材料的经济性越来越低,贝宁国王所穿的办公室装饰变得更加炫耀。

这种类型的纪念肖像画高度风格化,不描绘可识别的面部特征,而是描绘已故国王的壮年。重点是王权和王权的材料:黄铜和珊瑚都是贝宁领导人通过沿海贸易从欧洲获得的财富物品。珊瑚对江户来说具有特别的意义,因为它隐喻了海洋的祖先领域。使用黄铜作为纪念头像可以追溯到十五世纪,作为奥兰米亚王朝规则与以前的规则王朝区分开来的一种方式。在此期间,贝宁的艺术家与他们的赞助人对话,制定了一项雕塑纪念计划,其中对奥巴的描绘从代表性到理想化,加强了王朝的连续性及其对一贯领导理想的认同。即使在今天,江户仍然重视黄铜,因为它的红色和闪亮的表面,使其既美丽又可怕,与神圣君主的形象相得益彰。除了美学品质之外,黄铜的使用赋予了作品一种永恒感,并赋予它们转移邪恶的潜力。

参考书目

大麦,奈杰尔。贝宁的艺术。大英博物馆出版社:伦敦,2010年。

黑暗,菲利普。贝宁艺术图解目录。G.K. Hall&co:波士顿,1982年。插图 31

以斯拉,凯特。贝宁皇家艺术:大都会艺术博物馆的珀尔斯收藏。大都会艺术博物馆:纽约,1992年。

拉伽玛,艾丽莎。英雄的非洲人:传奇领袖,标志性雕塑。大都会艺术博物馆:纽约,2012年。

普兰肯斯坦纳,芭芭拉(编辑)。贝宁国王和仪式:来自尼日利亚的宫廷艺术。芝加哥艺术学院:芝加哥,2007年。
介绍(英)This commemorative cast-brass sculpture depicts the idealized likeness of an oba, or king, wearing a woven cap of coral beads, with lateral strands of coral suspended around both ears. A single bead extends from the headdress to the forehead, aligned with the ridge of the nose, creating bilateral symmetry. The youthful face is round and rendered with precise naturalism. A rolled collar is worn low on the neck and is characteristic of imagery associated with Benin rulers. A circular opening at the summit of the head would have accommodated a carved elephant tusk. This sculpture would have held a place of honor on an altar in the palace of the kingdom of Benin (in present-day Nigeria), during the early half of the sixteenth century.

The obas of Benin trace their origins to a ruling dynasty that began in the fourteenth century. The title of oba is passed on to the firstborn son at the time of the ruler’s death. The first obligation of the new king was to create a shrine, dedicated to his predecessor and serving as the site at which the living monarch communicated with his ancestor or father. Ensuring dynastic continuity, the shrine held various carved and cast artifacts, including freestanding brass heads such as this one. The head acted as a vessel through which the late king transferred his power to the new king, the latter accepting the responsibility for successfully directing and defining his life. The Edo people considered the head to be the locus of a man’s character, knowledge, authority, success, and family leadership. These sculptural heads were a consistent visual point of reference from ruler to ruler, reinforcing the idea of familial succession across a single dynasty. The oba is often called by his praise name “Great Head,” emphasizing the head of the living leader as the center of responsibility for the kingdom. Brass heads of the first half of the sixteenth century, such as this one, are distinguished by their naturalism and by the thin walls of their brass casting. The relatively minimal amount of brass used to make this light cast and the proportionately small amount of regalia depicted indicated that the head was created early on. Art historians have suggested that over the centuries, as greater quantities of brass became available, casters had less incentive to be economical with the material, and the trappings of office worn by the kings of Benin became more ostentatious.

This genre of commemorative portraiture is highly stylized and does not portray recognizable facial features, but rather renders the deceased king at the prime of his life. The focus is on the regalia and materials of kingship: both brass and coral were items of wealth obtained by Benin’s leadership from Europe through the coastal trade. Coral is of particular significance to the Edo as a metaphor for the ancestral realm of the sea. The use of brass for commemorative heads dates to the fifteenth century, as a way for the Oranmiyan Dynasty rules to distinguish themselves from the previous dynasty of rules. During this time, artists of Benin in dialogue with their patrons developed a sculptural program for commemoration in which the depiction of the oba went from representational to idealization, reinforcing the continuity of the dynasty and its identification with a consistent ideal of leadership. Even today, the Edo value brass for its red color and shiny surface, which make it both beautiful and frightening, properties befitting the images of divine monarchs. Beyond aesthetic qualities, the use of brass conferred on the works a sense of permanence and imbued them with the potential to deflect evil.

Bibliography

Barley, Nigel. The Art of Benin. The British Museum Press: London, 2010.

Dark, Phillip. An Illustrated Catalogue of Benin Art. G.K. Hall & co: Boston, 1982. Illus. 31

Ezra, Kate. Royal Art of Benin: The Perls Collection in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The Metropolitan Museum of Art: New York, 1992.

LaGamma, Alisa. Heroic Africans: Legendary Leaders, Iconic Sculptures. The Metropolitan Museum of Art: New York, 2012.

Plankensteiner, Barbara (ed.). Benin Kings and Rituals: Court Arts from Nigeria. The Art Institute of Chicago: Chicago, 2007.
  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。