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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)女性身材
品名(英)Female Figure
入馆年号1979年,1979.206.990
策展部门迈克尔·洛克菲勒之翼The Michael C. Rockefeller Wing
创作者
创作年份公元前 1000 - 公元前 900
创作地区墨西哥(Mexico)
分类陶瓷雕塑(Ceramics-Sculpture)
尺寸高 2 15/16 英寸 (7.5 厘米)
介绍(中)这个坚固的手工建模陶瓷雕像呈红棕褐色至黄色,并涂有橙红色颜料。球形臀部、小腰和小巧的手臂,很少考虑解剖学的准确性。项链符合颈部的厚实轮廓,中央发髻向下延伸到后脑勺。超大耳朵上的小孔都没有延伸到背面。

大约三千年前在墨西哥谷雕刻,这个雕像属于一组陶瓷雕像,统称为Tlatilco"漂亮女士"。这些手持雕塑描绘了头部大、腰部小、臀部突出的女性,呈现出相当标准化的体型,通常被烧成红色、浅黄色或棕色调。作为理想女性形态的流行化身,Tlatilco"漂亮女士"是数百年传统的一部分,其中怪癖和宗教意象占主导地位。以驼背、侏儒、扭曲的杂技演员、双头女人和连体双胞胎为特色,Tlatilco 小雕像的语料库涵盖了人类代表的全部范围。

几代人以来,特拉蒂尔科是一个位于现代墨西哥城边缘的小型农业社区。然而,到二十世纪初,特拉蒂尔科周围的粘土田已成为附近联邦区建设和快速扩张中使用的砖生产的重要场所。1936年,砖工开始出土陶瓷小雕像——后来被称为"漂亮女士"——与考古学家乔治·C·韦扬(George C. Vaillant,1930年)最近发现的其他雕像非常相似。利用他所掌握的少量背景信息,Vaillant准确地将这些作品归因于前古典时期的早期至中期萨卡滕科文化(约公元前1500-600年)。--一个总称,也包括特拉蒂尔科人。

从 1940 年代开始,考古学家开始认真研究特拉蒂尔科遗址。在著名艺术家、民族学家和艺术史学家米格尔·科瓦鲁比亚斯(Miguel Covarrubias)的带领下,联邦政府资助的发掘工作帮助揭露了数百座古代墓葬,不仅包含"漂亮女士"雕像,还包含丰富的彩色陶器、雕刻玉器和石器。大量耐用、制作精美的物品使科瓦鲁比亚斯能够建立比以前更全面的特拉蒂尔科作品类型。通过将当地的陶瓷传统与当代奥尔梅克文化进行比较,Covarrubias(1957)能够记录墨西哥湾沿岸人民在前古典晚期(约公元前600年)的某个时候大规模入侵特拉蒂尔科地区。因此,学者们现在认识到特拉蒂尔科人是区域间、多民族文化交流的核心参与者,这种文化交流成为未来几个世纪墨西哥中部高地文化互动的特征。

要查看Covarrubias保存在非洲,大洋洲和美洲艺术部的"漂亮女士"雕像的原始图纸,请参阅2014.244.15,2014.244.18a–c,以及2014.244.19a, b.

William T. Gassaway, 2014–15 Sylvan C. Coleman和Pamela Coleman研究员

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资源和附加阅读

Covarrubias, Miguel.墨西哥和中美洲的印第安艺术。纽约:阿尔弗雷德·A·克诺普夫,1957年。

尼科尔森,亨利B."西班牙裔前墨西哥中部的主要雕塑"。在Gordon F. Eckholm和Ignacio Bernal编辑的《中美洲印第安人手册》中,第一部分:92-134。10. 奥斯汀: 德克萨斯大学出版社, 1971.

陶布,卡尔。敦巴顿橡树园的奥尔梅克艺术。华盛顿特区:敦巴顿橡树研究图书馆和收藏,2004年。

威扬,乔治· 美国自然历史博物馆人类学论文32,第1部分。1930年,纽约。
介绍(英)This solid, hand-modeled ceramic figurine is reddish tan to yellow in color and painted with an orange-red pigment. Featuring bulbous hips, a small waist, and diminutive arms, little regard is given to anatomical accuracy. A necklace conforms to the thick contours of the neck, and the central hair bun extends down the back of the head. Neither of the small perforations in the oversized ears continues to the backside.

Sculpted some three millennia ago in the Valley of Mexico, this figurine belongs to a group of ceramic effigies known collectively as the Tlatilco "pretty ladies." Depicting females with large heads, small waists, and prominent hips, these handheld sculptures present a fairly standardized body type and are typically fired to red, buff, or brown tones. As the popular embodiments of an ideal feminine form, the Tlatilco "pretty ladies" are part of a centuries-long tradition in which eccentricities and religious imagery predominate. Featuring hunchbacks, dwarfs, contorted acrobats, two-headed women, and conjoined twins, the corpus of Tlatilco figurines encompasses the full gamut of human representation.

For generations, Tlatilco was a small farming community located on the fringes of modern-day Mexico City. By the early twentieth century, however, the fields of clay surrounding Tlatilco had become important sites of brick production utilized in the construction and rapid expansion of the nearby Federal District. In 1936, brick workers began unearthing troves of ceramic figurines—later termed "pretty ladies"—that closely resembled others recently discovered by the archaeologist George C. Vaillant (1930). Using what little contextual information he had available to him, Vaillant accurately attributed these works to the Early to Middle Preclassic-period Zacatenco culture (ca. 1500–600 B.C.)--an umbrella term which also included the people of Tlatilco.

Beginning in the 1940s, archaeologists began to study the site of Tlatilco in earnest. Led by the renowned artist, ethnologist, and art historian Miguel Covarrubias, federally funded excavations helped to expose hundreds of ancient burials containing not only "pretty lady" figurines but also rich collections of polychrome pottery, carved jade, and stone tools. The enormous number of durable, finely made objects enabled Covarrubias to establish a more comprehensive typology of Tlatilco works than was previously possible. Through his comparisons of the local ceramic tradition with that of the contemporary Olmec culture, Covarrubias (1957) was able to document a large-scale incursion of Gulf Coast peoples into the area of Tlatilco sometime during the Late Preclassic period (ca. 600 B.C.). As a result, scholars now recognize the Tlatilco people as central players in the interregional, multi-ethnic cultural exchange that came to characterize Central Mexican Highland cultural interactions for the next several centuries.

To view Covarrubias’ original drawings of "pretty lady" figurines, which are preserved in the Department of the Arts of Africa, Oceania, and the Americas, see 2014.244.15, 2014.244.18a–c, and 2014.244.19a, b.

William T. Gassaway, 2014–15 Sylvan C. Coleman and Pamela Coleman Fellow

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Resources and Additional Reading

Covarrubias, Miguel. Indian Art of Mexico and Central America. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1957.

Nicholson, Henry B. "Major Sculpture in Pre-Hispanic Central Mexico." In Handbook of Middle American Indians, edited by Gordon F. Eckholm and Ignacio Bernal, Part I: 92–134. 10. Austin: University of Texas Press, 1971.

Taube, Karl. Olmec Art at Dumbarton Oaks. Washington, D.C.: Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection, 2004.

Vaillant, George C. Excavations at Zacatenco. Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural History 32, part 1. New York, 1930.
  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。