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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)头饰装饰
品名(英)Headdress Ornament
入馆年号1979年,1979.206.1151
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 200 - 公元 600
创作地区秘鲁(Peru)
分类金属装饰品(Metal-Ornaments)
尺寸高 9 × 宽 10 1/2 × 宽 1/8 英寸 (22.9 × 26.7 × 0.3 厘米)
介绍(中)通过切割和压印金属板(在本例中为金铜银合金)制成,这件饰品将通过中央凸起图像(一只长着突出獠牙的咆哮猫科动物的脸)顶部和底部的成对孔固定在一个类似头巾的头饰上。这只猫的两侧是两只面朝下的猛禽,而这只猫本身戴着月牙形的头饰,这被秘鲁北海岸的莫切人视为地位崇高甚至神圣的标志

这个头饰正面,是已知的两个几乎相同的例子之一(另一个在利马的拉科博物馆,ML100770),类似于莫切工匠制作的精美陶瓷器皿上看到的头饰类型。例如,在利马的两艘船只上,"仪式跑者"戴着头饰,头饰上方有一个圆盘,中心有一张猫脸,尽管这些头饰周围有一圈球状珠子(见Donnan2004:71和Donnan和McClelland 1999:129)。由人类或拟人化动物进行的仪式是后来Moche陶瓷中最常描绘的活动之一。由于缺乏这一时期的文本(传统上,写作直到16世纪欧洲人到来才在南美洲实践),这种意象的确切含义是未知的

猫脸头饰饰品也有不同的形状,例如在秘鲁发现的排名最高的女性之一曹夫人墓中发现的双叉额饰(Franco Jordán 2011;Mujica Barreda等人2007)。然而,目前的例子尤其引人注目,不仅是因为它的构图平衡而优雅,而且还因为它从头饰的顶部到陆上和空中捕食者的结合,都体现了纯粹的力量

Joanne Pillsbury,Andrall E.Pearson策展人,《古代美洲艺术》,2018年

参考文献和进一步阅读

卡斯蒂略,路易斯·詹姆。《人物》(Personajes míticos)、《圣像》(escenas y narraciones en la iconografía mochica)。利马:基金会编辑部,1989年,卡托利卡·德尔·佩鲁本科,

卡斯蒂略,路易斯·詹姆。"宇宙大师:莫切艺术家及其赞助人",《黄金王国:古代美洲的奢华与遗产》,乔安妮·皮尔斯伯里、蒂莫西·波茨和金·里希特主编,第25-31页。洛杉矶:J.Paul Getty博物馆,2017年。

Donnan,Christopher B.Moche古代秘鲁肖像。奥斯汀:德克萨斯大学出版社,2004年。

Donnan,Christopher B.《莫切州宗教:莫切政治组织中的统一力量》。《莫切政治政治组织的新视角》,由Luis Jaime Castillo B.和Jeffrey Quilter编辑,第47–69页。华盛顿特区:邓巴顿橡树研究图书馆和收藏,2010年。

Donnan、Christopher B.和Donna McClelland。莫切细线画:它的演变及其艺术家。洛杉矶:加州大学洛杉矶分校福勒文化历史博物馆,1999年。

Franco Jordán,Régulo。"La Dama de Cao,"Investigación y scienceia 417(2011):68-74。

琼斯,朱莉。《莫契卡金属艺术作品:回顾》,载于伊丽莎白·本森主编的《南美前哥伦布冶金》。华盛顿特区:邓巴顿橡树研究图书馆和收藏,1979年。

琼斯、朱莉和海蒂·金。"美洲黄金"。《大都会艺术博物馆公报》第59卷,第4期(2002年春季),第19页。

Mujica Barreda,Elías,Régulo Franco Jordán,César Gálvez Mora,Jeffrey Quilter,Antonio Murga,Carmen Gamarra,Victor Ríos,Segudo Lozada Alcade,John Verano和Marco Aveggio。El Brujo:Huaca Cao,Chicama山谷仪式中心。利马:法新社Integra,2007年

Pillsbury,Joanne,Timothy Potts和Kim N.Richter编辑,《黄金王国:古代美洲的奢华艺术》。洛杉矶:J.保罗·盖蒂博物馆,2017年。
介绍(英)Created by cutting and embossing sheet metal (in this case a gold-copper-silver alloy), this ornament would have been secured to a cloth turban-like headdress via the pairs of holes at the top and bottom of the central raised image—the face of a snarling feline with prominent fangs. The feline is flanked by two downward-facing birds of prey, and the feline itself wears a crescent-shaped headdress, considered a marker of high, perhaps even divine, status by the Moche people of Peru’s North Coast.

This headdress frontal, one of two nearly identical examples known (the other is in the Museo Larco in Lima, ML100770), is similar to a type of headdress seen on finely painted ceramic vessels made by Moche artisans. For example, on two vessels now in Lima, “ritual runners” are shown wearing headdresses that are surmounted by a disk with a feline face in the center, although those headdresses are encircled by a band of spherical beads (see Donnan 2004:71 and Donnan and McClelland 1999:129). Ritual running by a human or an anthropomorphized animal is one of the most frequently depicted activities in later Moche ceramics. In the absence of texts from this period (writing, as it is traditionally known, was not practiced in South America until the arrival of Europeans in the 16th century), the precise meaning of such imagery is unknown.

Feline-faced headdress ornaments are also found in different shapes, such as the two-pronged frontals found in the tomb of the Lady of Cao, one of the highest-ranked females ever discovered in Peru (Franco Jordán 2011; Mujica Barreda et al. 2007). The present example, however, is particularly striking, not only for the balanced formal elegance of its composition but also for its invocation of sheer power, from the crest of the headdress to the union of terrestrial and aerial predators.

Joanne Pillsbury, Andrall E. Pearson Curator, Arts of the Ancient Americas, 2018

References and Further Reading

Castillo, Luis Jaime. Personajes míticos, escenas y narraciones en la iconografía mochica. Lima: Fondo Editorial, Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú, 1989.

Castillo, Luis Jaime. “Masters of the Universe: Moche Artists and Their Patrons.” In Golden Kingdoms: Luxury and Legacy in the Ancient Americas, edited by Joanne Pillsbury, Timothy Potts, and Kim Richter, pp. 25-31. Los Angeles: J. Paul Getty Museum, 2017.

Donnan, Christopher B. Moche Portraits from Ancient Peru. Austin: University of Texas Press, 2004.

Donnan, Christopher B. “Moche State Religion: A Unifying Force in Moche Political Organization.” In New Perspectives on Moche Political Organization, edited by Luis Jaime Castillo B. and Jeffrey Quilter, pp. 47–69. Washington, DC: Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection, 2010.

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

Franco Jordán, Régulo. “La Dama de Cao,” Investigación y ciencia 417 (2011):68-74.

Jones, Julie. "Mochica Works of Art in Metal: A Review." In Pre-Columbian Metallurgy of South America, edited by Elizabeth P. Benson. Washington, DC: Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection, 1979.

Jones, Julie, and Heidi King. "Gold of the Americas." The Bulletin of the Metropolitan Museum of Art vol. 59, no. 4 (Spring 2002), p. 19.

Mujica Barreda, Elías, Régulo Franco Jordán, César Gálvez Mora, Jeffrey Quilter, Antonio Murga, Carmen Gamarra, Victor Ríos, Segundo Lozada Alcade, John Verano, and Marco Aveggio. El Brujo: Huaca Cao, centro ceremonial Moche en el Valle de Chicama. Lima: AFP Integra, 2007.

Pillsbury, Joanne, Timothy Potts, and Kim N. Richter, eds. Golden Kingdoms: Luxury Arts in the Ancient Americas. Los Angeles: J. Paul Getty Museum, 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。