微信公众号 
图码生活

每天发布有五花八门的文章,各种有趣的知识等,期待您的订阅与参与
搜索结果最多仅显示 10 条随机数据
结果缓存两分钟
如需更多更快搜索结果请访问小程序
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)
读取中
读取中
读取中
品名(中)温彻斯特1894型击倒步枪(序列号311946)与瞄准盒
品名(英)Winchester Model 1894 Takedown Rifle (serial no. 311946) with Box of Sights
入馆年号2018年,2018.856.5a–j
策展部门武器和盔甲Arms and Armor
创作者Winchester Repeating Arms Company【1866 至 现在】【美国人】
创作年份公元 1906
创作地区原产国: 美国, 康涅狄格州, 纽黑文(Country of Origin: United States, Connecticut, New Haven)
分类枪支(Firearms-Guns)
尺寸Rifle (a): 长 40 英寸 (101.6 厘米); 长 of barrel 21 英寸 (53.3 厘米); Cal. .30 英寸 (7.62 毫米); 重 6 磅 13.9 盎司 (3114 g); box of sights (b): 5 13/16 x 3 x 1 1/8 英寸 (14.76 x 7.62 x 2.86 厘米); 重 2.9 盎司 (82 g); rear sight (c): 1 15/16 x 11/16 英寸 (4.92 x 1.75 厘米); 重 0.35 盎司 (10 g); front sight (d): 3/8 x 7/16 英寸 (0.95 x 1.11 厘米); 重 less than 0.01 盎司 (less than 1 g); front sight (e): 3/8 x 7/16 英寸 (0.95 x 1.11 厘米); 重 less than 0.01 盎司 (less than 1 g); front sight bracket (f): 13/16 x 7/8 英寸 (2.06 x 2.22 厘米); 重 0.05 盎司 (2 g); front sight (g): 3/8 x 5/8 英寸 (0.95 x 1.59 厘米); 重 0.15 盎司 (4 g); front sight (h): 11/16 x 5/8 英寸 (1.75 x 1.59 厘米); 重 0.10 盎司 (3 g); spare breach strap screw (i): 长 2 英寸 (5.08 厘米); head 直径 5/16 英寸 (0.79 厘米); 重 0.35 盎司 (10 g); spare set screw (j): 长 3/16 英寸 (0.48 厘米); 直径 3/16 英寸 (0.48 厘米); 重 less than 0.01 盎司 (less than 1 g)
介绍(中)这支雕刻的黄金和铂金镶嵌的 1894 型步枪是 20 世纪初制造的最华丽的温彻斯特杠杆动作运动枪之一。它的装饰程度以及工厂运输记录表明,该步枪至少两次被退回工厂,这表明它可能是作为展览品制作的。

步枪的蓝钢机匣、指杆和枪管上刻有卷轴,并镶嵌着金和铂金线框,三个镶金雕刻的大游戏场景,描绘了一只山狮、一只雄鹿和一只熊与两条狗搏斗。枪托和前枪托上雕刻着花卉卷轴。这些装饰再现了温彻斯特武器公司目录"高度装饰武器"中所示的图案。《高度装饰武器》于1897年首次出版,首次编纂了温彻斯特步枪系列的工厂装饰选项,为温彻斯特客户提供十种机匣装饰设计选择和八种不同价位的枪托设计选择。它们包括被卷轴作品包围的游戏场景,以及与卷轴作品相结合的树叶图案,并可以选择以额外费用进行自定义。这些设计主要由温彻斯特工厂雕刻师赫尔曼·莱斯利·乌尔里希(1846-1937)和威廉·E·斯托克斯构思。这支步枪具有 1 号式雕刻和 A 型枪托雕刻——最昂贵的选择——再现了目录中说明的第一支步枪的装饰。

该枪还配备了其他特殊订购功能。它格外轻巧,可拆卸,并具有由花式胡桃木制成的手枪握把枪托,具有高颗粒对比度,霰弹枪枪托,橡胶枪托板,枪托右侧的银色铭牌,油饰面,半弹匣和莱曼枪瞄准具公司瞄准具与运动后视镜。该步枪于 31 年 1906 月 1909 日从温彻斯特仓库发货,并两次返回工厂(1909 年 12 月 27 日和 1916 年 4 月 7 日)。这些后来的货物表明它可能被用于展览。除了展览枪,很少有温彻斯特人被送回工厂。

虽然在下唐上签名了约翰·乌尔里希的标记,"J. ULRICH",但雕刻的质量和风格表明它可能不是出自他的手。这些动物比许多已知被约翰·乌尔里希处决的动物更活泼、更形象,它们巧妙渲染的树木繁茂的背景传达了约翰许多其他游戏场景所缺乏的深度。卷轴也比约翰装饰的枪支上通常的卷轴更加流畅和动态。相反,雕刻可能是他更有才华的哥哥康拉德·弗里德里希·乌尔里希(Conrad Friedrich Ulrich,1844-1925 年)的作品,他于 1874 年离开公司,但继续独立雕刻温彻斯特步枪和其他枪支,也可能是温彻斯特承包商。康拉德·乌尔里希(Conrad Ulrich)签名的豪华1894型步枪与博物馆的步枪(303492)同时制造,并装饰有以类似方式执行的游戏场景,提供了一个比较点。

虽然此时温彻斯特禁止用"检查签名印章"装饰私人销售的冲压枪,但允许在展览枪支上盖章。作为温彻斯特设计和雕刻实验室的高级雕刻师,而不是外部承包商,约翰·乌尔里希(John Ulrich)本可以像这把展览枪一样盖章,即使他可能没有直接参与它的创作。众所周知,乌尔里希还盖章枪支返回工厂工作。

虽然传统上被认为是"美国"风格,但在温彻斯特步枪和十九世纪中叶和二十世纪初的许多其他美国机器制造的枪支上发现的装饰实际上是国际性的,反映了德国出生的雕刻师的训练和品味,他们在本世纪中叶左右移民到美国,并领导美国最大的枪支制造商的装饰业务, 包括乌尔里希家族和古斯塔夫·杨。这支步枪的游戏和狩猎场景,以及温彻斯特提供的许多标准狩猎和游戏场景,都直接从特定的北欧图像来源汲取灵感,包括比利时艺术家查尔斯·克莱森 (Charles Claesen) 1856 年的图案书,.在装饰的温彻斯特步枪、柯尔特手枪和其他主要美国制造商的枪支上发现的大量卷轴作品的灵感也可以追溯到北欧,主要是泽拉的古斯塔夫恩斯特的作品,他在 1839-53 年间制作了六本有影响力的图案书,被美国的枪支雕刻师广泛使用。恩斯特的图案书《1850年阿拉伯人》一书《1850年由著名枪械雕刻师路易斯·丹尼尔·尼姆施克(Louis Daniel Nimschke,1832-1904)拥有的《墓地等》的副本是大都会收藏的一部分(编号2002.233.1a-j)。在1894

年11月推出后不久,温彻斯特1894型成为该公司最受欢迎的杠杆式步枪,并最终成为美国最受欢迎的中心火力运动步枪。与新型.30口径无烟弹药筒一起开发,非常适合狩猎各种小型到大型游戏,该枪膛的步枪实现了数十年来客户青睐的功率,后坐力,重量和尺寸的平衡。.30口径(或30-30)的1894型是一种高速小口径子弹,仍然被简单地称为"鹿步枪"。约翰·摩西·勃朗宁(John Moses Browning,1855-1926)的设计导致了九种温彻斯特步枪型号的开发,他构思了1894型的初始设计。这是该公司制造的第六个勃朗宁设计,它对他之前在1886型和1892型中发现的杠杆动作进行了重大改进,最值得注意的是将两个独立的锁定凸耳合并为螺栓后面的单个凸耳,加强了动作并允许引入额外的安全功能。

这支步枪是罗伯特·李基金会于2018年赠送给博物馆的三把豪华工厂装饰的温彻斯特步枪之一(编号2018.856.4; 2018.856.6),这是第一批进入收藏的工厂装饰温彻斯特
介绍(英)This engraved and gold- and platinum-inlaid Model 1894 rifle ranks among the most lavishly decorated Winchester lever action sporting guns made in the early twentieth century. The extent of its embellishment as well as its factory shipping record, which indicates that the rifle was returned to the factory on at least two occasions, suggest it may have been made as an exhibition piece.

The rifle’s blued receiver, finger lever, and barrel are engraved with scrollwork and inlaid with gold and platinum wire framing three gold-inlaid and engraved big game scenes, depicting a mountain lion, a buck, and a bear battling two dogs. The buttstock and forestock are carved with floral scrollwork. These embellishments reproduce patterns illustrated in the Winchester Arms Company’s catalogue Highly Embellished Arms. First published in 1897, Highly Embellished Arms codified for the first time Winchester’s factory decoration options for its line of rifles, offering Winchester customers ten design options for receiver decoration and eight for the stock at varying price points. They include game scenes surrounded by scrollwork, and foliage motifs combined with scrollwork, with the option to customize for an added cost. The designs were conceived primarily by Winchester factory engravers Herman Leslie Ulrich (1846–1937) and William E. Stokes. This rifle features Style No. 1 engraving and Style A stock carving—the most expensive options available—reproducing the decorations of the first rifle illustrated in the catalogue.

The gun is fitted with other special-order features. It is extra light, takedown, and has a pistol grip stock made of fancy walnut with high grain contrast, shotgun butt, rubber butt plate, silver nameplate on the right side of the stock, oil finish, half-magazine, and Lyman Gun Sight Company sights with sporting rear sight. The rifle shipped from the Winchester warehouse on August 31, 1906, and was returned to the factory on two occasions (December 27, 1909 and April 07, 1916). These later shipments indicate it may have been used for exhibition. With the exception of exhibition guns, few Winchesters were ever returned to the factory.

Though signed on the lower tang with the mark of John Ulrich, "J. ULRICH", the quality and style of the engraving suggest it may not be by his hand. The animals are more lively and well-modeled than many of those known to have been executed by John Ulrich, and their skillfully rendered wooded backdrops convey a depth that many of John’s other game scenes lack. The scrollwork, too, is more fluid and dynamic than that typically found on guns decorated by John. The engraving instead may be the work of his more talented elder brother, Conrad Friedrich Ulrich (1844–1925), who left the company in 1874 but continued to engrave Winchester rifles and other firearms independently, and also possibly worked as a Winchester contractor. A deluxe Model 1894 rifle signed by Conrad Ulrich made around the same time as the Museum’s rifle (303492) and decorated with game scenes executed in a similar manner provides one point of comparison.

Though at this time Winchester forbid stamping guns decorated for private sale with "inspection signature stamps", the stamps were permitted on exhibition guns. As a senior engraver in Winchester’s Design and Engraving Laboratory, as opposed to an outside contractor, John Ulrich could have stamped an exhibition gun, like this one, even though he may not have had a direct hand in its creation. Ulrich is also known to have stamped firearms returned to the factory for work.

Though traditionally regarded as "American" in style, the decorations found on Winchester rifles and many other American machine-made firearms of the mid-nineteenth and early twentieth century are in fact international in nature, reflecting the training and taste of the German-born engravers who emigrated to the United States around the middle of the century and headed the decorative operations at America’s largest firearms manufacturers, including the Ulrich family and Gustave Young. This rifle’s game and hunting scenes, and indeed many of the standard hunting and game scenes offered by Winchester, draw direct inspiration from specific northern European iconographic sources, including the 1856 pattern book by the Belgian artist Charles Claesen, . The inspiration for the profusion of scrollwork found on embellished Winchester rifles, Colt pistols, and guns by other major American manufacturers, too, traces to northern Europe, chiefly the work of Gustav Ernst of Zella, who produced six influential pattern books between 1839–53 widely used by gun engravers in America. A copy of Ernst’s pattern book Musterblätter enthaltend die anwendbarsten Jagdstücke u. Arabesken für Büchsenschäfter, Graveure etc. of 1850 owned by the famous firearms engraver Louis Daniel Nimschke (1832–1904) is part of The Met’s collection (acc. no. 2002.233.1a–j).

Soon after its introduction in November 1894, the Winchester Model 1894 became the company’s most popular lever action rifle, and eventually the most popular center fire sporting rifle in the United States. Developed in conjunction with a new .30 caliber smokeless cartridge well-suited for hunting a variety of small to larger game, the rifle chambered for this round achieved a balance of power, recoil, weight, and size favored by customers for decades. The Model 1894 in .30 caliber (or 30-30), a high velocity small bore round, remains popularly known as simply "the deer rifle." John Moses Browning (1855–1926), whose designs led to the development of nine Winchester rifle models, conceived the initial design for the Model 1894. It was the sixth Browning design manufactured by the company and it introduced significant improvements to his previous lever action found in the Model 1886 and Model 1892, most notably the consolidation of the two independent locking lugs into a single lug behind the bolt, strengthening the action and allowing for the introduction of additional safety features.

This rifle is one of three deluxe factory-decorated Winchesters given to the Museum by the Robert M. Lee Foundation in 2018 (acc. nos. 2018.856.4; 2018.856.6)—the first factory-decorated Winchesters to enter the collection.
  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。