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고대 스타일의 가벼운 투구

Armorer Filippo Negroli Italian
dated 1543
On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 374
르네상스 시대 금속 가공 작품 중 최고의 걸작으로 손꼽히는 이 투구는 밀라노의 필리포 네그롤리의 서명이 들어가 있습니다. 그가 양각 세공 기법으로 제작한 이 작품은 16세기 당시 “기적적인” 그리고 ”불멸의가치”라는 찬사가 기록으로 전해지고 있습니다. 헬멧의 볼 부분은 한 장의 철로 만들었으며 깊게 양각으로 새긴 알란티카 스타일로 제작되었고—고전예술에서 영감을 받은 모티프—동처럼 보이도록 녹슬게 하였습니다. 헬멧의 가장자리는 푸토들을 둥글게 둘러싼 아칸서스 스크롤 무늬로 덮여 있는데 푸토(putto)들은 네로황제의 황금 궁전에서 볼 수 있는 로마 시대 벽화인 프레스코에서 기원한 모티프로 추정됩니다. 프레스코는 15세기 후반에 재발견되어 르네상스 디자인에 큰 영향을 주었습니다.

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • 제목: 고대 스타일의 가벼운 투구
  • 아티스트: 필리포 네그롤리 이탈리아, 15107ndash; 1579년경
  • 연대: 1543년
  • 재료: 철, 금
  • 크기: 높이: 24.1cm
  • 크레디트 라인: J. 피어폰트 모건 기증, 1917
  • 작품 번호: 17.190.1720
  • Curatorial Department: Arms and Armor

Audio

다음에서만 사용 가능: English
Cover Image for 4407. Burgonet

4407. Burgonet

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NARRATOR: Donald Larocca.

DONALD LAROCCA: This helmet by Fillipo Negroli, signed and dated 1543, is probably the single most artistic piece of armor in the Museum, and one of the most beautifully made examples anywhere in the world. It looks like it’s cast out of bronze and that’s intentional; it’s made to look as if it were a piece of sculpture, but it’s all made out of iron that’s been decorated also with gold, a technique known as embossing or repoussé. The designs are worked up from the inside, but the finishing work, the real detail, is done on the outside—chasing and chiseling in steel; it’s not a soft iron, it’s actually a steel; and then the coloration of it, the patination is done intentionally to give it the appearance of bronze.

NARRATOR: Stuart Pyhrr.

STUART PYHRR: The inspiration comes from Roman decoration. The comb, or the top of the helmet, worked up into an imaginative creature, a siren or mermaid whose body stretches over the top, her hands reaching forward to hold at the front to hold the legendary gorgon, Medusa, whose look would turn one to stone. Gorgons heads on shields and in front of helmets was a playful conceit of the Renaissance, with the thought that would turn one’s enemies into stone.

At the very back of the helmet, over the nape, of the neck is a grimacing satyr head, and out of his lips come two tendrils that curl around the side of the helmet. The cheekpieces, which would have covered the side of the head are now missing. At the front of the helmet is an added plate below the brow. If you bend down, you’ll see a plate over the forehead, which is difficult to read but is in fact inscribed in gold with the name of the armorer, Fillipo Negroli of Milan, and the date 1543.

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