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法尔内塞石桌

Designer Designed by Jacopo [Giacomo] Barozzi da Vignola Italian
Marble piers carved by Guglielmo della Porta Italian
Pietre Dure top attributed to Giovanni Mynardo (Jean Ménard) French
ca. 1565–73
On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 503
这张巨大的石桌体现了罗马文艺复兴盛期的风格。虽然石桌制作者各自的角色尚不完全明朗,但其设计者据信是雅各布·巴罗齐·达·维尼奥拉(意大利人,1507 –1573年),他为罗马法尔内塞宫中的国寓打造了极为华美的装潢,这张豪华的石桌也是为法尔内塞宫而造的。桌面的制作者是曾于1525年至1582年期间在意大利工作的法国人让·梅纳尔,他使用了一种“硬石”(pietra dura)镶嵌工艺,以各种大理石和半宝石镶嵌框住了中间由埃及雪花石膏制成的两扇“窗户”。大理石桌脚可能出自古列尔莫·德拉·波尔塔(意大利人,约1515 –1577年)和他带领的宫廷艺术家们的刻刀下。装饰中的鸢尾花形是法尔内塞家族的纹章,巨大的石桌脚上有红衣主教亚历山德罗·法尔内塞的盾徽。

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • 标题: 法尔内塞石桌
  • 创作日期: 约1569年
  • 材料: 大理石,埃及雪花石膏,半宝石
  • 尺寸: 371⁄2 英寸 x 12英尺 51⁄4 英寸 x 661⁄4 英寸(95 x 379 x 168厘米)
  • 来源信息: 哈里斯·布里斯班·迪克基金,1957年
  • 藏品编号: 58.57a–d
  • Curatorial Department: European Sculpture and Decorative Arts

Audio

仅适用于: English
Cover Image for 2178. The Farnese Table

2178. The Farnese Table

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IAN WARDROPPER: I’m Ian Wardropper, Chairman of the Department of European Sculpture and Decorative Arts. If you're a frequent visitor to The Met, you may have passed this table without realizing its significance. Look first at the materials. Curator Wolfram Koeppe.

WOLFRAM KOEPPE: You see on the top of the table two enormous Egyptian alabaster slabs, which most likely were excavated or taken from an ancient Roman building, but even the Romans were known for taking those things as spoils from Egypt, so they may have been reused two, three, or four times until they ended up in this beautiful tabletop.

IAN WARDROPPER: The table is a distillation of the ancient world, both in its materials and in its design. The marbles come from Roman sources, and so do the motifs, for instance, the abstracted shield shapes, or peltae, in the border. Renaissance artists saw themselves as rivaling with the ancients and striving to surpass them. So this table represents both an homage to antiquity and a triumph over it.

The table top is a brilliant example of pietre dure, that is, work in colored hardstones, often assembled into a mosaic like this one. Pietre dure of this kind was especially prized in the late Renaissance, when this table was made for Cardinal Alessandro Farnese. It stood in the center of a grand room in his palace, among outstanding works of classical statuary and paintings of his own day. Imagine the moment when the table first arrived there: it weighs some thirty thousand pounds, and even today, it takes twelve men and several days to move it. In the Palazzo Farnese, the table was treated as the treasure that it is—an inventory tells us that whenever the Cardinal was away, it was covered with leather and encased in a wooden box with a padlock and chain.

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