神圣的实体:美国人想象中的林肯模型和雕像

Ramey Mize
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引用次数: 0

摘要

1860年3月31日,亚伯拉罕·林肯在伦纳德·威尔斯·沃尔克(Leonard Wells Volk)的工作室里等着他的脸和头周围的石膏模具变硬。一小时后,Volk取出模具;后来他在林肯的手上重复了这个过程。由此产生的生命模型引起了观看者深刻的情感反应。奥古斯都·圣高登在1887年的芝加哥纪念碑《亚伯拉罕·林肯:男人》中认识到并利用了他们作为林肯肖像的真实索引的宝贵地位。用雕塑家Lorado Taft的话来说,“它看起来不像青铜. . . .人们站在它面前,感觉自己就在美国的灵魂面前。”也正是圣高登通过制作一系列珍贵的33件青铜复制品,扩大了这些铜像的影响力。这些雕像的实际和想象的特征——他们拥有“灵魂”的感觉,以及他们对林肯触摸的物理表现——都证明了他们在更大的圣物传统中的地位。本文将林肯模型视为“接触遗物”,并为美国观众建立了这种神秘分类的生成潜力,特别是在内战之后。沃尔克对林肯的面部和双手的直接印象提供了“蓝图”,可以说,为各种各样的雕塑表现提供了惊人的蓝图——从丹尼尔·切斯特·弗兰奇的标志性林肯纪念堂(1920年)到乔治·格雷·巴纳德的亚伯拉罕·林肯(1917年)。这篇文章认为这个雕塑谱系的文化影响很大程度上要归功于林肯身体存在和触摸的铸件的物质基础。事实上,通过将这些物体置于中世纪和现代的观察模式之间,很明显,这些模型,作为原始生活模型的后代,为美国人想象中的林肯纪念碑提供了一种情感上的,甚至是补救性的真实性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Sacred Substantiations: Lincoln Casts and Statuary in the American Imagination
On March 31, 1860, Abraham Lincoln waited in the studio of Leonard Wells Volk as a plaster mold hardened around his face and head. After one hour, Volk removed the mold; he later repeated the process for Lincoln’s hands. The resulting life casts elicited profound emotional reactions in those who saw them. Augustus Saint-Gaudens recognized and capitalized on their invaluable status as candid indexes of Lincoln’s likeness in his 1887 Chicago monument, Abraham Lincoln: The Man. In the words of sculptor Lorado Taft, “It does not seem like a bronze. . . . One stands before it and feels himself in the very presence of America’s soul.” It was also Saint-Gaudens who amplified the casts’ influence through the manufacture of a prized series of thirty-three bronze replicas. The actual and imagined characteristics of these casts—their sense of possessing a “soul,” and their physical manifestation of Lincoln’s touch—all warrant consideration of their place within the larger tradition of holy relics. This paper posits the Lincoln casts as “contact relics” and establishes the generative potential of such a numinous categorization for American audiences, especially in the wake of the Civil War. Volk’s direct impressions of Lincoln’s visage and hands provided the “blueprints,” so to speak, for an astonishingly wide variety of sculptural manifestations—from the iconic Lincoln Memorial (1920) by Daniel Chester French to Abraham Lincoln (1917) by George Grey Barnard. This essay argues that the cultural impact of this sculptural genealogy is largely indebted to the casts’ material substantiations of Lincoln’s bodily presence and touch. Indeed, by situating these objects between medieval and modern modes of viewing, it will become clear that the casts, as progeny of the original life molds, afforded an affective, even remedial, authenticity for subsequent Lincoln monuments in the American imagination.
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