拄着拐杖的法老,坐着的猎人

Emily Smith-Sangster
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引用次数: 1

摘要

学术和大众资料都经常提到图坦卡蒙在他死的时候是“残疾的”,并引用他坟墓里物品的艺术表现来支持这种说法。据说,这组物品描绘了这位年轻的国王在打猎时坐着,用手杖辅助行走,似乎突出了腿部残疾的存在。这幅描绘图坦卡蒙身体状况真相的图像已经被公众接受为事实,这位坐着的国王的图像甚至被用在巡回展览“图坦卡蒙:金法老的宝藏”的广告中,以暗示图坦卡蒙的“脆弱体质”。然而,将这些描绘与历史上国王狩猎和使用权杖的描绘进行比较,表明这些对图坦卡蒙的描绘是图坦卡蒙艺术家使用的传统肖像的一部分,不是为了突出他的残疾,而是将他的形象置于旧、中、新王国国王的艺术作品中。因此,这项研究旨在消除关于残疾图坦卡蒙艺术表现存在的普遍神话,同时为理解埃及艺术中残疾表现的真实本质提供基础。此外,这项工作敦促埃及古物学家避免依赖于物理遗骸来“破译”太平间艺术品。这种方法上的改变只会让我们更好地理解在太平间的语境中所描绘的身体的目的,以及它在新王国思想中作为分离但补充肉体的角色。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Crutched Pharaoh, Seated Hunter
Academic and popular sources alike regularly refer to Tutankhamun as “disabled” at the time of his death, citing artistic representations from the items in his tomb to back up such claims. This group of objects has been said to depict the young king seated while hunting and using a staff as a walking aid seemingly highlighting the presence of a leg-based disability. This narrative of the image depicting the truth of Tutankhamun’s physical condition has publicly become accepted as fact with images of the seated king even being used in the advertising for the touring exhibit “Tutankhamun: Treasures of the Golden Pharaoh” to suggest Tutankhamun’s “fragile constitution.” A comparison of these depictions to historical representations of kings hunting and using staffs of authority, however, suggests that these depictions of Tutankhamun were part of a traditional iconography utilized by Tutankhamun’s artists, not to highlight his disability, but instead to situate his image within the artwork of kings of the Old, Middle, and New Kingdoms. This study, thus, works to dispel the pervasive myth of the existence of artistic representations of a disabled Tutankhamun, while providing a basis for understanding the true nature of the representation of disability in Egyptian art. Furthermore, this work urges Egyptologists to avoid relying on physical remains to “decipher” mortuary artwork. Such a change in method can only lead to a better understanding of the purpose of the depicted body within the mortuary context and its role as separate but complementary to the physical body in New Kingdom thought.
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