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引用次数: 0
摘要
在阿姆斯特丹瑞士外科医生和艺术收藏家奥托·兰茨(Otto Lanz)的收藏中,有一幅15世纪晚期的画板有些被忽视了,这幅画是他珍爱的。这篇文章很有说服力地论证了这个面板是一个虔诚的龛,用于私人奉献,在中世纪晚期经常挂在卧室的墙上。缺失的中心图像可能是圣母和圣婴或圣母。Lanz认为这是木雕师Antonio di Neri Barili或Barile(1453-1516)的作品。巴里尔是锡耶纳最重要的木雕师,他为杰出的客户工作,其中包括皮科洛米尼家族,他们负责在1500年后不久将罗马的全古tica风格引入锡耶纳。帐幕里有家族的纹章和各种图案,这些图案与巴里利的文献作品相对应,并以他特有的清晰、开放的风格雕刻而成。如果这个面板确实是Barili的作品,那么它将是他工作室中幸存下来的最小的作品。
A somewhat neglected late fifteenth-century panel from the collection of the Amsterdam-Swiss surgeon and art collector Otto Lanz, which he cherished, is investigated here. This article argues persuasively that the panel is a devotional tabernacle, intended for private devotion, of a kind that often hung on the wall of a bedchamber in the late Middle Ages. The missing central image may have been a Virgin and Child or a Pietà. Lanz attributed the carving to the woodcarver Antonio di Neri Barili or Barile (1453-1516). Barile was the most important woodcarver in Siena, who worked for distinguished clients, among them the Piccolomini family, which was responsible for introducing the Roman all’antica style to Siena shortly after 1500. The tabernacle contains the family’s coat of arms and various motifs that correspond to documented work by Barili, and was carved in his characteristic crisp, open style. If this panel is indeed by Barili, it would be the smallest surviving object in its own right to come out of his workshop.