利维坦:中世纪形象的变形

Pub Date : 2020-11-26 DOI:10.1163/18718000-12340134
Boris Khaimovich
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引用次数: 0

摘要

从18世纪到20世纪上半叶,在东欧,那些装饰木制犹太教堂和为手稿配图的艺术家对利维坦的形象有着特殊的迷恋。他们通常把这种《圣经》和《犹太法典》中的生物描绘成一条盘绕在一个圆圈里的大鱼。同样形状的利维坦最初出现在13世纪德国和受德国犹太人文化影响的地区的犹太手稿中。这一形象的出现可能是受到同一时期在同一地区创作的piyutim(礼拜歌曲)的启发。十六和十七世纪的犹太注释传统显示了对这个特殊生物的兴趣重新高涨。可以假设,对利维坦的特殊兴趣,无论是在口头上还是在视觉传统上,都与对弥赛亚时代的期待有关。利维坦代表了木制犹太教堂拱顶壁画中唯一与传统文本有直接联系的图像,并表现出与中世纪视觉传统的连续性。因此,研究犹太教堂绘画中的利维坦形象具有特殊的意义。犹太艺术家对这幅画的使用也可能间接地揭示了其他与构图相关的描绘的意义,从而为这些画的性格和意义等有趣的问题提供了部分答案。本文正是要探讨利维坦形象的这些方面;也就是说,它在犹太教堂绘画中的形式和语义的起源。
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Leviathan: The Metamorphosis of a Medieval Image
The image of Leviathan held a special fascination for artists who decorated wooden synagogues and illustrated manuscripts from the eighteenth century through the first half of the twentieth century in Eastern Europe. They usually depicted this biblical and Talmudic creature as a giant fish coiled round in a circle. A leviathan of the same shape appears at first in Jewish manuscripts produced in Germany and regions under the cultural influence of German Jews in the thirteenth century. The appearance of this image was inspired, probably, by piyutim (liturgical songs) written in this time in the same region. The Jewish commentary tradition of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries demonstrates a renewed surge of interest in this particular creature. It can be assumed that the special interest in Leviathan, both in the verbal and in the visual tradition, was correlated with the expectation of messianic times. The Leviathan represents the only image in the vault paintings of wooden synagogues that possesses a direct connection to traditional texts and manifests continuity with the Middle Ages visual traditions. In light of this, investigation into the Leviathan image in synagogue paintings is of special significance. The use of this image by Jewish artists may also shed indirect light on the meaning of other depictions that are compositionally related, and thus furnish a partial answer to the intriguing questions of the character and significance of those paintings. The present article is devoted to precisely these aspects of the Leviathan image; i.e., the genesis of its form and its semantics in synagogue paintings.
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