{"title":"维多利亚国家美术馆展出的一件来自马尼拉的17世纪象牙雕刻","authors":"Matthew Martin","doi":"10.1080/14434318.2022.2076034","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"In 1939, the National Gallery of Victoria (NGV) became the beneficiary of a rich private collecting legacy—the bequest of Mr Howard Spensley (1870–1938) of Westoning Manor, Bedfordshire. Howard Spensley was born in Melbourne in 1870, the son of the Hon. Howard Spensley (1834–1902), solicitor general of Victoria in 1871–72, commissioner for Victoria to the London exhibition of 1873, and MP for Finsbury Central in 1885–86. The younger Spensley was educated at Harrow and Trinity College, Cambridge, and became a barrister, with chambers in the Inner Temple. Before moving to Westoning in 1905, when he bought Westoning Manor, he lived in London and travelled widely, particularly to Egypt and Australia, where he had business interests. He was an avid collector, with wide-ranging tastes, and he assembled an impressive collection of paintings, drawings, sculptures, antiquities, bronzes, ceramics, glass, and furniture, the details of which, including date and place of purchase and the amount paid, he meticulously recorded in a handwritten catalogue. Those records are held in the rare books collection of the Shaw Research Library at the NGV, in Melbourne. Spensley died on 3 March 1938, bequeathing his art collection to the NGV. This group of nearly 800 artworks was transformative in a number of areas of the Melbourne art museum’s collection, especially the small group of Italian Renaissance maiolica works and the large group of Renaissance bronzes, mortars, and plaquettes. Among the bequeathed works was a collection of some sixteen ivory objects of various dates and places of origin, including a 1714 portrait bust of Isaac Newton by David le Marchand (4118-D3), perhaps the most significant work in this group. But it is another of these ivory works that concerns us here (fig. 1). Spensley’s catalogue entry describes the work thus:","PeriodicalId":29864,"journal":{"name":"Australian and New Zealand Journal of Art","volume":"22 1","pages":"113 - 127"},"PeriodicalIF":0.1000,"publicationDate":"2022-01-02","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"A Peripatetic Virgin: A Seventeenth-Century Ivory Carving from Manila in the National Gallery of Victoria\",\"authors\":\"Matthew Martin\",\"doi\":\"10.1080/14434318.2022.2076034\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"In 1939, the National Gallery of Victoria (NGV) became the beneficiary of a rich private collecting legacy—the bequest of Mr Howard Spensley (1870–1938) of Westoning Manor, Bedfordshire. Howard Spensley was born in Melbourne in 1870, the son of the Hon. Howard Spensley (1834–1902), solicitor general of Victoria in 1871–72, commissioner for Victoria to the London exhibition of 1873, and MP for Finsbury Central in 1885–86. The younger Spensley was educated at Harrow and Trinity College, Cambridge, and became a barrister, with chambers in the Inner Temple. Before moving to Westoning in 1905, when he bought Westoning Manor, he lived in London and travelled widely, particularly to Egypt and Australia, where he had business interests. He was an avid collector, with wide-ranging tastes, and he assembled an impressive collection of paintings, drawings, sculptures, antiquities, bronzes, ceramics, glass, and furniture, the details of which, including date and place of purchase and the amount paid, he meticulously recorded in a handwritten catalogue. Those records are held in the rare books collection of the Shaw Research Library at the NGV, in Melbourne. Spensley died on 3 March 1938, bequeathing his art collection to the NGV. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
1939年,维多利亚国家美术馆(NGV)成为了一笔丰厚的私人收藏遗产的受益者——贝德福德郡威斯宁庄园的霍华德·斯宾斯利先生(1870-1938)的遗赠。霍华德·斯宾斯利于1870年出生于墨尔本,他的父亲霍华德·斯宾斯利(1834-1902)曾于1871-72年担任维多利亚州副检察长,1873年担任维多利亚参加伦敦展览的专员,1885-86年担任芬斯伯里中央议员。小斯宾斯利在剑桥的哈罗公学和三一学院接受教育,并成为一名律师,在内殿设有办公室。1905年,他买下威斯顿庄园,搬到威斯顿,在此之前,他住在伦敦,经常旅行,特别是去埃及和澳大利亚,因为他在那里有商业利益。他是一个狂热的收藏家,爱好广泛,他收集了令人印象深刻的油画、素描、雕塑、古董、青铜器、陶瓷、玻璃和家具,他一丝不苟地在手写的目录中记录了细节,包括购买的日期、地点和支付的金额。这些记录保存在墨尔本NGV的Shaw研究图书馆的珍本藏书中。斯宾斯利于1938年3月3日去世,他将自己的艺术收藏遗赠给了国家档案馆。这组近800件艺术品在墨尔本艺术博物馆收藏的许多领域都是革命性的,尤其是一小部分意大利文艺复兴时期的马爵利卡陶瓷作品和大量文艺复兴时期的青铜器、灰泥和牌匾。在遗赠的作品中,有大约16件象牙制品,它们来自不同的年代和地点,其中包括大卫·勒·马尔尚(David le Marchand, 418 - d3)于1714年创作的艾萨克·牛顿半身像,这可能是这组作品中最重要的作品。但我们在这里关注的是另一件象牙作品(图1)。斯宾斯利的目录条目是这样描述这件作品的:
A Peripatetic Virgin: A Seventeenth-Century Ivory Carving from Manila in the National Gallery of Victoria
In 1939, the National Gallery of Victoria (NGV) became the beneficiary of a rich private collecting legacy—the bequest of Mr Howard Spensley (1870–1938) of Westoning Manor, Bedfordshire. Howard Spensley was born in Melbourne in 1870, the son of the Hon. Howard Spensley (1834–1902), solicitor general of Victoria in 1871–72, commissioner for Victoria to the London exhibition of 1873, and MP for Finsbury Central in 1885–86. The younger Spensley was educated at Harrow and Trinity College, Cambridge, and became a barrister, with chambers in the Inner Temple. Before moving to Westoning in 1905, when he bought Westoning Manor, he lived in London and travelled widely, particularly to Egypt and Australia, where he had business interests. He was an avid collector, with wide-ranging tastes, and he assembled an impressive collection of paintings, drawings, sculptures, antiquities, bronzes, ceramics, glass, and furniture, the details of which, including date and place of purchase and the amount paid, he meticulously recorded in a handwritten catalogue. Those records are held in the rare books collection of the Shaw Research Library at the NGV, in Melbourne. Spensley died on 3 March 1938, bequeathing his art collection to the NGV. This group of nearly 800 artworks was transformative in a number of areas of the Melbourne art museum’s collection, especially the small group of Italian Renaissance maiolica works and the large group of Renaissance bronzes, mortars, and plaquettes. Among the bequeathed works was a collection of some sixteen ivory objects of various dates and places of origin, including a 1714 portrait bust of Isaac Newton by David le Marchand (4118-D3), perhaps the most significant work in this group. But it is another of these ivory works that concerns us here (fig. 1). Spensley’s catalogue entry describes the work thus: