Hufschmidt H J
Arch Psychiatr Nervenkr (1970). 1977 Nov 7;224(3):187-202.
Taking anthropometric mean values of the European population as a standard, we examined some proportions in representative sculptural and pictorial works of art. We established that the classical antique sculptures and those of Michelangelo and his school conform very closely to the European norm. Mid-Italian wooden crucifixes of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries and early medieval European paintings of the Corpus Christi, on the other hand, display quite different proportions: exaggerated length of forearms, or torsos that are stunted in relationship to the legs. Proportions similar to these can be found in the art of the New Kingdom of the Egyptians, reflecting the physique of the Nubian population. We discussed the extent to which an artistic proportion is conditioned by style, imitation, racial aesthetic ideals, or anatomy of the ambient population.
以欧洲人口的人体测量平均值为标准,我们研究了一些具有代表性的雕塑和绘画艺术作品中的比例关系。我们发现,古典古代雕塑以及米开朗基罗及其学派的雕塑与欧洲标准非常接近。另一方面,14世纪和15世纪意大利中部的木制十字架以及中世纪早期欧洲关于基督圣体的绘画则呈现出截然不同的比例:前臂过长,或者躯干与腿部相比发育不良。类似的比例在古埃及新王国的艺术中也能找到,反映了努比亚人的体格特征。我们讨论了艺术比例在多大程度上受到风格、模仿、种族审美理想或周围人群解剖结构的影响。