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Miradas Comparadas En Los Virreinatos De America
$52.20
Spanish Edition of Contested Visions in the Spanish Colonial World.
Awarded the 2012 Eleanor Tufts Book Prize (American Society of Hispanic Art Historical Studies) and Runner-up prize for Outstanding Exhibition Catalogue for 2011 by the American Association of Museum Curators (AAMC). Chosen by Tyler Green's Modern Art Notes as one of its "best books" for 2012.
Edited by Ilona Katzew with essays by William B. Taylor, Cecelia F. Klein, Kevin Terraciano, Diana Magaloni Kerpel, Mónica Domínguez Torres, Eduardo de Jesús Douglas, Carolyn Dean, Ilona Katzew, Ramón Mujica Pinilla, Thomas B. F. Cummins, Luisa Elena Alcalá, and Luis Eduardo Wuffarden.
Accompanying a major exhibition, Contested Visions in the Spanish Colonial World, at LACMA from November 6, 2011 to January 29, 2012, this book offers a comparative view of the two principal viceroyalties of Spanish America: Mexico and Peru. Spanning developments from the 15th to the 19th century, this ambitious book looks at the many ways and contexts in which indigenous peoples were represented in art of the early modern period—by colonial artists, European artists, and themselves. More than two hundred works of art, including paintings, sculptures, illustrated books, maps, codices, manuscripts, and other materials such as textiles, queros, and feather works, are reproduced in full-color illustrations, demonstrating the rich variety of these artistic approaches.
A collection of essays by an international team of distinguished scholars in the field uncovers the different meanings and purposes behind these depictions of native populations of the Americas. These experts explore the role of the visual arts in negotiating a sense of place in late pre-Columbian and colonial Latin America. They address a range of important topics, such as the construct of the Indian as a good Christian; how Amerindians drew on their pre-Columbian past to stake out a place within the Spanish body politic; their participation in festive rites; and their role as artists. Lavishly illustrated, this ambitious book provides a compelling and original framework by which to understand the intersection of vision and power in the Spanish colonial world.
Ilona Katzew is curator and department head of Latin American art at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art.
- Spanish
- Hardbound only
- 320 pages, 10 x 12 inches
- 220 color illustrations
- 2011
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