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9788881183265

Pre-Columbian America : Ritual Arts of the New World

by
  • ISBN13:

    9788881183265

  • ISBN10:

    8881183269

  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 2000-07-01
  • Publisher: Skira
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List Price: $67.50

Summary

This work, a virtually unique opportunity for those wishing to learn about pre-Hispanic America and its art, is divided into two parts and includes an essay by the Nobel Prize Winner for Literature Octavio Paz. The first part of the book is historical and, essentially, examines the brutal shock suffered by two worlds between 1492, the year of the discovery of America, and 1532, when Pizarro subdued and conquered the Inca empire in Peru, eleven years after Hernando Cortés had destroyed the Aztecs in Mexico.

The connection between what took place in those dramatic years is illustrated with maps, old engravings and color photographs of various pre-Columbian archeological sites, as well as some of the background scenarios linked to the exploits of the European navigators. The second part looks at the major civilisations (Maya, Aztec, Inca, etc.), and some little-known although equally fascinating cultures, attributed with the production of the approximately one hundred and fifty works of art from Mesoamerica, Central America, and the Andean Cordillera and the Amazon Basin, shown in full page color illustrations. The authors-- historians and specialists-- provide in these pages a clear vision of what has often been drawn out in long-winded explanations. Most importantly, they pause on the aesthetic value of peoples that have, on many occasions, been called "primitive," without however omitting to place the sculptures, pottery and fabrics selected by the authors themselves in a precise anthropological context.

The result is an exemplary work of interest and delight that neither experts nor the inquisitive will be able to resist.
This work, a virtually unique opportunity for those wishing to learn about pre-Hispanic America and its art, is divided into two parts and includes an essay by the Nobel Prize Winner for Literature Octavio Paz. The first part of the book is historical and, essentially, examines the brutal shock suffered by two worlds between 1492, the year of the discovery of America, and 1532, when Pizarro subdued and conquered the Inca empire in Peru, eleven years after Hernando Cortés had destroyed the Aztecs in Mexico.

The connection between what took place in those dramatic years is illustrated with maps, old engravings and color photographs of various pre-Columbian archeological sites, as well as some of the background scenarios linked to the exploits of the European navigators. The second part looks at the major civilisations (Maya, Aztec, Inca, etc.), and some little-known although equally fascinating cultures, attributed with the production of the approximately one hundred and fifty works of art from Mesoamerica, Central America, and the Andean Cordillera and the Amazon Basin, shown in full page color illustrations. The authors-- historians and specialists-- provide in these pages a clear vision of what has often been drawn out in long-winded explanations. Most importantly, they pause on the aesthetic value of peoples that have, on many occasions, been called "primitive," without however omitting to place the sculptures, pottery and fabrics selected by the authors themselves in a precise anthropological context.

The result is an exemplary work of interest and delight that neither experts nor the inquisitive will be able to resist.

Table of Contents

Mexican Art
Pre-Columbian Mexican Art
11(10)
Octavio Paz
The Discovery and the Conquests
The Discovery - Christopher Columbus
21(32)
Jean Paul Barbier
The Beginning of the End of the American Empire-After Columbus
53(8)
Jean Paul Barbier
The Conquest of Mexico - Hernando Cortes
61(18)
Jean Paul Barbier
The Conquest of Peru - Francisco Pizarro
79(26)
Jean Paul Barbier
Pre-Columbian Art of Mesoamerica, Peru and the Amazon Region
The Art of Mesoamerica
105(64)
Henri Stierlin
The Art of Ancient Peru
169(36)
Daniele Lavallee
The Arts of Amazonia
205(18)
Conceicao Gentil Correa
Arts of the Upper Amazon
223(166)
Iris Barry
Prints
Descriptive Catalogue 389(16)
Bibliography 405

Supplemental Materials

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