Cuzco School

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18th century Cuzco School painting. Author unknown.
18th century Cuzco School painting. Author unknown.

The Cuzco School (Escuela Cuzqueña) was an artistic tradition that centered on Cusco, Peru (the former capital of the Inca Empire) in the 17th and 18th centuries, after the 1534 Spanish conquest of the city.[1] The Cuzco School is considered the first organized artistic center in the New World.[1]

The Cusqueña paintings were a form of religious art whose main purpose was didactic.[1] The Spanish, who aimed to convert the Incans to Catholicism, sent a group of religious artists to Cusco.[1] These artists formed a school for Amerindians and mestizos, teaching them drawing and oil painting.[1] (The designation "Cusqueña," however, is not limited to the city of Cusco. These artistic traditions spread to other cities in the Andes, as well as to Bolivia and Ecuador.[1]) The Cusqueña style is generally thought to have originated in the art of Inca painter Diego Quispe Tito.[2][3]

The Adoration of the Magi, unknown Cuzco School author, c. 1740-1760.
The Adoration of the Magi, unknown Cuzco School author, c. 1740-1760.

Cusqueña paintings are characterized by their use of exclusively religious subjects, their lack of perspective, and the predominance of red, yellow and earth colors.[1] They also used a lot of gold, especially with images of the Virgin Mary. Though the Cusqueño painters studied Byzantine, Flemish, Andorran and Italian Renaissance art, their works were freer than those of their European tutors: they used bright colors and distorted, dramatic images, and depicted their native flora and fauna as a backdrop in their works.[1]

Most Cusqueña paintings were created anonymously because of pre-Columbian traditions that define art as communitarian.[1]

[edit] References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i "The 'Cusquenha' Art." National Historical Museum of Brazil.
  2. ^ Bethell, Leslie. The Cambridge History of Latin America, Cambridge University Press (1995), p.742. ISBN 0521245168.
  3. ^ Bakewell, Peter J. A History of Latin America: C. 1450 to the Present, Blackwell Publishing (2003), p.268. ISBN 0631231617.
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