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The Survival of Maya Blue in Sixteenth-Century Mexican Colonial Mural Paintings in Studies in conservation, Vol.67 N°7-8(2022; October-November) (2022-10-01)
[article]
Titre : The Survival of Maya Blue in Sixteenth-Century Mexican Colonial Mural Paintings Type de document : texte imprimé Année de publication : 2022 Article en page(s) : P. 445-458 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : Art précolombien -- Mexique -- Conservation et restauration
Bleu -- Nouvelle-Espagne -- 16e siècle -- Conservation et restauration
Couleurs --16e siècle -- Analyse
Peinture et décoration murales -- Nouvelle-Espagne -- 16e siècle -- Conservation et restaurationIndex. décimale : 7.025 Dommages. Conservation. Protection Résumé : The famous Maya blue, a nanostructured hybrid organic–inorganic material, has been the subject of numerous studies since its discovery in 1931. These mainly focused on mural paintings, manuscripts, cultural artifacts from ancient Mesoamerica, and notable examples of syncretic art produced in early colonial times in New Spain as a result of the convergence of Mesoamerican and European traditions. This article reports on the identification of Maya blue in the wall painting programs of four mendicant monasteries founded in Southern and Central Mexico during the sixteenth century. It discusses the pictorial effects, painting mixtures, and artistic inventiveness of indigenous artists who expressed themselves through the quality of color and the meanings of materials by using Maya blue in Christian images. This article proposes that Maya blue reappeared in the palette of local artists in the second half of the sixteenth century, as a traditional technology that integrated the complex worldview of Mesoamerican cultures and their knowledge of its extraction, production, and use in the art of painting. En ligne : https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/00393630.2021.1913825
in Studies in conservation > Vol.67 N°7-8(2022; October-November) (2022-10-01) . - P. 445-458[article] The Survival of Maya Blue in Sixteenth-Century Mexican Colonial Mural Paintings [texte imprimé] . - 2022 . - P. 445-458.
Langues : Anglais (eng)
in Studies in conservation > Vol.67 N°7-8(2022; October-November) (2022-10-01) . - P. 445-458
Catégories : Art précolombien -- Mexique -- Conservation et restauration
Bleu -- Nouvelle-Espagne -- 16e siècle -- Conservation et restauration
Couleurs --16e siècle -- Analyse
Peinture et décoration murales -- Nouvelle-Espagne -- 16e siècle -- Conservation et restaurationIndex. décimale : 7.025 Dommages. Conservation. Protection Résumé : The famous Maya blue, a nanostructured hybrid organic–inorganic material, has been the subject of numerous studies since its discovery in 1931. These mainly focused on mural paintings, manuscripts, cultural artifacts from ancient Mesoamerica, and notable examples of syncretic art produced in early colonial times in New Spain as a result of the convergence of Mesoamerican and European traditions. This article reports on the identification of Maya blue in the wall painting programs of four mendicant monasteries founded in Southern and Central Mexico during the sixteenth century. It discusses the pictorial effects, painting mixtures, and artistic inventiveness of indigenous artists who expressed themselves through the quality of color and the meanings of materials by using Maya blue in Christian images. This article proposes that Maya blue reappeared in the palette of local artists in the second half of the sixteenth century, as a traditional technology that integrated the complex worldview of Mesoamerican cultures and their knowledge of its extraction, production, and use in the art of painting. En ligne : https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/00393630.2021.1913825