Lettered Artists and the Languages of Empire: Painters and the Profession in Early Colonial Quito
English
By (author): Susan Verdi Webster
Arvey Foundation Book Award, Association for Latin American Art, 2019
Quito, Ecuador, was one of colonial South Americas most important artistic centers. Yet the literature on painting in colonial Quito largely ignores the first century of activity, reducing it to a handful of names, writes Susan Verdi Webster. In this major new work based on extensive and largely unpublished archival documentation, Webster identifies and traces the lives of more than fifty painters who plied their trade in the city between 1550 and 1650, revealing their mastery of languages and literacies and the circumstances in which they worked in early colonial Quito.
Overturning many traditional assumptions about early Quiteño artists, Webster establishes that these artistsmost of whom were Andeanfunctioned as visual intermediaries and multifaceted cultural translators who harnessed a wealth of specialized knowledge to shape graphic, pictorial worlds for colonial audiences. Operating in an urban mediascape of layered languages and empiresa colonial Spanish realm of alphabetic script and mimetic imagery and a colonial Andean world of discursive graphic, material, and chromatic formsQuiteño painters dominated both the pen and the brush. Webster demonstrates that the Quiteño artists enjoyed fluency in several areas, ranging from alphabetic literacy and sophisticated scribal conventions to specialized knowledge of pictorial languages: the materials, technologies, and chemistry of painting, in addition to perspective, proportion, and iconography. This mastery enabled artists to deploy languages and literaciesalphabetic, pictorial, graphic, chromatic, and materialto obtain power and status in early colonial Quito.
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