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Department of Archaeology

 
When: 
Tuesday, 26 November, 2019 - 17:00 to 18:00
Event speaker: 
Dr Joanne Pillsbury (Metropolitan Museum of Art)

Abstract:

Drawing upon significant recent archaeological findings and new investigations into the roles of artists, their patrons, and their workshops, this talk focuses on luxury arts in the lands between the two great imperial capitals of the ancient Americas: Cusco, the seat of the Inca state, and Tenochtitlan, the Aztec capital.

The presentation follows a specific historical and geographical path, tracing the development of gold-working in the Americas from around 1000 BC in the Andes of South America, to its expansion northward into Central America, and finally to Mexico, where gold-working only comes into its full flower after 1000 AD. Although the spread northward of gold working provides the exhibition with its trajectory and narrative, this golden road passed through regions where gold was of little interest to the indigenous populations. Such variations bring to the fore the most challenging and broad-ranging research question driving this lecture: How can we discern and interpret indigenous ideas of value?

This lecture seeks to understand which materials were considered most precious to the Moche, the Incas, the Maya, the Aztecs, and other ancient American cultures, and how and why certain materials were selected and transformed into some of the ancient world’s most spectacular works of art.

 

Biography:

Joanne Pillsbury, Andrall E. Pearson Curator of Ancient American Art, is a specialist in the art and archaeology of     the Precolumbian Americas. Pillsbury earned her PhD from Columbia University. She was previously associate director of the Getty Research Institute and director of Precolumbian Studies at Dumbarton Oaks. She is the author, editor, or co-editor of numerous publications, including the three-volume Guide to Documentary Sources for Andean Studies, 1530–1900 (2008), the Alfred H. Barr, Jr., Award recipient Ancient Maya Art at Dumbarton Oaks (2012), and Past Presented: Archaeological Illustration and the Ancient Americas (2012), which was awarded the Association for Latin American Art Book Award.
Contact name: 
Emma Jarman
Contact email: 
Event location: 
The McCrum Lecture Theatre, followed by a reception
Geographical areas: 
Americas
Subjects: 
Archaeology
Themes: 
Material Culture
Rethinking Complexity
Research Expertise / Fields of study: 
Museum Studies
Material Culture
Socio-Politics of the Past
Artefact Analysis & Technology
Art and Iconography
Archaeological Theory
Archaeometallurgy
Periods of interest: 
Other Historical
Other Late Prehistory
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