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“Unthinking Eurocentrism” (left) Joaquin Torres-Garcia (Uruguay, ) Map of South America, (right) André Breton (French Surrealist poet, ) Surrealist Map of the World, 1929 In the Surrealist "Map of the World," 1929, the Pacific Ocean is central, the United States does not exist.
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Dimaxion map
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Voyages of Christopher Columbus, 1492, 1493, 1502
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The Taíno: The Caribbean before European Conquest
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Taíno Zemi, Dominican Republic, cotton, shell, and human skull 75 inchs high, C.E.1200 to 1500, Anthropological museum, Turin, Italy
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Taíno Duho, Dominican Republic, wood and manatee bone, 45 x 62 in, Museum of Dominican Man, Santo Domingo; (right) detail of duho carving
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Taíno (left & center) Zemi, clay & stone; (right) stone belt or yoke, C.E.1200 to 1500
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Taíno reliquaries, hollow earthenware, C.E.1200 to 1500
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Taíno, ritual objects: monkey-effigy ax, stone (left) and rattle, incised clay (right), C.E.1200 to 1500
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Latin America was the main destination of the millions of people enslaved and taken out of Africa between 1500 and The U.S. received about 523,000 enslaved immigrants. Cuba alone got more. Spanish America absorbed around 1.5 million and Brazil at least 3.5 million. Their descendants form about half of the population in the Caribbean and Brazil – the two historic centers of sugar production.
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Taíno, Zemi, (left: back view), Dominican Republic, after 1515 CE, wood, cotton, shell, and glass, 32” H, National Ethnographic Museum, Rome. Combines Taino, European, and African materials, a syncretic spiritual object made for a high ranking cacique
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Raphael, The School of Athens (Philosophy), 1511, from the fresco suite made for the Pope’s Vatican Library, Vatican City, Rome, Italy
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El Escorial, palace-monastery of Philip II of Spain, mid-16th Century, this vast complex was the center of the Counter-Reformation in Europe funded by the enormous wealth drawn from Latin America. The Reformation had begun in 1517.
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El Escorial, designed by Juan Bautista de Toledo, Spanish architect and sculptor who had studied under Michelangelo in Rome.
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Diego Velázquez (Spanish 1599-1660), Las Meninas, 1656
Diego Velázquez (Spanish ), Las Meninas, Velázquez was the leading painter of the Spanish Golden Age. The influence of his painting is unsurpassed in the history of Western art.
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Detail of Las Meninas showing the lady in waiting offering the princess a bucharo on a silver tray. The bucaro was imported from Guadalajara (although they were made in other regions of Spanish colonial America as well), and the silver for the tray was mined in Bolivia.
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Detail of Las Meninas. The red pigment used to represent the curtains and other objects in the image was cochineal, a dye made in Mexico.
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Hispaniola, Taino/Arawak, 1500 CE
For the next quiz, know locations and dates for cultures covered in lecture only. You can use the dates given here or in your textbook. You will be asked to mark them on the same map we used to identify modern nation states of Central and South America.
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MOCHE CULTURE Northern Coastal Peru, c. 100 C.E to 800 C.E
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Moche stirrup spout portrait vessel, (detail) unidentified artist, painted and slipped
earthenware, 11 ½ “H. c.450 CE
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(right) Peruvian, Moche, Male Effigy Vessel, unidentified artist, painted earthenware, 9 7/16 in H, A.D Compare (left) self-portrait mug by Paul Gauguin, c. 1889
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Moche, Portraits of “Cut Lip” (L-R) at about 10 yrs, early 20s, and middle 30s ceramic, c. 300 CE
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Moche, Portraits of Bigote, head (right) and full body as warrior (left) ceramic, 430 CE
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Moche (left) Man with a Flower Headdress, painted earthenware, 10” H, CE (right) Stirrup Head Vessel, painted earthenware c 12” H, CE
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Moche, Male Effigy Vessel (stirrup missing), unidentified artist, painted earthenware 4 in H, A.C
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