The early colonial era and criollo and indigenous artists and influences Since the
Spanish conquest of the Aztec Empire, Mexican art has been an ongoing and complex interaction between the traditions of Europe and native perspectives. The Spanish friars directing construction were not trained architects or engineers. They relied on indigenous stonemasons and sculptors to build churches and other Christian structures, often in the same places as temples and shrines of the traditional religion. "Although some Indians complained about the burden such labor represented, most communities considered a large and impressive church to be a reflection of their town's importance and took justifiable pride in creating a sacred place for divine worship." The fact that so many colonial-era churches have survived centuries it testament to their general good construction. The first monasteries built in and around Mexico City, such as the
monasteries on the slopes of Popocatepetl, had
Renaissance,
Plateresque,
Gothic or
Moorish elements, or some combination. They were relatively undecorated, with building efforts going more towards high walls and fortress features to ward off attacks. The construction of more elaborate churches with large quantities of religious artwork would define much of the artistic output of the colonial period. Most of the production was related to the teaching and reinforcement of Church doctrine, just as in Europe. Religious art set the rationale for Spanish domination over the indigenous. Today, colonial-era structures and other works exist all over the country, with a concentration in the central highlands around
Mexico City. '', feathers on wood panel, the oldest dated feather work with a Christian subject. Made for
Diego Huanutzin, nephew and son-in-law of
Moctezuma II to present to
Pope Paul III, dated 1539
Feather work was a highly valued skill of prehispanic central Mexico that continued into the early colonial era. Spaniards were fascinated by this form of art, and indigenous feather workers (
amanteca) produced religious images in this medium, mainly small "paintings", as well as religious vestments.
Indigenous writings Indians continued production of written manuscripts in the early colonial era, especially
codices in the Nahua area of central Mexico. An important early manuscript that was commissioned for the Spanish crown was
Codex Mendoza, named after the first viceroy of Mexico, Don
Antonio de Mendoza, which shows the tribute delivered to the Aztec ruler from individual towns as well as descriptions of proper comportment for the common people. A far more elaborate project utilizing indigenous scribes illustration is the project resulting in the
Florentine Codex directed by Franciscan
Bernardino de Sahagún. Other indigenous manuscripts in the colonial era include the
Huexotzinco Codex and Codex Osuna. An important type of manuscript from the early period were pictorial and textual histories of the Spanish conquest of the Aztecs from the indigenous viewpoint. The early
Lienzo de Tlaxcala illustrated the contributions the Spaniards' Tlaxcalan allies made to the defeat of the Aztec Empire, as well the
Hernán Cortés and his cultural translator Doña Marina (
Malinche).
Painting Most Nahua artists producing this visual art are anonymous. An exception is the work of Juan Gerson, who ca. 1560 decorated the vault of the Franciscan church in the Nahua town of Tecamachalco,(Puebla state), with individual scenes from the Old Testament. While colonial art remained almost completely European in style, with muted colors and no indication of movement—the addition of native elements, which began with the
tequitqui, continued. They were never the center of the works, but decorative motifs and filler, such as native foliage, pineapples, corn, and
cacao. Much of this can be seen on portals as well as large frescoes that often decorated the interior of churches and the walls of monastery areas closed to the public. The earliest of Mexico's colonial artists were Spanish-born who came to Mexico in the middle of their careers. This included mendicant friars, such as Fray Alonso López de Herrera. Later, most artists were born in Mexico, but trained in European techniques, often from imported engravings. This dependence on imported copies meant that Mexican works preserved styles after they had gone out of fashion in Europe. Important museum collections include those of the
Museo Soumaya and
Museo Nacional de San Carlos, both in Mexico City.
Gallery File:Geistliche_Schatzkammer_Wien_(2).JPG|Representation of Mary as a feather picture, Juan Baptista Cuiris, 1550/1580 File:Codex Mendoza folio 2r.jpg|Founding of
Tenochtitlan in
Codex Mendoza ca. 1541. File:Codex Mendoza folio 47r.jpg|Towns owing tribute to the
Aztec Empire shown in
Codex Mendoza ca. 1541 File:Cortez & La Malinche.jpg|Image of Cortés and Malinche in the
Lienzo de Tlaxcala, chronicling the conquest of central Mexico from the Tlaxcalans' viewpoint. File:Duran Codex Eagle.png|Native illustration of
Diego Durán's history of ancient Mexico, showing the founding of
Tenochtitlan File:Codex azcatitlan222.jpg|
Codex Azcatitlan, page depicting Spanish conquerors, with
Hernán Cortés and
Malinche File:Tzompantli Tovar.jpeg|
Codex Ramirez, A depiction of a
tzompantli, or skull rack, associated with the depiction of a temple dedicated to
Huitzilopochtli from Juan de Tovar's manuscript. File:The Florentine Codex- Aztec Feather Painters VI.tiff|Feather work artists as depicted in the
Florentine Codex (ca. 1576). File:Nezahualpiltzintli.jpg|
Nezahualpilli, tlatoani of Texcoco.
Codex Ixtlilxochitl ca. 1582. File:Badianus.jpg|A page of the
Badinus Herbal, 16th c. File:Huex codex 1a loc.jpg|
Huexotzinco Codex; the panel contains an image of the
Virgin and Child and symbolic representations of tribute paid to the administrators File:NunoBeltranGuzman-1.jpg|Conquistador
Nuño Beltrán de Guzmán as depicted in
Codex Telleriano Remensis, a 16th c. pictorial annal/history File:Aubin codex.jpg|
Codex Aubin File:TecamachalcoPue.JPG|
Juan Gerson's religious paintings in the Franciscan church of Tecamachalco, Puebla, 1562. File:AtriumCrossAcolman1.JPG|An atrium cross in
Acolman, an anthropomorphized stone cross with Jesus at its center.
Mexican Baroque (1675-1728), painter. Self-portrait Baroque painting became firmly established in Mexico by the middle of the 17th century with the work of Spaniard
Sebastián López de Arteaga. His painting is exemplified by the canvas called
Doubting Thomas from 1643. In this work, the
Apostle Thomas is shown inserting his finger in the wound in Christ's side to emphasize Christ's suffering. The caption below reads "the Word made flesh" and is an example of Baroque's didactic purpose. The Church produced the most important works of the seventeenth century. Among the important painters were Baltasar de Echave Ibia and his son Baltasar Echave Rioja, also Luis Juárez and his son José Juárez,
Juan Correa,
Cristóbal de Villalpando, Rodrigo de la Piedra, Antonio de Santander, Polo Bernardino, Juan de Villalobos, Juan Salguero and Juan de Herrera. Juan Correa, worked from 1671 to 1716 and reached great prestige and reputation for the quality of its design and scale of some of his works. Among the best known: 'Apocalypse in the Cathedral of Mexico', 'Conversion of St. Mary Magdalene', now in the 'Pinacoteca Virreinal' and 'Santa Catarina and Adam and Eve casting out of paradise', the latter located in the
National Museum of Viceroyalty of
Tepotzotlán. Colonial religious art was sponsored by Church authorities and private patrons. Sponsoring the rich ornamentation of churches was a way for the wealthy to gain prestige.
Gallery File:Lactación de Santo Domingo.JPG|The
Lactación de Santo Domingo, by
Cristóbal de Villalpando painted near the end of the 17th century. File:Mujer del Apocalipsis - Cristóbal de Villalpando.jpg|Cristóbal de Villalpando,
Woman of the Apocalypse (Mujer del Apocalipsis), 1686 File:Santa rosa tentada por el demonio - Cristobal de Villalpando.jpg|Cristóbal de Villalpando,
Saint Rose tempted by the devil (Santa rosa tentada por el demonio), ca. 1695/1697 File:Correa La Pascua de Maria.jpg|
Juan Correa La Pascua de María, 1698. File:Ibarra-virgen del apocalipsis.jpg|
Inmaculada del Apocalipsis, Pinacoteca de La Profesa, México, by
José de Ibarra File:Miracles_of_Saint_Salvador_de_Horta_(Milagros_del_beato_Salvador_de_Horta)_LACMA_M.2008.32_(1_of_4).jpg|Mexico, circa 1720 Paintings Oil on canvas, Latin American Art Currently on public view: Art of the Americas Building, floor 4 File:La_Visitación_-_Miguel_Cabrera.jpg|The Visitation by Miguel Cabrera. 18th Century. New Spain (Mexico). Oil on canvas, Arocena Museum Collection.
Virgin of Guadalupe Starting in the seventeenth century, the
Virgin of Guadalupe was increasingly a subject for religious painters.
Juan Correa and his atelier produced many such images. Increasingly there was an emphasis on the accuracy of the image to the original, and Correa created a wax template to ensure that every detail was correct.Guadalupe became the focus of Criollo patriotism, with her intervention being called upon in catastrophic events and then rendered in art.
Gallery File:Traslado de la imagen y dedicación del santuario de Guadalupe, Ciudad de México, Manuel de Arellano.jpg|Manuel Arellano,
Inauguration of the Sanctuary of the Virgin of Guadalupe in Mexico city (Traslado de la imagen y dedicación del santuario de Guadalupe en la Ciudad de México), 1709 File:Verdadero retrato de Santa María Virgen de Guadalupe.jpg|Painting of
Our Lady of Guadalupe, including scenes of the apparition of the
Virgin Mary to
Juan Diego by Josefus De Ribera Argomanis. (1778) File:Eternal father painting guadalupe.jpg|18th-century painting of
God the Father fashioning the image of the Virgin of Guadalupe File:Dibujo Escudo de Armas de México.jpg|Virgin of Guadalupe intervenes in a Mexico City disastrous plague, ca. 1743. File:Brooklyn Museum - Virgin of Guadalupe - Isidro Escamilla - overall.jpg|
Virgin of Guadalupe, 1 September 1824. Oil on canvas by Isidro Escamilla.
Brooklyn Museum. File:Miguel_Cabrera_-_Altarpiece_of_the_Virgin_of_Guadalupe_with_Saint_John_the_Baptist,_Fray_Juan_de_Zumárraga_and_Juan_Diego_-_Google_Art_Project.jpg|The altar image of
Our Lady of Guadalupe with
St. John the Baptist,
Juan de Zumárraga and
St. Juan Diego. Miguel Cabrera. File:Cuadro NovohispanoxFernando VII MNH.jpg|The Virgin of Guadalupe,
Ferdinand VII of Spain, royal officials, and indigenous
caciques, showing the legitimate conveyance of power. Anon. Museo Nacional de Historia, Mexico City.
Portraiture by
Miguel Cabrera 1750. In New Spain, as in the rest of the
New World, since the seventeenth century, particularly during the eighteenth century, the portrait became an important part of the artistic repertoire. In a society characterized by a deep religious feeling which was imbued, it is not surprising that many portraits reflected the moral virtues and piety of the model. While most commissioned art was for churches, secular works were commissioned as well. Portrait painting was known relatively early in the colonial period, mostly of viceroys and archbishops, as well as the conqueror
Hernán Cortés. Portraits of royal and ecclesiastical officials were an approximation of the sitter's appearance, and were displayed in their official settings. They often included their coats of arms. In the sixteenth-century portrait of Cortés, the conqueror is portrayed with a baton, sword, and armor "symbolize political and military might, but the discarded glove helmet and glove reveal that his warring activities are completed." Portraits of viceroys and ecclesiastics were often portrayed in rich clothing and writing implements, along with their coats of arms indicating their genealogy and high standing as well as books and writing implements. In Mexico, there are few exemplars of royal officials from before the eighteenth century, perhaps because the 1696 riot destroyed the portrait gallery in the viceregal palace. Beginning in the late seventeenth century, portrait painting of local elites became a significant genre. Especially important is that women were portrayed for the first time, starting in the eighteenth century. These works followed European models, with symbols of rank and titles either displayed unattached in the outer portions or worked into another element of the paintings such as curtains. A subset of their genre were portraits of nuns when they first professed, dressed in elaborate clothing appropriate for the solemn step they were taking in entering the convent. A notable example is by
José de Alcíbar of Sor (sister) María Ignacia de la Sangre de Cristo, with a ceremonial crown, embroidered robes, and other accoutrements. Miguel Cabrera's posthumous portrait of Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz, famous in her own time, in her convent cell surrounded by books, is different from most nun's portraits, painted from life or immediately postmortem. There are also a number of postmortem portraits of nuns. There are quite a number of family group portraits with a religious devotional theme, commissioned to show the family's piety, but also as way to display the family's wealth. Josep Antonio de Ayala was a prominent artist, who is known for painting "The family of the Valley at the foot of
Our Lady of Loreto" (c. 1769). This devotional painting was commissioned for the children of the del Valle family in memory of his parents and is characteristic of the painting of this century. The Virgin of Loreto is central to the composition, with the stiff figures of the family members are finely dressed. The men are in fashionable clothing of the era, with the matriarch of the family wearing an embroidered and lace dress, along with pearls. The daughters are shown in the habit of Conceptionist nuns, with
escudos de monjas, religious paintings worn on their chests. The painting is inscribed with in information about its commission and the parents, and the fact that it hung in chapel of the family's hacienda. The painting is a display of piety and wealth. There are such group paintings with different central religious figures. Two notable portrait painters are brothers in the late seventeenth and early eighteenth century are
Juan Rodríguez Juárez and
Nicolás. Some other prominent painters of this period are:
Cristóbal de Villalpando,
Juan Correa,
José de Ibarra, Joseph Mora, Francisco Martinez,
Miguel Cabrera, Andrés López, and Nicolás Enríquez. In the 18th century, artists increasingly included the Latin phrase
pinxit Mexici (painted in Mexico) on works bound for the European market as a sign of pride in their artistic tradition.
Gallery Image:Hernán Cortés Retrato Portrait 17th century.png|Hernán Cortés, with his coat of arms on the upper right corner. 17th c. File:AntonioMendoza.jpg|Official Portrait of Don
Antonio de Mendoza, first viceroy of
New Spain. Unknown artist. 1535. File:PedroMoyaContreras.jpg|Official Portrait of Don
Pedro Moya de Contreras, first secular cleric to be archbishop of Mexico and first cleric to serve as viceroy. Unknown artist. File:Juan Rodríguez Juárez - Portrait of the Viceroy, the Duke of Linares - Google Art Project.jpg|
Juan Rodríguez Juárez Portrait of Viceroy Fernando de Alencastre Noroña y Silva, duque de Linares y marqués de Valdefuentes, ca. 1717 File:Ayala La familia del Valle a los pies de la Virgen de Loreto.jpg|Josep Antonio de Ayala, The del Valle family at the feet the Virgin of Loreto, 1769. In the collections of the
Museo Soumaya File:Retrato de familia Fagoaga Arozqueta - Anónimo ca.1730.jpg|
Portrait of family Fagoaga Arozqueta 1730 File:Miguel Cabrera - Doña María de la Luz Padilla y (Gómez de) Cervantes - Google Art Project.jpg|Miguel Cabrera (1695–1768).
Doña María de la Luz Padilla y Gómez de Cervantes, ca. 1760. Oil on canvas.
Brooklyn Museum File:Alcíbar - Sor María Ignacia de la Sangre de Cristo.jpg|Sor (sister) María Ignacia de la Sangre de Cristo.
José de Alcíbar. 18th c. File:José de Alcibar - Portrait of María Anna Josefa Taking Vow - WGA00135.jpg|Sor María Anna Josefa File:Sebastiana Ynes Josepha de San Agustin - Museo Franz Mayer.jpg|
Sebastiana Ynes Josepha de San Agustin. Unknown artist, 1757.
History paintings and other secular art Starting in the seventeenth century, painters began to produce canvases and biombos with historical themes, including the conquest of Mexico and imagined scenes of events involving Mexico's Nahua population. Also important was a history painting of the destruction of the Franciscan mission of San Sabá by Comanches, by
José de Páez. Paintings of Mexico City sites appeared beginning in the seventeenth century, most famously a painting by
Cristóbal de Villalpando of the Plaza Mayor in Mexico City, ca. 1696, showing the damage to the viceregal palace from the 1692 corn riot. It also shows the Parián market, where luxury goods were sold. The Parián market was also the subject of at least one other painting.
Gallery File:Conquista-de-México-por-Cortés-Tenochtitlan-Painting.png|History painting of the Spanish Conquest of
Tenochtitlan, 17th century File:La consagración de los templos paganos y la primera misa en México-Tenochtitlan.jpg|
The consecration of pagan temples and the first mass in Mexico-Tenochtitlan by José Vivar y Valderrama, ca. 1752. Oil on canvas. File:Bautizo de Ixtlixóchitl.jpg|Baptism of
Ixtlilxochitl by José Vivar y Valderrama, 18th century. File:Attributed to José de Páez - The Destruction of the Saint Sabá Mission in the Province of Texas and the Martyrdom of the Priests,... - Google Art Project.jpg|The destruction of the mission of San Sabá in the province of Texas, ca. 1765.
José de Páez File:Vista de la Plaza Mayor de la Ciudad de México - Cristobal de Villalpando.jpg|
Cristóbal de Villalpando,
View of the Plaza Mayor of Mexico city, 1695 File:5829_Paseo_de_la_Viga_con_la_iglesia_de_Iztacalco.jpg|
Paseo de la Viga 1706 File:El Parian - 18th century in New Spain.jpg|
The Parian (El Parián), ca. 1770
Casta painting Another type of secular colonial genre is called
casta paintings referring to the depiction of racial hierarchy racially in eighteenth-century
New Spain. Some were likely commissioned by Spanish functionaries as souvenirs of Mexico. A number of artists of the era created casta paintings, including
Miguel Cabrera,
José de Ibarra,
Juan Patricio Morlete Ruiz,
Francisco Clapera, and
Luis de Mena, but most casta paintings are unsigned. Ibarra, Morlete, and possibly Cabrera were of mixed race and born outside Mexico City. Mena's only known casta painting links the Virgin of Guadalupe and the casta system, as well as depictions of fruits and vegetables and scenes of everyday life in mideighteenth-century Mexico. It is one of the most-reproduced examples of casta paintings, one of the small number that show the casta system on a single canvas rather than up to 16 separate paintings. It is unique in uniting the thoroughly secular genre of casta painting with a depiction of the Virgin of Guadalupe. Production of these paintings stopped after the 1821 conclusion of the
Mexican War of Independence, when legal racial categories were repudiated in independent Mexico. Until the run-up to the 500th anniversary of the Columbus's 1492 voyage, casta paintings were of little or no interest, even to art historians, but scholars began systematically studying them as a genre. A set of casta paintings was included in
Pedro Alonso O'Crouley's
A Description of the Kingdom of New Spain, published in translation in 1972. and were then included in the first major catalog of casta paintings published in 1989.
Gallery File:Casta_Painting_by_Luis_de_Mena.jpg|
Luis de Mena, Virgin of Guadalupe and castas, 1750. File:Casta painting all.jpg|
Las castas. Anonymous, 18th century, Museo Nacional del Virreinato,
Tepotzotlán, Mexico. File:Castas 01mestiza max.jpg|From Spaniard and
Indian woman, Mestiza.
Miguel Cabrera, 1763 File:De_español_y_mestiza,_castiza.jpg|Spanish (español) father,
Mestiza (mixed Spanish-Indian) mother, and their
Castiza daughter. Miguel Cabrera, 1763. File:Cabrera_Pintura_de_Castas.jpg|Spaniard +
Mulata,
Morisca. Miguel Cabrera, 1763 File:Castas 07tornatras max.jpg|Spanish father and
Albina mother,
Torna atrás.
Miguel Cabrera, eighteenth century Mexico. File:Cabrera_15_Coyote.jpg|Casta Painting, No. 15. From Mestizo and from Indian;
Coyote.
Biombos, or folding screens Biombos or folding screens became popular among elites in the seventeenth century. Large and meant for display in public and private rooms of elite homes, they had a variety of subject matter, ranging from paintings of historical events, real or imagined, allegorical presentations, and scenes from everyday life in Mexico. Mexico was a crossroads of trade in the colonial period, with goods from Asia and Europe mixing with those locally produced. This convergence is most evident in the decorative arts of New Spain. Another was allegorical, entitled
The Four Continents (ca. 1683), showing Europe, the Americas, Asia and Africa with Europe and Asia at the center, and the Americas and Africa at either end. The earliest of these Mexican made screens had oriental designs but later ones had European and Mexican themes. One example of this is a screen by an anonymous artist with the conquest of Mexico one side and an aerial view of central Mexico City's streets and buildings, but no people, on the other, now at the
Franz Mayer Museum. While the depiction of saints consumed most artistic efforts, they were not without political effects. The most important of these was the rise of the cult of the
Virgin of Guadalupe as an American rather than European saint, representative of a distinct identity. The Crown promoted the establishment in Mexico of the
Neoclassical style of art and architecture, which had become popular in Spain. This style was a reinterpretation of Greco-Roman references and its use was a way to reinforce European dominance in the Spain's colonies. One Neoclassical artist from the Academy at the end of the colonial period was
Manuel Tolsá. He first taught sculpture at the
Academy of San Carlos and then became its second director. Tolsá designed a number of
Neoclassical buildings in Mexico but his best known work is an equestrian status of King Charles IV in bronze cast in 1803 and originally placed in the
Zócalo. As of 2011 it can be seen at the
Museo Nacional de Arte. The Academy of San Carlos survived into post-independence Mexico.
List of Colonial Mexican artists ==Independence to the outbreak of the Mexican Revolution, 1821–1910==