Enfilade

Installation | A Voyage to South America

Posted in exhibitions by Editor on January 13, 2015

B2cDCujCMAAy5-E.jpg_large

Unidentified artist, active in Cuzco, Peru, Our Lady of the Rosary of Chiquinquirá with Female Donor, late 17th/early 18th century (Carl and Marilynn Thoma Collection)

◊  ◊  ◊  ◊  ◊

From the AIC:

A Voyage to South America: Andean Art in the Spanish Empire
Art Institute of Chicago, 11 November 2014 — 21 February 2016

While the Art Institute has a long tradition of collecting and displaying works from the pre-Hispanic cultures of South America, this long-term installation offers the museum’s first presentation of work from the viceregal period. Fourteen paintings and related works on paper—including pieces from the collection of Chicagoans Marilynn and Carl Thoma never before displayed in a museum, as well as important loans from the Newberry Library and Denver Art Museum—introduce visitors to explorers, artists, and patrons who lived in the Spanish-governed Andes during the 17th, 18th, and 19th centuries.

Unidentified artist, active in Spain, Portrait of Antonio de Ulloa y de la Torre-Guiral, 1768–70 (Carl and Marilynn Thoma Collection)

Unidentified artist, active in Spain, Portrait of Antonio de Ulloa y de la Torre-Guiral, 1768–70
(Carl and Marilynn Thoma Collection)

The metaphorical guide of this journey is Antonio de Ulloa (1716–95), a Spanish naval officer and cartographer who traveled to South America with a French scientific mission in the 1730s and 1740s. His portrait introduces the group of works assembled—paintings of identified sitters, signal works by important South American artists, and devotional paintings that include historical figures. Each work has its own direct link to individual biography and lived experience in the New World, offering a more personal look at the themes of exploration and discovery and bringing to life the culture and artistic production in South America as European conventions combined with indigenous traditions.

The installation is accompanied by a bilingual brochure as well as bilingual treatment of all object labels, wall texts, and audio guide stops. Select works have also been added to the museum’s ‘Closer’ app, featuring slide shows, videos, archival materials, and more for further insight into this unique period of cultural convergence.

At noon on 17 February 2015, Victoria Sancho Lobis, associate curator in the Department of Prints and Drawings, will discuss the exhibition.

◊  ◊  ◊  ◊  ◊

Chicago’s Newberry Library will host a symposium on Latin America in the Early Colonial Period on Saturday, 11 April 2015, exploring related material in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.

Leave a comment