The Mexican colonial period has traditionally been considered a dark period in the arts, a long gap between the arrival of the Spaniards and the early twentieth century. Through new and
focused scholarship, the exhibition catalogue The Grandeur of Viceregal Mexico demonstrates that just the opposite is true.
This landmark publication features extraordinary decorative and fine arts from the Mexican viceregal period (1521-1821). The lavishly illustrated catalogue is written in Spanish and English
and, for the first time, presents to American audiences the rich artistic heritage of colonial Mexico. Five insightful essays by Mexican and American specialists explore the confluence of
cultures that gives the arts of colonial Mexico a distinctive quality. This distinction, which differentiates the works from the arts of both Spain and other Latin American countries, is not
widely understood in either the United States or Mexico. Expert commentaries enable readers to learn in greater depth about the outstanding collection of paintings, sculptures, furniture,
ceramics, metals, textiles, featherwork, lacquer, and books housed in the Museo Franz Mayer in Mexico City.
The contributors are:
- D. Hector Rivero Borrell Miranda, Director of the Museo Franz Mayer, Mexico City
- Gustavo Curiel, cultural historian
- Antonio Rubial Garc簿聶翻a, historian
- Juana Guti簿聶翻rrez Haces, art historian
- Peter C. Marzio, Director of the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
- David B. Warren, Director of Bayou Bend Collection, Museum of Fine Arts, Houston