Casta Painting: Images of Race in Eighteenth-century Mexico

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Yale University Press, Jun 21, 2005 - Art - 242 pages

The first in-depth study of a mesmerizing and colorful art from colonial Mexico

The pictorial genre known as casta painting is one of the most compelling forms of artistic expression from colonial Mexico. Created as sets of consecutive images, the works portray racial mixing among the main groups that inhabited the colony: Indians, Spaniards, and Africans. In this beautifully illustrated book, Ilona Katzew places casta paintings in their social and historical context, showing for the first time the ways in which the meanings of the paintings changed along with shifting colonial politics.

The book examines how casta painting developed art historically, why race became the subject of a pictorial genre that spanned an entire century, who commissioned and collected the works, and what meanings the works held for contemporary audiences. Drawing on a range of previously unpublished archival and visual material, Katzew sheds new light on racial dynamics of eighteenth-century Mexico and on the construction of identity and self-image in the colonial world.

 

Contents

Racial Ideology
39
Exoticism and Creole Pride
63
Casta Painting in the Era of
111
Casta Paintings in the Textual
163
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About the author (2005)

Ilona Katzew is associate curator of Latin American art at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art.

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