Ximena A. Gomez is an assistant professor in the Department of the History of Art & Architecture at the University of Massachusetts Amherst.
Description
List of Illustrations Abbreviations Introduction Part I 1. Curating Sacred Images and Interactions 2. Inside the Church 3. Fiestas and Processions Part II 4. The Continuous Creation of the Virgin of Copacabana 5. A Virgin from Seville, Contentious Goods, and a Black Confraternity 6. From Ira to Imagen and Back Conclusion Acknowledgments Appendices
"In in this extraordinary study, Ximena GOmez recovers the long-neglected central role Indigenous and Black lay Catholic associations, or confraternities, played in shaping colonial Lima's visual culture as artists, patrons, and consumers. GOmez reminds us of the significance of these institutions in the daily and collective lives of Indigenous and Black LimeNos as they engaged with the city and the Spanish empire's material culture to express their subaltern Catholic subjectivities and carve their own space in that world. Methodologically bold and beautifully written, her book will reshape many fields of study." - Miguel A. Valerio, University of Maryland, author of Sovereign Joy: Afro-Mexican Kings and Queens, 1539-1640 "Ximena GOmez has written a major contribution to the history of Latin American art that shines for its clarity of prose, purpose, and methodology. It is a transformative contribution that will no doubt inspire scholars to follow in its footsteps and strive to shed light on the many overlooked dimensions of the histories of art." - Cecile Fromont, Harvard University, editor of Afro-Catholic Festivals in the Americas: Performance, Representation, and the Making of Black Atlantic Tradition