Museo de América
Established | 1941 |
---|---|
Location | Madrid, Spain |
Type | Artistic, archaeological and ethnographic |
Owner | General State Administration |
Website | museodeamerica |
Official name | Museo de América |
Type | Non-movable |
Criteria | Monument |
Designated | 1962 |
Reference no. | RI-51-0001378 |
The Museo de América (English: Museum of America) is a Spanish national museum of arts, archaeology and ethnography in Madrid. Its collections cover the whole of the Americas and range from the Paleolithic period to the present day.
It is owned by the Spanish State and its initial pieces came from the former collection of American archaeological and ethnographic artifacts from the National Archaeological Museum, Madrid, also exhibiting a number of unrelated donations, deposits and purchases.[1]
History[edit]
The institution was founded by a decree of 19 April 1941 and opened in 1944 inside the building housing the National Archaeological Museum.[2] After all the initial holdings were moved to a newly built premises in the Ciudad Universitaria, the building was inaugurated on 12 October 1965.[3] After a series of renovations of the building, which was previously shared with a number of unrelated institutions, the museum was reopened on 12 October 1994, this time exclusively occupying the entire building.[4] As part of preparation for the re-opening, a collecting programme was established, with artifacts from Spain's first Caribbean settlement on Hispaniola (modern Haiti and the Domincan Republic) found by anthropologist Soraya Aracena.[5]
Collection[edit]
The permanent exhibit is divided into five major thematic areas:
- An awareness of the Americas
- The reality of the Americas
- Society
- Religion
- Communication
- Ceramic vessel representing a crustacean. Moche culture artwork from Peru.
- Bronze helmet of a 16th-century Spanish soldier.
- Chimú vessel showing a sexual act between men.
- Helmet and collar made by the Tlingit people (late 18th century).[6]
- Statuette of a Quimbaya cacique (200–1000 AD)[7]
- Maya Stele of Madrid (600–900 AD)[9]
- Aztec Codex Tudela
- Luis de Mena, Casta Painting with the Virgin of Guadalupe, 1750
- Los mulatos de Esmeraldas, de Andrés Sánchez Gallque (escuela quiteña), 1599 (depósito del Museo del Prado).
- Conquista de México. Recibimiento de Moctezuma, enconchado de Juan y Miguel González, escuela novohispana, 1698 (depósito del Prado).
- Escena de mestizaje (pintura de castas): De chino cambujo e india, loba. Miguel Cabrera, escuela novohispana, 1763.
- Yapanga de Quito con el traje que usa esta clase de mujeres que tratan de agradar. Lienzo de Vicente Albán de 1783, escuela quiteña.
See also[edit]
- Museo Nacional de Antropología (Madrid), also featuring American pieces
References[edit]
- Citations
- ^ García Sáiz & Jiménez Villalba 2009, p. 84.
- ^ Krizmanics 2018, p. 40.
- ^ García Sáiz & Jiménez Villalba 2009, p. 89.
- ^ García Sáiz & Jiménez Villalba 2009, p. 90.
- ^ "Calendario-Conversatorio-RD – Jornada Centenaria Ricardo E. Alegría Gallardo". centenarioricardoalegria.com. Retrieved 2022-11-05.
- ^ García Sáiz & Jiménez Villalba 2009, p. 99.
- ^ García Sáiz & Jiménez Villalba 2009, p. 95.
- ^ García Sáiz & Jiménez Villalba 2009, p. 112.
- ^ García Sáiz & Jiménez Villalba 2009, p. 91.
- ^ "Vasija Nazca". Ministerio de Cultura y Deporte.
- Bibliography
- García Sáiz, Mª Concepción; Jiménez Villalba, Félix (2009). "Museo de América, mucho más que un museo" (PDF). Artigrama. 24 (24). Zaragoza: Universidad de Zaragoza: 83–118. doi:10.26754/ojs_artigrama/artigrama.2009247698. ISSN 0213-1498. S2CID 257308144.
- Krizmanics, Georg T. A. (2018). "El Museo de América de Madrid: ¿un instrumento para la política exterior española?". A Contracorriente. 15 (2): 39–61.
External links[edit]
Media related to Museo de América (Madrid) at Wikimedia Commons