The development of pre-Hispanic art forms in Peru : seen as an outgrowth of textile techniques and their influence upon art forms and depiction of symbols
Abstract
Pre-Hispanic geometric art
forms In Peru
and the Andean Area
are taken to be
an
outgrowth of textile techniques. Textiles
and
fibre
arts predate ceramics
by
several millennia
In the Central Andean Area. The artist who created these textiles developed
an art style which
was to go
largely
unaltered until the arrival of the Spaniards. The foundations
of the Andean
art
form date to the Pre-ceramic. The restrictive, rather
Inflexible
nature of the warp and the weft
of the cloth
(the
geometric grid) was to influence the methods of represention that were to
follow. Geometric designs
were well suited to fit Into the rigid
framework. A
series of
conventions were
developed for the representation of symbols.
With the development
of ceramics, there was
leeway for
a new style to come
Into being.
However, this was not to be the case. The
potter
borrowed
extensively
from the weaving
tradition and
Its
associated styles
(only in Moche times did the potter make a
break the highly
geometric style
developed
centuries
before,
and even then this break
with tradition was a short
lived one).
The pre-Columbian artist often portrayed birds,
cats, fish and reptiles.
Many of these
designs were used
frequently and repeatedly throughout the centuries,
but none,
I
would
maintain. was represented as
frequently as the double-headed serpent, and with so
few variants.
Andean art
Is
a truly distinctive art
form;
very different from European art, and through Its
geometricity
It
conveyed and still conveys a totally different
approach to nature and the world
surrounding Andean man.
Type
Thesis, PhD Doctor of Philosophy
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