The Mobile Image
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Emily C. Floyd
About this book
A study of the production and movement of prints in colonial South America.
Printed images have had a central place in art-historical studies of colonial Spanish America, but scholars have typically focused on imported prints, designed and produced in Europe. The Mobile Image focuses instead on works printed in colonial Lima, generating there a distinctive print culture that served local and regional needs, while also appealing to European print consumers.
Inexpensive, easily transportable, and numerous, Lima’s prints traversed the varied geographies of the Viceroyalty of Peru both as loose sheets and within the protective covers of printed books. In the process, limeño devotional prints encouraged the development of shared regional imaginaries about the sacred Andean landscape, a space marked by miracle-working Virgins, potential saints, and powerful images of Christ. These same prints traveled abroad, where they promoted iconographies developed in Lima and influenced European conceptions of the Andes. Simultaneously, the visual language of limeño prints often challenges conventional approaches to interpreting colonial depictions of race. In analyzing limeño prints, and the identities of their makers, patrons, and consumers, The Mobile Image demonstrates that race is harder to recognize in colonial images than we might think. Unearthing hundreds of forgotten prints, Emily C. Floyd provides a fresh resource for interpreting colonial artworks, troubling established understandings of their aesthetics, and compelling us to reexamine colonial South American material cultures.
Author / Editor information
Emily C. Floyd is a lecturer of Visual Culture and Art before 1700 in the History of Art Department at University College London. She is also an editor and curator at the Center for the Study of Material and Visual Cultures of Religion (MAVCOR) at Yale University.
Reviews
The book opens new avenues for thinking about Andean visual culture as a dynamic field, traversed by practices, affects, and uses that transcend traditional hierarchies between media, audiences, and formats.
— CaianaTopics
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Frontmatter
i -
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Dedication
v -
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Contents
vii -
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List of Illustrations
ix -
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Introduction: Colonial Prints in Context
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1. Between the Local and the Global: Virgins of Candelaria in the Andes
29 -
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2. Paper Saints: Prints and the Promotion of the Local Holy Dead
75 -
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3. Brotherhoods of Paper: Lay Religious Confraternities and Regional Sacred Geographies
111 -
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4. Race, Representation, and Limeño Printmaking
131 -
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Conclusion
165 -
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Appendix: Engravers Active in Colonial Lima and Their Oeuvres
169 -
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Acknowledgments
203 -
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Notes
207 -
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Index
233