The promotion of classicism in the visual arts in late
eighteenth and nineteenth-century Latin America and the need to
"revive" buen gusto (good taste) are the themes of this collection
of essays. The contributors provide new insights into neoclassicism
and buen gusto as cultural, not just visual, phenomena in the late
colonial and early national periods and promote new approaches to
the study of Latin American art history and visual culture.
The essays examine neoclassical visual culture from assorted
perspectives. They consider how classicism was imposed, promoted,
adapted, negotiated, and contested in myriad social, political,
economic, cultural, and temporal situations. Case studies show such
motivations as the desire to impose imperial authority, to fashion
the nationalist self, and to form and maintain new social and
cultural ideologies. The adaptation of classicism and buen gusto in
the Americas was further shaped by local factors, including the
realities of place and the influence of established visual and
material traditions.
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