Publication: Pinturas zurbaranescas en Nueva España.
Loading...
Identifiers
Publication date
Reading date
Event date
Start date of the public exhibition period
End date of the public exhibition period
Authors
Prieto Ustio, Ester
Advisors
Authors of photography
Person who provides the photography
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
A lo largo de la Edad Moderna, las actividades
comerciales desarrolladas entre el continente
europeo y el americano, constituyeron toda una
serie de beneficios económicos visibles en diversos ámbitos, en los que se incluye el artístico. Con este estudio, queremos analizar los motivos de la existencia del mercado artístico entre Sevilla y Nueva España durante las primeras décadas del siglo XVII, así como las consecuencias en las que derivó este comercio en el arte virreinal mexicano, centrándonos en la figura de Francisco de Zurbarán, ya que el maestro extremeño fue uno de los pintores que más activamente participó en el comercio transatlántico ayudado por su fecundo obrador.
Throughout the Modern Age, the commercial activities that developed between the European and American continent constituted a series of economic benefits visible in several areas, including the arts. In this paper, we seek to analyze the reasons for the existence of the art market between Seville and New Spain during the first decades of the seventeenth century, as well as its consequences in Mexican Viceregal art. We will focus on the figure of Francisco de Zurbarán who, with the help of his fecund workshop, was one of the most active artists in the transatlantic market.
Throughout the Modern Age, the commercial activities that developed between the European and American continent constituted a series of economic benefits visible in several areas, including the arts. In this paper, we seek to analyze the reasons for the existence of the art market between Seville and New Spain during the first decades of the seventeenth century, as well as its consequences in Mexican Viceregal art. We will focus on the figure of Francisco de Zurbarán who, with the help of his fecund workshop, was one of the most active artists in the transatlantic market.




