Historia y Sociedad (Jul 2018)

Artists and Artisans in Hispano-American Pre-Industrial Societies, 16th - 18th Centuries

  • Orián Jiménez Meneses,
  • Sonia Pérez Toledo,
  • Kris Lane

DOI
https://doi.org/10.15446/hys.n35.71995
Journal volume & issue
no. 35
pp. 11 – 29

Abstract

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Presentation made by the editor-director an the guest editors for issue 35. This article deals with the relations between craftwork, material culture and religious devotion in the Nuevo Reino de Granada; explains and defines the role that met the craftsmen at religious festivals and the elaboration of ephemeral art objects for civil parties. His dedication to his work as a “work of God” and the condition of cultural mediators allowed to perform different activities and build economic independence and commercial networks. Carpenters, tailors, silversmiths, blacksmiths, masons and barbers were indigenous shaping, since the second half of the seventeenth century, as a “middle class” with economic power and independence of the hegemonic social groups. The cofradía and the workshop would be the most effective way to build a subculture within the Hispanic world.

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