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Maya Art Reinterpreted: A Brilliant Civilization Comes to Life
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11584 |
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Section : |
THE ARTS
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| Issue
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9 / 1986 |
2,201 Words |
| Author
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Louise Sheldon Louise Sheldon is a free-lance writer on the arts living in
Washington, D.C. A former associate editor of Smithsonian and
an assistant editor of Life, she has written on various
aspects of Russian culture. |
In art and architecture, the ancient Maya rival the Egyptians and the Chinese, yet until recently the culture of this Central American people remained unknown to us. Major breakthroughs in the reading of Maya hieroglyphics now give details of the lives of actual people that shatter beliefs long held by archeologists.
A unique exhibit of supreme esthetic quality, The Blood of Kings, A New Interpretation of Maya Art, has been mounted by the Kimbell Art Museum of Fort Worth, Texas. These works of art, on loan from major European and American collections, not only prove the quality of mind and artistic achievement of an advanced society; they also tell us a new and different story.
The accepted myth of a benign elite of star-gazing priests who ruled an agrarian society, never thirsting for personal glory, has been exploded by a series of new findings. Ancient Maya settlements were not peaceful theocracies as previously claimed, but rival city states engaged in constant warfare. Not priests, but powerful kings ruled among a high caste of nobles, who engaged in blood-letting rites and took captives, whom they ritually murdered after subjecting them to debasing forms of torture.
Yet in their Classic Period (circa A.D. 200-900) the Maya created one of the most brilliant civilizations that ever exited. In writing, jade carving, stone sculpture, ceramic figurines, and pottery, they display extraordinary artistic skills for a people who must necessarily be classified as of the Stone Age; the Maya did not use metals.
They did have a functional written
... (1992 of 13203 Characters)
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