Albuquerque Journal

NEW WORLD DEVOTION

‘Art of Devotion’ showcases works from former Spanish, Portuguese colonies

- BY KATHALEEN ROBERTS ASSISTANT ARTS EDITOR

SF gallery shows religious works by colonial masters

‘Art of Devotion’ showcases religious works from former colonies

SANTA FE — Artists have sought to capture the divine since the first painter put brush to petroglyph.

Spanish Colonial Viceregal paintings capture a sense of the sacred, transformi­ng transcende­nce into the fabric of everyday life.

Santa Fe’s Peyton Wright Gallery will showcase that radiance with its 24th annual Art of Devotion — Historic Art of the Americas exhibition. This collection of 17th to 19th century Spanish Colonial Viceregal artwork features paintings, furniture, silver and objects from the former Spanish and Portuguese colonies, including Bolivia, Peru, Argentina, Mexico, Ecuador, Chile, Venezuela, Brazil, Guatemala and the Philippine­s.

Much of this year’s collection came from a four-generation Santa Fe estate, gallery owner John Wright Schaefer said.

“These are cataloged and collected 17th century painters, all top-tier, and the provenance is as immaculate as their condition,” he said.

Miguel Mateo Maldonado y Cabrera’s “La Virgen Dolorosa,” circa 1750, arguably is star of the show. The

painting by the Mexican master has been donated to the Museum of Spanish Colonial Art.

During his lifetime, Cabrera was recognized as the greatest painter in all of New Spain. He created religious and secular art for the Catholic Church and wealthy patrons. His casta paintings, depicting interracia­l marriage among Indians, Spaniards and Africans, are considered the genre’s finest.

A cartouche marks the compositio­n’s lower left corner, indicating it was painted for someone of standing in either the church or Mexican political life.

“In typical Cabreran fashion, it is beautifull­y and exquisitel­y painted with the subtexts and nuance he’s known for,” Wright Schaefer said. “His elegant and understate­d palette is very much in keeping with the European tradition.”

Antonio de Torres’ “Madre Dolorosa,” 1718, is another version of the same “Our Lady of Sorrows.”

Torres was one of Mexico’s leading painters of the early 18th century. He created an extraordin­ary number of works for the wealthy mining towns of San Luis Potosí and Zacatecas, in northcentr­al Mexico.

“This was an informed collector who had an educated eye and acquired quality work when it was available,” Wright Schaefer said.

A 1752 duet by Jose de Ibarra depicts Mary with her parents, Santa Ana and Joachim. Many of Ibarra’s pieces are preserved in Mexican museums and the Metropolit­an Cathedral in Mexico City. He was one of the most prolific painters of his day, producing mainly religious paintings for the cathedrals of Mexico.

“Like Cabrera, he was known for his gestural paintings of the human form,” Wright Schaefer said.

A Peruvian painting of “The Annunciati­on,” circa 1750, on fine linen was almost certainly created by an indigenous artist.

“This is not a Spanish painter in Peru,” Wright Schaefer said. “The charm and whimsy and folkloric elements many institutio­ns find fascinatin­g. Some of the anatomical posing and the palette support that it is an indigenous painter.”

Its original gold overlay reveals it likely hung in a private chapel, he added.

For the Spanish colonists, devotion was a part of daily life. The devout never cloistered artwork in churches but kept it in private homes and chapels. From about 1520 to 1820, European religious orders sailed to the New World to evangelize the Natives. They brought thousands of liturgical prints to help communicat­e the lives of the Catholic saints. Local artists learned to reproduce European styles and motifs as they incorporat­ed their own materials, methods and subjects. The results grew into an artistic hybrid that remains unique in history.

Gallery owner Wright Schaefer launched the annual show with about a dozen works and a few hundred visitors. Today the event draws art lovers by the thousands, many of them from Albuquerqu­e.

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 ?? COURTESY THE MUSEUM OF SPANISH COLONIAL ART ?? Madre Dolorosa, 1718, Antonio de Torres, oil on canvas, Mexico.
COURTESY THE MUSEUM OF SPANISH COLONIAL ART Madre Dolorosa, 1718, Antonio de Torres, oil on canvas, Mexico.
 ??  ?? Santa Ana by Jose de Ibarra, 1752, oil on canvas, Mexico.
Santa Ana by Jose de Ibarra, 1752, oil on canvas, Mexico.
 ?? COURTESY THE MUSEUM OF SPANISH COLONIAL ART ?? The Annunciati­on, circa 1750, oil on canvas, Peru.
COURTESY THE MUSEUM OF SPANISH COLONIAL ART The Annunciati­on, circa 1750, oil on canvas, Peru.
 ??  ?? Joachim and Mary, 1752, Jose de Ibarra, oil on canvas, Mexico.
Joachim and Mary, 1752, Jose de Ibarra, oil on canvas, Mexico.

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