

An edition of Colors Between Two Worlds (2012)
The Florentine Codex of Bernardino de Sahagún
By Gerhard Wolf,Joseph Connors,Louis A. Waldman
Publish Date
Mar 19, 2012
Publisher
Villa I Tatti
Language
eng
Pages
506
Description:
For half a century the Franciscan friar Bernardino de Sahagún (1499–1590), often described as the first anthropologist of the New World, worked with his indigenous colleagues at the Collegio Imperial at Tlatelolco (now Mexico City) on an encyclopedic compendium of the beliefs, rituals, language, arts, and economy of the vanishing culture of the Aztecs. Colors Between Two Worlds examines the most richly illustrated manuscript of this great ethnographic work, the Florentine Codex, which is in the collection of the Biblioteca Medicea Laurenziana in Florence, through the issue of color. The Codex reveals how the colors the Aztecs used in their artistic production and in everyday life, as well as the names they gave each color, illuminate their understanding of the world around them, from the weather to the curing of disease. The pigments and dyes that indigenous artists used to illustrate the Codex reflect a larger dialogue between native and European cultures, which the Florentine Codex records more fully than any surviving document from colonial New Spain.
subjects: Human ecology, Symbolism of colors, Bernardino, de sahagun, 1499-1590, Aztecs, Mexico, history, Congresses, Illumination of books and manuscripts, Pigments, History, Plants in art, Flowers in art, Indians of Mexico, Antiquities, Natural history, Color, Mexican Illumination of books and manuscripts, Códice florentino