two images of renaissance art in color and black and white

Blanton Museum of Art: Inventiveness and Invention in Spanish Colonial Art

For:

Student, Faculty, Staff, Alumni

Date:

-

Location:

Zoom

Register

The act of copying may have connotations of a lack of originality. Visual artists, however, know that it is the best path to master technique and find unique inspiration. Join the Blanton Museum of Art for a lively conversation about the use of European engravings as one of many fundamental sources of the art of the Spanish Americas, and the ways local artists enhanced their own inventiveness through this practice, allowing for a robust exchange between different generations of painters and their publics both in Mexico and Peru.

Speakers: Almerindo E. Ojeda, founding director of the Project for the Engraved Sources of Spanish Colonial Art (PESSCA) and Professor Emeritus (in Linguistics), University of California at Davis and Aaron M. Hyman, assistant professor, Department of the History of Art, Johns Hopkins University.

Moderator: Rosario I. Granados, Marilynn Thoma Associate Curator, Art of the Spanish Americas, Blanton Museum of Art, The University of Texas at Austin

 

a graphic of international education week, nov. 16-20