Art of the AmericasAfter 1300
Map of Latin America.
Map of Mesoamerica. (source)
------------- Image1 ------------- Field Data Collection Digital Media Collection Work Record ID img006542 Work Type document Rights Statement NSVR Title The Founding of Tenochtitlan, Codex Mendoza Display Measurement 21.5 x 31. 5cm Material ink and color on paper Source Stokstad 2nd Ed. Description created for Spanish administrators prepared for Spanish viceroy, sacred ceremonial precinct Display Date 16th Century Repository Oxford, England, Bodleian Library, Oxford University ID Number 23-2 Culture Aztec Subject ceremony Image ID 5003048 Resolution Size 6 Format JP2 Media Type Image File Name 23_2.jp2 Width 2188 Height 3112
The Founding of Tenochtitlan, page from the Codex Mendoza, Aztec, 16th Century, Ink and color on paper, 12 3/8” x 8 7/16”. ( source)
------------- Image1 ------------- Field Data Collection Digital Media Collection Work Record ID img006542 Work Type document Rights Statement NSVR Title The Founding of Tenochtitlan, Codex Mendoza Display Measurement 21.5 x 31. 5cm Material ink and color on paper Source Stokstad 2nd Ed. Description created for Spanish administrators prepared for Spanish viceroy, sacred ceremonial precinct Display Date 16th Century Repository Oxford, England, Bodleian Library, Oxford University ID Number 23-2 Culture Aztec Subject ceremony Image ID 5003048 Resolution Size 6 Format JP2 Media Type Image File Name 23_2.jp2 Width 2188 Height 3112
Tenochtitlan: Hernan Cortes's map of the city, 1524. (top, source; bottom, source)The Founding of Tenochtitlan.
Coyolxauhqui, 15th Century CE, diameter 3.5m. (source)
The Goddess Coatlicue, 1487–1520 CE,Basalt, height 8’ 6”. (source)
Diagram: front, side, and back views of Coatlicue. (source)
Coyolxauhqui.
Colossal Head of Coyolxauhqui.Green porphyry. 29 ½ x 32 5/8 x
21 5/8”. (source)
Double-Headed Serpent, 15th–16th Century CE, Turquoise, wood, oyster and conch shell, 20.5 x 43.3 x 6.5 cm. (source)
Colonial Trade Routes. (source)
Vase, Puebla, Mexico, 18th century CE, Tin-glazed earthenware with cobalt. (
source)The Founding of
Tenochtitlan.
Francisco Laso, Inhabitant of the Cordillera, 1855, Oil on canvas,53 ¼ x 33 7/8”. (source)
Laso, Portrait of Gonzalo Pizarro, 1855, Oil on canvas, 76 x 85 cm. (source)Laso, Inhabitant of the Cordillera, 1855.
Juan CorderoColumbus Before the Catholic Monarchs
1850Juan Cordero, Columbus Before the Catholic Monarchs, 1850,Oil on canvas, 173 x 244 cm. (source)
Jacques-Louis David, The Coronation of Napoleon and Josephine, 1806-1807, Oil on canvas 621 x 979 cm. (source)
Cordero, Columbus Before the Catholic Monarchs, 1850.
Page from the Codex Mendoza, Aztec, 16th Century, Ink and color on paper, 12 3/8” x 8 7/16”. (source)
Diego Rivera, History of Mexico: Mexico Today and Tomorrow, National Palace, Mexico City, 1935, fresco, 749 x 885 cm. (source)
Frida Kahlo, My Birth, 1932, Oil on sheet metal, 12 ½ x 14.” (source)
Goddess Tlazolteotl in Childbirth,15th-16th Century CE. 7 ¼”. (source)
Guillermo Gómez-Peña, Enrique Chagoya, and Felicia Rice, Codex Espangliensis, 2001, ink on amatl paper. (source; View the Book)