LTS 376
Download as PDF
The Art of Mestizaje
Department(s)
Course Description
This course analyzes how artists articulated the idea of mestizaje (racial and ethnic mixing) in Mexico and the U.S from the 16th to the 21th century. This course is divided into three sections: in the first section, students will study the genesis and evolution of racial taxonomies in the viceroyalty of New Spain. This section will teach the students the conceptual history of the idea of mestizaje and its political implications. In the second section, students will examine how diverse artists and political institutions portray the idea of mestizaje creating the genre of Casta paintings. Casta paintings are one of the most important artistic expressions of the Spanish Catholic Empire. In the third section, the students will analyze how governmental and nongovernmental corporations developed the Mexican muralism artistic movement, and also how U.S Latinx artists reinterpreted the muralist conceptualization of mestizaje in the 20th and 21st Century. Particularly, the course will emphasize the artworks of Diego Rivera in Mexico City and Detroit, and the artworks of Sandra de la Loza, and Emilio Aguayo.
Course Typically Offered
Offered occasionally.
Career
Undergraduate
Catalog Course Attributes
AUDT - NO (Cannot be audited.), CO24 - ARTHUM (Artistic and Humanistic), CORE - AR (Artistic Approaches), INTD - HUM-EMPIRE (Intd Humanities-Empire IHE), INTD - LS (Latina/o Studies Minor LS), INTD - SP-LTS (Span-Latina/o Study Major SPAN), INTD - SPAN-HISP (Spanish-Hisp Int'l Std Major), LANG - SPAN (Taught in Spanish)
Min Units
1
Max Units
1
Name
Lecture
Optional Component
No
Final Exam Type
Yes