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TAMU ARTS 150 - Art in the Early Americas
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ARTS 150 1st Edition Lecture 24 Outline of Lecture 23 Conclusion of Japanese Art I Monorobu II Torii Kiyomasu III Suzuki Harunobu IV Utamaro V Hokusai VI Hiroshige The Early Americas VII The Founding of Tenochtitlan VIII Schematic View of the World Outline of Lecture 24 Aztecs I II Skull Rack Relief Sculpture of Dismembered Moon Goddess III IV V The Goddess Coatlicue The Aztec Calendars Feather Headdress of Moctezuma II Inca VI VII VIII IX X XI XII XIII XIV XV XVI XVII XVIII Machu Picchu Temple of the Sun Intihuatana Inca Masonry Terraces for Agriculture Llama Statuette Woven Tunic Native American Art Wampum Belt William Penn s Treaty with the Delaware Tribe Baby Carrier Shoulder Bag Blackfoot Woman Raising Tipi Battle Scene Current Lecture Aztecs Skull Rack Stacked the skulls up in a way of keeping track of how many sacrifices given These notes represent a detailed interpretation of the professor s lecture GradeBuddy is best used as a supplement to your own notes not as a substitute Relief Sculpture of Dismembered Moon Goddess Very good at the relief sculpture To explain the phases of the moon Aztecs said that the moon goddess was being dismembered Snakes were a symbol of regeneration The Goddess Coatlicue The Aztec Calendars Sacred calendar when to make sacrifices 260 days Solar calendar 360 days Predict when the world will next end Feather Headdress of Moctezuma II Made from the green iridescent tail feathers of the quezotil bird Inca Machu Picchu Undiscovered by the Spanish because it had already been abandoned when they arrived The history of the city is a mystery Theories fortress summer retreat religious purposes Temple of the Sun Thought to be a temple due to large altar like stone Intihuatana hitching post of the Sun Inca Masonry Ashlar masonry at its finest Not even a piece of paper could fit between the rocks All rocks were very irregular Terraces for Agriculture Spanish brings back new agricultural products Llama Statuette There for silver and gold Melted down the art for the metal Woven Tunic Could tell a person s lineage from their tunic Native American Art Eastern Woodlands Great Plains Northwest Coast Southwest Wampum white and purple beads made from shells Wampum Belt William Penn s Treaty with the Delaware Tribe Eastern Woodlands Baby Carrier Eastern Sioux Eastern Woodlands buckskin and porcupine quill Shoulder Bag Delaware Tribe Eastern Woodlands Shows the use of glass and metal beads that were imported from Europe Blackfoot Woman Raising Tipi Great Plains culture changed as the result of the introduction of horses Buffalos were used for everything Hides clothing tipi cover leather Bones tools Meat food Battle Scene Buffalo hide Great Plains collected by Lewis and Clark Used for oral storytelling and warmth


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TAMU ARTS 150 - Art in the Early Americas

Type: Lecture Note
Pages: 3
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