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Peruvian retablo

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A retablo ayacuchano

A Peruvian retablo, in the context of Peruvian folk art, is a home altar with figures of saints or religious scenes, arranged on shelves inside a portable box altar, made to be shuttered closed with hinged doors to protect the content.

It is also called retablo ayacuchano in Spanish-language scholarship, referring to its origins in the Ayacucho region of the Central Peruvian highlands, though it is now manufactured in the peripheral departments or elsewhere in Peru.

Terminology

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The original Spanish word retablo (cognate of "retable") has a rather different meaning, and denotes some sort of structure to house and image behind the altar table, deriving from Latin retrotabulum.[1] Such a piece in a church is better termed and altarpiece if it features a panel painting, and reredos if consisting of sculptures or relief. But in the context of the folk art of the Americas, it carries a different meaning,[a][2] and "in Peruvian usage, has also come to mean a whole set of differentiated objects".[1]

Thus "Peruvian retablo" refers to a "portable altar",[3] populated with figures of saints or other people, animals, beings, and objects, and English-language literature mainly discuss the works of Peruvian-born émigrés based in the U.S. as their craftsmen.[3][4][5] However, the "retablo ayacuchano" is the shorthand used for this genre of artwork in Spanish-language literature.[6][7]

The product still being created into the 1940's was generically called San Marcos Box (cajón San Marcos), until collector and art trader Alicia Bustamante [es] decided to start calling them "retablo".[8][9][10]

Ignacio López Quispe (son of master Joaquín López Antay [es]), stated c. 1979 that the term sculptor (escultor) was still used as the term for the artist in Ayacucho, but he had been called one of the retableros in 1977, and later they came up with the term retabalista.[11]

Origins and history

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It is generally conceded that the retablo of this style originated in the Ayacucho region, more particularly around Ayacucho city and its Huamanga province, though artists in other parts of Peru now create them.[12] It has been dubbed by some as retablo ayacuchano.[4][13] but it is implicit the manufacture of a "retablo ayacuchano" could occur in the departments of Huancavelica (to the west), Apurímac (to the east), and parts of Arequipa (to the south).[13]

There are both church and indigenous traits in the artwork and composition (Christian good vs. evil and Andean three world or pachas concept), and ultimately can be traced back to both Spanish and pre-Columbian origins.[14] [15] The illa was a portable, sacred piece of rock (struck by lightning) which could crafted to hold offerings, and transported to the huaca.[16]

The precursors of the retablo ayacuchano bore such names as misa, demanda, missa mastay or cajón San Marcos ("St. Mark's box or drawer").[13] Although the "St. Mark's box" name has been used as shorthand to denote all the precursors,[13] the name used in Colonial times was the demanda, carried by itinerant priests and doctrineros.[17] The oldest examples contain cult idols carved on a piece of piedra de Huamanga [es] (type of alabaster), placed in an altar box,[7][18][b] or so it is contended. But images of the virgin molded from the fiber of maguey (agave) is known from the 17th century, made in the Southern end of Peru.[19] They would typically depict the Virgin, surrounded by the images of saints and smaller images of the Virgin in stages of her life; the altar would be no taller than three feet; the Christian missionary would pack an alter or two on an ass or a mule and go from place to place.[20] It is noted in this connection that in the age when loaded caravans of mules were the means of commerce between regions, Ayacucho served as the hub going from Lima to inland.[21]

The missionaries had abandoned using these altars by the end of the 18th century, and the props fell into the hands of people called the demanderos, but this came to be employed as cause for celebration, dance, drunkenness, which degenerated even to violence (though alms were being paid), and the municipality of Lima moved to revoke their permit.[7]

The cajón San Marcos apparently started in the 19th century might be considered the most immediate precursor of the modern retablo ayacuchano,[7] but then, cajón San Marcos still remains a popular crafted and merchandised genre of folk art to this day, while other crafts[c] have languished,[22] so scholars may refer to the Saint Mark's as a classic form of retablo (after Bustamante who put this use of the term retablo into practice).[9][8]

It was master maker Joaquín López Antay [es] whom Bustamante had discovered in the 1940s and helped groom the style incorporating European art influence,[23] and it is López Antay sometimes billed as the "father of retablo ayacuchano".[24] López is certainly the only one distinguished with the National Culture Award [es],[25][13] and one of three masters most discussed in literature, the others being Florentino Jiménez Toma (father of Nicario Jiménez Quispe, cf. section below) and Jesús Urbano Rojas [es].[13] Several members of the Jiménez family are engaged in the retablo-making trade, going back to Nicario's great-grandfather according to them.[4]

Description

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These Peruvian retablo are made portable, equipped with hinged doors to protect the contents.[4] Traditionally, the maguey (agave) was used as source material, its mashed pulp could be molded to make the figurines, and it could be split into planks from which the boxes were made.[26]

The modern retablo ayacuchano figures have been made of a paste made from mashed boiled potatoes, with plaster or gypsum powder added.[4][27] The use of wood for the outside box remained, but other materials, such as gypsum, clay, or a potato-gypsum-clay paste mix, were increasingly used for the figures because of their ease of handling and durability.

San Marcos Box

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A retablo with St. Mark, patron of animals

The classic retablos of St. Mark[d] (aka cajón San Marcos) mentioned above recognized the evangelist saint as a patron saint of sheep and cattle husbandry, thus closely associated with herding.[33] The retablo in the past days were crafted for the private ownership of herdsmen and merchants, and the box was placed in the presence of rituals involving farm animals.[21]

Other saints are associated with animals among scholars of Peruvian art: John the Baptist with sheep, Saint Agnes with goats, Saint Anthony with horses.[21] The saint featured in the center of the top level,[34] and whoever the specific saint was, the name cajón San Marcos was the common name that was used[35] (though St. Anthony's box could be a "sanantonio"[36]), that is until Bustamante decided to label them as retablos.[37] One old name for a San Marcos Box was misa, having to do with the Catholic mass,{But the name misa was confusing, since a mesa ritual (ritual table) would also be present in the rituals.[36]

It was the ritual of cattle branding (herranzas) and also the healing ceremony of the mountain god wamani that called for the presence of the San Marcos Box was would be placed.[38] The herranza ritual involves not just adorning the livestock's ear with colored ribbons, but clipping a piece of ear and the end of the tail and these would be placed on the ritual table near (underneath) the Box, until the buried as offerings to the deities, alongside chicha, coca, etc.[39]

There are typically two levels or floors on the San Marcos, and with the top level occupied by the saints, it frees the lower level to depict other scenes such as the herraza ritual.[36]

Daily life and identity

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Corn harvest

Later, retablos evolved to include daily scenes in the lives of the Andean people, such as harvests, processions, feasts, and tableaux depicting shops and homes.

In the period from 1940s onwards, retablistas began to introduce slice of life scenes and elements of the indigenous people of the Andean region. The works of this style being dubbed "retablos costumbristas" (after the costumbrismo school of artistic movement). The reason López Antay started making items that was as strictly traditional was that his clientele crave some sort of novelty on new themes while still demanding authenticity.[40]

The master maker Florentino Jiménez stated in retrospect in 2001 that he and sons were the first to start using reeds or canes to make the retablos, which were meant for quantity over quality, and also matchbox sized ones, but inserting the everyday scene paintings (cuadros costumbristas). These were copied by the others.[41]

Joaquín López Antay

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Joaquín López Antay is considered by some the first retablista,[42] the one of the preeminent masters, decorated with the Culture Prize in 1975, as aforementioned.[43][44]

López Antay's San Marco boxes (billed as "retablos"), would feature scenes incorporating indigenous culture, in what was part of the indigenista movement.[45] The artist incorporated such scenes as suggested by his clientele circle: the collector Bustamunte, her brother-in-law anthropologist-novelist José María Arguedas, and painter José Sabogal Diéguez who were strongly influencing and help shaping the emerging retablo style.[9][46] There is thus the image of marketplace-driven art.[47] Using Huancavelica jail as backdrop for a passion scene was purportedly suggested by the painter Sabogal,[9] but López himself recalls such piece as verbally requested by Bustamunte; the bullfight was another request; he also made threshing scenes, cockfighting, and tuna gathering scenes that entered her collection.[48]

As for the composition of López Antay's San Marco Box or retablo, the lower level could feature a wide range of scenery from the lives of the indigenous people, from animal herding, to crop harvest, dance, cockfight, etc.,[23] as already touched upon earlier. Further artistic analysis explains that in López Antay's new style, the left half was reserved for human suffering scenes dubbed the "passion" (pasión), and the right for happy scenes dubbed "reunion" (reunión).[49][9] In the analysis of a particular San Marco retablo by Arguedas, the passion half shows an indigenous peasant flogged by a mestizo overseer, and the "reunion" half people enjoying dance and music. The condor in the middle is symbolic of the indigenous people's resolve and spiritual invincibility despite the social difficulties.[50] The characterization from the opposite camp, critic Jürgen Golte[e], wrote that an indigenous emblem such as the condor representing wamani or mountain god (which Golte claims foreign buyers cared nothing about) was López Antay's way of asserting his own artistic expression in otherwise commission-ordered art.[52]

Jiménez family

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Nicario Jiménez Quispe in workshop

Florentino also credits his family for pioneering the giant-sized retablo, such as the one commemorating the Battle of Ayacucho in the Peruvian War of Independence.[53]

Story goes that Florentino Jiménez was making San Marcos on barter (or paltry sums) while residing in Alcamenca, Department of Ayacucho[f] and it wasn't until he moved to Huamanga (in 1968 or 1969[55]) that he learned the sanmarcos were being called retablos and being sold for real money.[54]

Florentino 's eldest son Nicario Jiménez was born 1957 in a village in Alcamenca, near Ayacucho city.[4] The artist has produced traditional pieces, but is known for innovative themes, such as cityscapes of New York or Miami.[4] He also features culturally iconic items familiar to Peruvians such as the coca leaf in a crucifix piece, or the pet and cuisine ingredient guinea pig (cuy) in a shaman retablo.[4] His Pishtaco (Pistaku) scenes, while part of traditional Peruvian lore, is not standard theme for a devotional retablo.[56][57]

Florentino 's third son Edilberto Jiménez[g] has produced an acclaimed work entitled Sueño de la mujer huamanguina en los ocho años de la violencia ("The Dream of the Woman from Huamanga in the eight years of violence", 1988).[59][60] Here, the woman's husband accused by soldiers of Shining Path involvement is attacked, jailed, killed, and the body is eaten by dogs; the overwatching Christian God and the mountain god sympathize and salvages his soul. Gold gleams in the mountain god's cavern, but under the sleeping mother and child the blood flows.[60] A replica of this work was commissioned in 2017 by the Museum of International Folk Art of Santa Fe, New Mexico.[32]

Comisión de la Verdad y Reconciliación

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On 29 August 2003, the Comisión de la Verdad y Reconciliación (CVR, Truth and Reconciliation Commission) announced its findings in the public square of Huamanga, Ayacucho. Of the 70,000 death toll in the bloodsheds, 40% were from the department of Ayacucho. A giant two-storey retablo with the doors flying open was built to serve as stage for this announcement.[h][62][58]

Other works by theme

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Adam and Eve

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Adam and Eve

There is a story of how a Catholic priest effectively used a retablo to hold the attention of his Indigenous audience. He began with a closed retablo, and told a long story about what was hidden inside: a naked man meets naked woman, the serpent, temptation, and punishment. Then he would open the box and reveal the figures, disclosing the story to be about Adam and Eve.[citation needed]

Yawar fiesta

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Yawar fiesta

This retablo shows a ceremony (“Yawar Fiesta”) involving a struggle between a bull (symbol of the Spanish) and a condor (symbol of the Andeans). The condor is tied to the back of the bull, who is infuriated and cannot rid itself of the condor, and eventually dies from exhaustion. The condor is then set free. It spreads its wings, and it becomes the symbol of the freedom of the Andean Indigenous peoples.

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See also

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Explanatory notes

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  1. ^ Thus retablo refers to painted panels in the art of New Mexico.[2] Whereas painted panels from Sarhua District, Ayacucho are referred to as Tablas de Sarhua [es]
  2. ^ Majluf & Wuffarden (1998), Fig. 193 is a Retablo de la Virgen, first half of 19th cent., maguey (agave) and paste
  3. ^ i.e., the alabaster carvings, silver filigrees, saddles.
  4. ^ Rendered variously as "San Marcos Box",[28] "San Marcos retablo"[29] sanmarco[s],[30] or "St. Mark's Box",[31] "St. Mark Box";[32]
  5. ^ Golte is an aficionado of Edilberto Jiménez, and the opinion comes from his own essay on Edilberto in his own co-edited anthology on Edilberto.
  6. ^ His eldest son Nicario born (1957) was a newborn infant when he made a distant trip on foot to Sacsamarca District where there was an affluent shepherding community, where he was able to (sell his sanmarcos and) gain a number of livestock. Nicolo fell sick and received a healing from a curandero.[54]
  7. ^ Hosono (2005) wrote that unlike his siblings, he does not constantly produce artwork, and insists on still residing in Ayacucho city.[58] But now he lives in Lima.[32]
  8. ^ The report blamed the Sindero Luminoso responsible for 46% of the deaths and disappearances, the Persian army 30%, and other factions (including MRTA) and reasons 24%.[61]

References

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  1. ^ a b Sordo (1995), p. 47, n7.
  2. ^ a b Padilla, Carmella (2004). "Retablos". In Wertkin, Gerard C. (ed.). Encyclopedia of American Folk Art. Routledge. p. 476. ISBN 9781135956158.
  3. ^ a b Underberg, Natalie M.; Zorn, Elayne (2013). Digital Ethnography: Anthropology, Narrative, and New Media. University of Texas Press. p. 1923. ISBN 9780292744356.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Congdon, Kristin G.; Hallmark, Kara Kelley (2012). "Nicario Jiménez". American Folk Art: A Regional Reference [2 volumes]. Vol. 1. Bloomsbury Publishing USA. pp. 219–221. ISBN 9780313349379.
  5. ^ Congdon, Kristin G.; Hallmark, Kara Kelley (2012). "Jeronimo E. Lozano". American Folk Art: A Regional Reference [2 volumes]. Vol. 2. Bloomsbury Publishing USA. pp. 610–. ISBN 9780313349379.
  6. ^ Fujii (1998).
  7. ^ a b c d Majluf & Wuffarden (1998), p. 140 or repr., Rivera Martínez (2004), p. 264
  8. ^ a b Ulfe (2011), p. 60.
  9. ^ a b c d e Strong (2012), p. 201.
  10. ^ Cf. Sordo (1995), p. 41: Ignacio López Quispe, "the retablo is an evolution of the sanmarcos" (after López Quispe as quoted in Sabogal Wiesse (1979), p. 43).
  11. ^ Ulfe (2011), p. 60, quoting Ignacio López Quispe, after Sabogal Wiesse (1979), p. 39).
  12. ^ Strong (2012), p. 203.
  13. ^ a b c d e f Fujii (1998), p. 161.
  14. ^ Strong (2012), pp. 196, 209–210.
  15. ^ Strong (2012), p. 196.
  16. ^ Strong (2012), pp. 195–196.
  17. ^ Majluf & Wuffarden (1998), p. 140.
  18. ^ Strong (2012), p. 3 glosses piedra de Huamanga as alabaster carvings, and on p. 212, states alabaster and stucco were used in early retablos.
  19. ^ Peruvian Altiplano, Strong (2012), p. 197, citing Phipps 2004, p. 261.
  20. ^ Strong (2012), p. 197, where she calls the altar retablo.
  21. ^ a b c d Fujii (2005), p. 220.
  22. ^ Fujii (1998), p. 163.
  23. ^ a b Strong (2012), pp. 200–201.
  24. ^ a b Zanelli, Marco (27 July 2021), Retablo ayacuchano: Orígenes, tradición y legado del arte andino, Radio Programas del Perú
  25. ^ Milton (2013), p. 111.
  26. ^ Strong (2012), pp. 196, 203, 206.
  27. ^ Originally only the kneaded boiled potato paste was used, and the plaster added later, according to Fujii.[21]
  28. ^ Strong (2012), p. 213.
  29. ^ Strong (2012), p. 203, 209.
  30. ^ Sordo (1995), p. 33.
  31. ^ Sherman, John W. (2023). Peru since Independence: A Concise Illustrated History, p. 29
  32. ^ a b c Groleau, Amy (Spring 2018). "Opening the Doors to Closure". El Palacio: The Magazine of the Museum of New Mexico.
  33. ^ Strong (2012), p. 200.
  34. ^ Ulfe (2014), p. 106.
  35. ^ Ulfe (2014), p. 6í also cited by Cabel García (2018), p. 112
  36. ^ a b c Ulfe (2011), p. 34.
  37. ^ Ulfe (2011), pp. 21, 34, 60, and Fig. 2.
  38. ^ Ulfe (2011), pp. 32, 34.
  39. ^ Flannery, Kent V.; Marcus, Joyce; Reynolds, Robert G. (2009) [1989]. "Chapter Two. Andean Nature". The Flocks of the Wamani: A Study of Llama Herders on the Punas of Ayacucho, Peru. Taylor&Francis. doi:10.4324/9781315418537. ISBN 978-1-138-40344-4.
  40. ^ Ulfe (2011), p. 62 under subsection "El mercado (the marketplace)", presumably based on Bustamante and her brother-in-law, novelist and ethnographer José María Arguedas and his analysis of 1958: Arguedas (1958), published the same year as his novel Deep Rivers (1958).}}
  41. ^ Florentino Jiménez (carrizo or "reed"), quoted by Ulfe (2011), pp. 62–63, and Ulfe (2011), p. 63. (caña, junco or "cane, read")
  42. ^ Ulfe (2014), p. 107.
  43. ^ Ulfe (2011), p. 19.
  44. ^ Cabel García (2018), p. 112.
  45. ^ Ulfe (2014), pp. 107–108.
  46. ^ Cabel García (2018), pp. 112–114.
  47. ^ Hence Ulfe (2011) 's discussion under "El mercado", p. 61–62
  48. ^ López, in interview by Razzeto, Mario (1982). Quoted in Ulfe (2011), pp. 57–58, Cabel García (2018), p. 113, excerpted RPP.[24]
  49. ^ This righ-left presentation may derive from the European style of presentation (perhaps like a diptych), probably influenced by Bustamante.
  50. ^ Strong (2012), p. 201 citing Arguedas (1958)
  51. ^ Golte, Jürgen (2012). "Los retablos de Edilberto Jiménez en el contexto de la imaginería huamanguina". In Golte, Jürgen; Pajuelo, Ramón (eds.). Universos de memoria : aproximación a los retablos de Edilberto Jiménez sobre la violencia política. Lima: Instituto de Estudios Peruanos. p. 23. JSTOR j.ctt9qdvdz.
  52. ^ Golte, p. 23[51] apud Cabel García (2018), p. 112
  53. ^ Ulfe (2011), p. 63.
  54. ^ a b Ulfe (2011), p. 95.
  55. ^ Ulfe (2011), p. 93.
  56. ^ Ulfe (2011), pp. 203–204.
  57. ^ Damian, Carol; Stein, Steve (2004). Popular Art and Social Change in the Retablos of Nicario Jiménez Quispe. Edwin Mellen Press. p. 57. ISBN 9780773462175.
  58. ^ a b Hosoya (2005), pp. 192–193.
  59. ^ Cabel García (2018), p. 117.
  60. ^ a b Hosoya (2005), p. 193.
  61. ^ Hosoya (2005), p. 191.
  62. ^ Ulfe (2011), pp. 26–27, Fig. 1; Fig. 3.1, Ulfe (2014), pp. 103–104, Fig. 3.1; Ulfe (2018), pp. 1782–1783

Bibliography

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  • Arguedas, José María (1958). "Notas elementales sobre el arte religios y la cultura mestiza". Revista deel Museo Nacional (in Spanish) (27): 140–194. reprinted in Arguedas, Formación de una cultura nacional indoamericana, pp. 148–172