88
FIG. 19 (below):
Andrés Sánchez Galque
(Andean, active Quito,
c. 1599), portrait of Don
Francisco de Arobe and his
sons Don Pedro and Don
Domingo, AD 1599.
Oil on canvas.
Unframed: 92 x 175 cm.
Museo del Prado, inv. PO4778.
Evans, Susan Toby. 2000. “Aztec Royal Pleasure Parks:
Conspicuous Consumption and Elite Status Rivalry.” Studies
in the History of Gardens and Designed Landscapes 20, pp.
206–28.
Hirth, Kenneth, and Joanne Pillsbury, eds. 2013. Merchants,
Markets, and Exchange in the Pre-Columbian World.
Washington, DC: Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and
Collection.
Hosler, Dorothy. 1994. The Sounds and Colors of Power: The
Sacred Metallurgical Technology of Ancient West Mexico.
Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press.
Johnson, Carina L. 2011. Cultural Hierarchy in Sixteenth-
Century Europe: The Ottomans and Mexicans. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press.
Lechtman, Heather. 1980. “The Central Andes: Metallurgy
without Iron.” In The Coming of Age of Iron, edited by T.
no. 4 (1996): 313–340.
Quilter, Jeffrey. 2011. “The Shining Dawn of American Gold:
Metallurgy in Ancient America.” In To Capture the Sun: Gold
of Ancient Panama, edited by Richard G. Cooke et al. Tulsa,
OK: Gilcrease Museum, pp. 44–77.
Rehren, Thilo, and Matilde Temme. 1994. “Pre-Columbian
Gold Processing at Putushio, South Ecuador: The Archaeo-
Metallurgical Evidence.” In Archaeometry of Pre-Columbian
Sites and Artifacts, edited by David A. Scott and Pieter
Meyers. Los Angeles, CA: The Getty Conservation Institute,
pp. 267–284.
Roberts, Benjamin W., and Christopher Thornton, eds. 2014.
Archaeometallurgy in Global Perspective. New York: Springer.
Sarmiento de Gamboa, Pedro. (1572) 2007. The History of
the Incas. Translated and edited by Brian S. Bauer and Vania
Smith. Austin: University of Texas Press.
FIG. 20 (right):
Mosaic shield.
Mixtec (Ñudzavui), Acatlán,
Puebla, Mexico.
AD 1400–1521.
Turquoise, wood, stone, tree pitch/
gum. D: 32.5 cm.
National Museum of the American
Indian, Smithsonian Institution,
Washington, D.C., inv. 108708.000.
ART ON VIEW
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