Member Previews—We Live in Painting: The Nature of Color in Mesoamerican Art
- Fri, Sep 13, 2024
- 11 am - 8 pm PT
- Resnick Pavilion | LACMA
-
LACMA members only
Mesoamerican artists held a cosmic responsibility: as they adorned the surfaces of buildings, clay vessels, textiles, bark-paper pages, and sculptures with color, they (quite literally) made the world. The power of color emerged from the materiality of its pigments, the skilled hands that crafted it, and the communities whose knowledge imbued it with meaning. Color mapped the very order of the cosmos, of time and space. By engineering and deploying color, artists wielded the power of cosmic creation in their hands.
We Live in Painting: The Nature of Color in Mesoamerican Art explores the science, art, and cosmology of color in Mesoamerica. Histories of colonialism and industrialization in the “color-averse” West have minimized the deep significance of color in the Indigenous Americas. This exhibition follows two interconnected lines of inquiry—technical and material analyses, and Indigenous conceptions of art and image—to reach the full richness of color at the core of Mesoamerican worldviews.
Access to Member Previews is a benefit of membership and as such is restricted to LACMA members only. Children accompanied by LACMA members are welcome in Member Preview galleries, but please note that discounted guest tickets purchased by members do not grant guests admission to Member Preview galleries.
Image: Pendant, Mexico, Oaxaca, 1100–1520, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, The Phil Berg Collection, photo © Museum Associates/LACMA
Image: Pendant, Mexico, Oaxaca, 1100–1520, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, The Phil Berg Collection, photo © Museum Associates/LACMA