This is a closer view of one of the gold lobsters in the Pre-Columiban Gold Museum in San Jose. This looks rather realistic, although the artist took some license, if we want to get nit picky in comparison to anatomical details. The front claws look small and the tail is large, but the skill and artistry is impressive, particularly for being more than 600 years old.
Rather than focusing on the details, I think the larger question is why did the artist decide to make a lobster. There are lots of more attractive animals to choose for a subject. Maybe he enjoyed the taste of lobster.
We have photos from a cruise up the east coast of Baja California in Mexico's Sea of Cortez posted this week on our Viva la Voyage travel photo site.
Showing posts with label Museums. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Museums. Show all posts
Tuesday, April 22, 2014
Monday, April 21, 2014
Jaguar Metates
Here are some more of the stone jaguar metates in the Pre-Columbian Gold Museum in San Jose.
These metates were not used for grinding corn, as they do not show signs of being used. Instead, they were funerary offerings buried with nobility between 500 B.C. and 500 A.D. They come from northwest Costa Rica, which is the province where Tamarindo is located.
The skillfulness of the artisans who carved these is indeed impressive. It is also interesting how ancient cultures incorporate animal designs into the most precious of objects, as metates buried with nobility must have been.
We have photos from a cruise up the east coast of Baja California in Mexico's Sea of Cortez posted this week on our Viva la Voyage travel photo site.
These metates were not used for grinding corn, as they do not show signs of being used. Instead, they were funerary offerings buried with nobility between 500 B.C. and 500 A.D. They come from northwest Costa Rica, which is the province where Tamarindo is located.
The skillfulness of the artisans who carved these is indeed impressive. It is also interesting how ancient cultures incorporate animal designs into the most precious of objects, as metates buried with nobility must have been.
We have photos from a cruise up the east coast of Baja California in Mexico's Sea of Cortez posted this week on our Viva la Voyage travel photo site.
Labels:
Art and culture,
Museums,
San Jose
Saturday, April 19, 2014
Gold Monkey
After showing a pre-Columbian gold frog, lizard, bat, and lobsters, it should not be a surprise that the indigenous culture produced gold monkeys as well.
I assume that the monkeys interacted with the Native Americans even more than they do with modern people, as the pre-Columbian cultures certainly lived in closer proximity to wildlife than modern people.
This week we have photos from the Galapagos posted on our Viva la Voyage travel photo site.
I assume that the monkeys interacted with the Native Americans even more than they do with modern people, as the pre-Columbian cultures certainly lived in closer proximity to wildlife than modern people.
This week we have photos from the Galapagos posted on our Viva la Voyage travel photo site.
Friday, April 18, 2014
Gold Butterfly
Butterflies are abundant in Costa Rica, many of them large and colorful. The indigenous cultures centuries ago evidently admired the butterflies as well, as reflected by this specimens in the Pre-Columbian Gold Museum in San Jose.
This week we have photos from the Galapagos posted on our Viva la Voyage travel photo site.
This week we have photos from the Galapagos posted on our Viva la Voyage travel photo site.
Thursday, April 17, 2014
Gold Lobster Designs
These gold objects in the Pre-Columbian Gold Museum all have a lobster motif. This is consistent with the location of the culture on the Nicoya Peninsula of northwest Costa Rica.
We continue to have lobster in the area today. In fact, the beach where one of our two condos is located is Playa Langosta, which translates as Lobster Beach. We occasionally see local fisherman with a few lobsters, and some of the local restaurants have local lobsters on the menu. It appears that the native Americans enjoyed lobsters 1,000 years ago as much as we do today.
This week we have photos from the Galapagos posted on our Viva la Voyage travel photo site.
We continue to have lobster in the area today. In fact, the beach where one of our two condos is located is Playa Langosta, which translates as Lobster Beach. We occasionally see local fisherman with a few lobsters, and some of the local restaurants have local lobsters on the menu. It appears that the native Americans enjoyed lobsters 1,000 years ago as much as we do today.
This week we have photos from the Galapagos posted on our Viva la Voyage travel photo site.
Wednesday, April 16, 2014
Jaguar Vase
This is another of the pre-Columbian ceramics in the Pre-Columbian Gold Museum. This is a tripod vase with a jaguar motif. The creativity and skill of the indigenous culture is indeed impressive. Most of the ceramics on display in the museum came from the Nicoya peninsula in northwest Costa Rica, where Tamarindo is located.
This week we have photos from the Galapagos posted on our Viva la Voyage travel photo site.
This week we have photos from the Galapagos posted on our Viva la Voyage travel photo site.
Tuesday, April 15, 2014
Gold Bat
I don't know what thought process or dialogue went into the selection process for animal subjects of pre-Columbian gold objects. I would not think that bats would be high on the list, but this bat looks rather friendly. In fact, his face looks almost cartoonish.
This week we have photos from the Galapagos posted on our Viva la Voyage travel photo site.
This week we have photos from the Galapagos posted on our Viva la Voyage travel photo site.
Monday, April 14, 2014
Gold Lizard
A few days ago I showed a gold frog from the Pre-Columbian Gold Museum. This is a gold lizard, or perhaps it is an iguana.
I guess it should not be a surprise that they would make gold jewelry in the shape of the animals around them. Can you guess what other animals they might have used as subjects for their art? I will show some additional examples in the days ahead.
This week we have photos from the Galapagos posted on our Viva la Voyage travel photo site.
I guess it should not be a surprise that they would make gold jewelry in the shape of the animals around them. Can you guess what other animals they might have used as subjects for their art? I will show some additional examples in the days ahead.
This week we have photos from the Galapagos posted on our Viva la Voyage travel photo site.
Labels:
Art and culture,
Museums,
San Jose
Saturday, April 12, 2014
Gold Jewelry
This exhibit in the Pre-Columbian Gold Museum showed how and where some of the items of gold jewelry were worn, such as the necklace that I showed yesterday. For people who must have been challenged just to meet the basic necessities of life, they evidently prized jewelry and adornment.
This week we have photos of the Trinity College Library in Dublin, Ireland posted on our Viva la Voyage travel photo site.
This week we have photos of the Trinity College Library in Dublin, Ireland posted on our Viva la Voyage travel photo site.
Labels:
Art and culture,
Museums,
San Jose
Friday, April 11, 2014
Gold Necklace
This is a gold necklace in the San Jose Pre-Columbian Gold Museum. The second object must also have been something that the native Americans wore, but I am not sure exactly what it is.
This week we have photos of the Trinity College Library in Dublin, Ireland posted on our Viva la Voyage travel photo site.
This week we have photos of the Trinity College Library in Dublin, Ireland posted on our Viva la Voyage travel photo site.
Thursday, April 10, 2014
Pre-Columbian Gold Frog
This is a gold frog in the Pre-Columbian Gold Museum. One of the things that amazed me about the museum's collection, in addition to the skill and artistry of those who created the items, was how the artists were inspired by the animals of Costa Rica.
People come to Costa Rica today because of the popularity of ecotourism and the wildlife and natural beauty of Costa Rica. The pre-Columbian cultures also admired the wildlife.
This week we have photos of the Trinity College Library in Dublin, Ireland posted on our Viva la Voyage travel photo site.
People come to Costa Rica today because of the popularity of ecotourism and the wildlife and natural beauty of Costa Rica. The pre-Columbian cultures also admired the wildlife.
This week we have photos of the Trinity College Library in Dublin, Ireland posted on our Viva la Voyage travel photo site.
Wednesday, April 9, 2014
Jaguar Metate
I have seen several Costa Rican jaguar metates before in museums in the USA, so I was very interested to see this one in the Gold Museum in San Jose. These are from the time period of 1,000 A.D. - 1350 A.D.
This week we have photos of the Trinity College Library in Dublin, Ireland posted on our Viva la Voyage travel photo site.
This week we have photos of the Trinity College Library in Dublin, Ireland posted on our Viva la Voyage travel photo site.
Labels:
Art and culture,
Museums,
San Jose
Tuesday, April 8, 2014
Gold Anthropomorphic Figure
Just inside the door to the Pre-Columbian Gold Museum was this spectacular part human-part animal figure.
One curious aspect of the very impressive and extensive collection of pre-Columbian gold is the source of the gold. Costa Rica did not have gold mining. Columbus named Costa Rica the "rich coast" because the Native Americans who greeted him there appeared rich because of their gold. But the gold came from elsewhere.
After the Spanish realized that Costa Rica did not have gold or silver, they largely ignored it, but they did send indigenous Costa Ricans to Peru to work as slaves in the silver mines. Costa Rica is the only country in Latin America without a liberator. It never had a struggle for liberation. When Spain granted independence to Nicaragua, it abandoned its sovereignty over Costa Rica as well.
This week we have photos of the Trinity College Library in Dublin, Ireland posted on our Viva la Voyage travel photo site.
One curious aspect of the very impressive and extensive collection of pre-Columbian gold is the source of the gold. Costa Rica did not have gold mining. Columbus named Costa Rica the "rich coast" because the Native Americans who greeted him there appeared rich because of their gold. But the gold came from elsewhere.
After the Spanish realized that Costa Rica did not have gold or silver, they largely ignored it, but they did send indigenous Costa Ricans to Peru to work as slaves in the silver mines. Costa Rica is the only country in Latin America without a liberator. It never had a struggle for liberation. When Spain granted independence to Nicaragua, it abandoned its sovereignty over Costa Rica as well.
This week we have photos of the Trinity College Library in Dublin, Ireland posted on our Viva la Voyage travel photo site.
Monday, April 7, 2014
Entrance to Pre-Columbian Gold Museum
Inside the large underground art museum was a vault-like door that is the entrance to the Pre-Columbian Gold Museum. It is a museum within a museum.
Maybe the underground location of the museum, besides creating space for a plaza above ground, was also considered a good design for security reasons. Art thieves can't break in or out of windows if there are no windows.
I will show photos of the collection beginning tomorrow.
This week we have photos of the Trinity College Library in Dublin, Ireland posted on our Viva la Voyage travel photo site.
Maybe the underground location of the museum, besides creating space for a plaza above ground, was also considered a good design for security reasons. Art thieves can't break in or out of windows if there are no windows.
I will show photos of the collection beginning tomorrow.
This week we have photos of the Trinity College Library in Dublin, Ireland posted on our Viva la Voyage travel photo site.
Sunday, April 6, 2014
Art of Lola Fernandez
When we visited the museum, they had an exhibition featuring the art of Lola Fernandez. She was born in Cartagena, Columbia, in 1926, but her family moved to Costa Rica within her first few years.
The big, bold figures in the paintings in this photo are typical of her style. She was featured in exhibitions in Costa Rica as well as elsewhere in Latin America, the U.S., Europe and Japan in the 1980's and 1990's. She continued painting into the 21st Century.
Costa Rica's High Ranking on international Social Progress Index. The Tico Times newspaper has an article about Costa Rica ranking number 1 in Latin America and 25 of 132 countries ranked on a Social Progress Index that measures fulfillment of basic human needs, such as medical care, education, nutrition, clean water, personal safety, human rights, tolerance, etc. Its ranking was comparable to Italy and Spain, even though those countries had higher economic output per person. The USA ranked number 16. New Zealand was first. Costa Rica's ranking was due in part to especially high rankings in nutrition, water, sanitation and opportunity.
Today is Sunday, so we have new photos posted on our Viva la Voyage travel photo site. This week we are showing photos of the Trinity College Library in Dublin, Ireland.
The big, bold figures in the paintings in this photo are typical of her style. She was featured in exhibitions in Costa Rica as well as elsewhere in Latin America, the U.S., Europe and Japan in the 1980's and 1990's. She continued painting into the 21st Century.
Costa Rica's High Ranking on international Social Progress Index. The Tico Times newspaper has an article about Costa Rica ranking number 1 in Latin America and 25 of 132 countries ranked on a Social Progress Index that measures fulfillment of basic human needs, such as medical care, education, nutrition, clean water, personal safety, human rights, tolerance, etc. Its ranking was comparable to Italy and Spain, even though those countries had higher economic output per person. The USA ranked number 16. New Zealand was first. Costa Rica's ranking was due in part to especially high rankings in nutrition, water, sanitation and opportunity.
Today is Sunday, so we have new photos posted on our Viva la Voyage travel photo site. This week we are showing photos of the Trinity College Library in Dublin, Ireland.
Labels:
Art and culture,
Museums,
San Jose
Saturday, April 5, 2014
Museum Staircase
An underground museum does not have architecture that is visible from the outside, but it does have interior architecture.
The central staircase in San Jose's underground museum complex has a broad spiral staircase. Perhaps the architect was inspired by /frank Lloyd Wright's design of the Guggenheim Museum in New York.
I will show some photos of parts of the collection in the days ahead.
This week we are showing photos of the Sydney Opera House on our Viva la Voyage travel photo site.
The central staircase in San Jose's underground museum complex has a broad spiral staircase. Perhaps the architect was inspired by /frank Lloyd Wright's design of the Guggenheim Museum in New York.
I will show some photos of parts of the collection in the days ahead.
This week we are showing photos of the Sydney Opera House on our Viva la Voyage travel photo site.
Friday, April 4, 2014
Inside the Art Museum
I wasn't sure how I would feel about an art museum entirely underground, but the Costa Rican art museum was spacious enough that it did not feel claustrophobic.
I suppose the underground museum has the benefit that there would not be sunlight that could fade the art work.
This week we are showing photos of the Sydney Opera House on our Viva la Voyage travel photo site.
I suppose the underground museum has the benefit that there would not be sunlight that could fade the art work.
This week we are showing photos of the Sydney Opera House on our Viva la Voyage travel photo site.
Thursday, April 3, 2014
Entrance to the Museums of (1) Pre-Columbian Gold, (2) Art, and (3) Coins
Under the plaza next to the National Theater are three museums. This is the entrance, but the museums are entirely underground.
There is a Pre-Columbian Gold Museum, whose collection is broader than gold, an Art Museum, and a Coin Museum. We visited the
Gold Museum and the Art Museum, and I will show some photos from them during the coming weeks.
This week we are showing photos of the Sydney Opera House on our Viva la Voyage travel photo site.
There is a Pre-Columbian Gold Museum, whose collection is broader than gold, an Art Museum, and a Coin Museum. We visited the
Gold Museum and the Art Museum, and I will show some photos from them during the coming weeks.
This week we are showing photos of the Sydney Opera House on our Viva la Voyage travel photo site.
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