Hailed as the finest museum of anthropology and archaeology in the Western Hemisphere, the National Museum of Anthropology in Mexico City houses the world's most impressive collection of pre-Columbian Mexican art,including sculpture, painting and pottery.
Hailed as the finest museum of anthropology and archaeology in the Western Hemisphere, the National Museum of Anthropology in Mexico City houses the world"s most impressive collection of pre-Columbian Mexican art,including sculpture, painting and pottery. Since its founding in 1964, the museum has been dedicated to the study and display of existing artifacts;in recent years, it has led the field in using progressive technology such as digitized satellite imagery and CT-scanning to explore previously unstudied sites and open newwindows of understanding in archaeology. In the past ten years alone, the National Museum of Anthropology has sponsored the exploration of fourteen new archaeological zones, revealing dues and treasures that contribute considerably to knowledge of the respective regions and their importance during their historical peak. At once a reflection of and an influence on Mexico"s national identity;, the work of the Museum has fostered the development of a unified Mexican identity from an ancient heritage of diverse indigenous populations.
Published to celebrate the fortieth anniversary of the museum"s founding,this elegant and authoritative volume explores both the museum"s collection and its role as a national cultural institution. Included among the 450 illustrations, many of them new photographs taken especially for this book,are pre- Columbian masterpieces such as Mixtec gold pendants worn to evoke the souls of fallen warriors, two-headed clay figurines associated with the Mesoamerican concept of the duality of life, utilitarian vessels carved from obsidian in the form of indigenous animals and intricate jade masks placed in burial sites. An array of curators and scholars contribute essays on the Mexica(Aztec), Maya and Toltec peoples; clues about life in the ancient Toltec metropolis of Tula and in nearby Teotihuacan; the contemporary ethnography of Mexico to and the historical background of the site, construction and architecture of the museum itself. This landmark publication is both an introduction to and a complete documentation of one of the world"s great museums.
FLOWING WITH HISTORY FORTY YEARS OF THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF ANTHROPOLOGY
THE RISE OF CRADLES OF CIVILIZATION
THE MUSEUM FORTY YEARS AGO
ADVENTURES AND MISADVENTURES OF
THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF ANTHROPOLOGY"S COLLECTIONS
ARCHAEOLOGY
1964-2004 FOUR DECADES OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL RESEARCH
ORIGINS
PRECLASSIC
TEOT1HUACAN
TOLTECS
MEXlCAS
OAXACA
GULF COAST OF MEXICO
MAYAS
WEST MEXICO
NORTHERN MEXICO
ETHNOGRAPHY
ETHNOGRAPHIC SONATA IN NO FLAT
MEXICO"S INDIGENOUS GROUPS
EL GRAN NAYAR CORAS AND HUICHOLS
OTOPAMEAN GROUPS
THE SIERRA DE PUEBLA
THE GULF OF MEXICO
MAYA PEOPLES
PUREPECHAS
OAXACA
NAHUAS
NORTHWESTERN MEXICO
CONTEMPORARY ART IN THE MUSEUM
BIBLIOGRAPHY
CREDITS AND ACKNOWLEDGMENTS