Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Dualism in Andean Art

Pectoral, 10th–5th century B.C.Peru;
Chavín
Gold


Pair of Bowls, Trophy-Head Deities, 3rd–1st centuryB.C.Peru, ParacasCeramic, postfired paint

Pair of Spouted Bottles, 2nd–4th centuryPeru, NascaCeramic

Bottle, Skeletal Couple with Child, 3rd–7th centuryPeru, MocheCeramic

Fox Warrior Bottle, 6th–8th centuryPeru; MocheCeramic

Pair of Keros, 16th–17th centuryPeru, Inka/ColonialWood, pigmented resin inlay


Tunic, 7th–9th centuryPeru; Nazca-WariCamelid hair

Ceremonial Knife (tumi), 9th–11th centuryPeru, Sicán (Lambayeque)Gold, silver, turquoise

Thursday, April 4, 2013

South America 1900- 2000


1899–1903 The War of a Thousand Days is fought between liberal and conservative factions in Colombia. Estimates of resulting deaths range between 60,000 and 130,000 and the country is plunged into economic crisis. In the wake of the war, Panama secedes from the republic.
1908 Juan Vicente Gómez (1857–1935) begins his intermittent dictatorship in Venezuela, which continues until 1935. The oil boom begins in 1909 and leads to extensive immigration.
1910 The Fourth International Conference of American States is held in Buenos Aires and its name is changed to the Union of American Republics. The Organization of American States achieves its current form at its 1948 meeting when twenty-one North, South, and Central American countries sign the new charter.
1911 Argentinean Antonio Alice (1886–1943) wins the painting prize at the first National Salon of art in Buenos Aires with his exhibited work Portrait of the Painter Decoroso Bonifanti. Alice, Brazilian painter Eliseu d'Angelo Visconti (1866–1944), and Colombian painter Alfonso González Camargo (1883–1941) consider themselves "Intimists."
1913 The "tango craze," which had earlier swept Europe, hits the United States. The dance originates in Montevideo and Buenos Aires.
1917 The first recording of Brazilian samba music, "Pelo Telefone" by Donga (1890–1974) and Mauro de Almeida (1882–1956), is made.
1916 In the midst of a period of economic prosperity, Argentinean radicals led by Hipólito Yrigoyen (1852–1933) gain political control of the country. Yrigoyen is reelected in 1928 but ousted by a military coup in 1930.
1922 The Revolt of the Lieutenants takes place in Brazil, largely in response to ongoing agitation against the social and economic inequalities that result in the country from its landed-proprietor system.
1922 Brazilian painter Tarsila do Amaral (1886–1973) returns to São Paulo after a period of European study. She becomes a member of the Grupo dos Cinco (Group of Five) which also includes Anita Malfatti (1889–1964), Menotti del Picchia (1892–1988), Mário de Andrade (1893–1945), and Oswald de Andrade (1890–1954).
1922 The Semana de Arte Moderna (Modern Art Week) takes place in São Paulo. It is the culmination of a growing interest in modern art in Brazil, inspired in part by the European avant-garde, beginning around 1915.
1924–32 Carlos Ibáñez (1877–1960) rules Chile as a quasi-dictator, following a coup that overthrows President Arturo Alessandri (1868–1950). Ibáñez serves as president between 1927 and 1931, and between 1952 and 1958.
1924 Víctor Raúl Haya de la Torre (1895–1979) founds Peru's oldest political party, the American Popular Revolutionary Alliance (APRA), while in Mexico. Inspired by Marxism, the APRA resists Latin American domination by both the U.S. and the Soviet Union. The APRA is in power in Peru between 1985 and 1990, a period marked by hyperinflation.
1924 Chilean poet Pablo Neruda (1904–1973) publishes Veinte poemas de amor y una canción desesperada (Twenty Love Poems and a Song of Despair) and subsequently serves in a variety of diplomatic posts. He is awarded the Nobel Prize in literature in 1971.
1924 Argentine-born artist Xul Solar (1888–1963) returns to his home country after many years in Europe and is associated with the Grupo Martín Fierro (a.k.a. as Grupo Florida), which includes Jorge Luis Borges (1899–1986). In 1925, he develops a system of pictorial writing called Neocriollo, which draws on a number of Romance languages. Xul Solar is a prominent member of the Argentine avant-garde, beginning in the 1920s.
1924 Oswald de Andrade (1890–1954) publishes a book of poetry entitled Pau-Brasil(Brazilwood) in which he inverts the commonly held belief that Brazil imported its culture by equating Brazilian poetry with its well-known export, Brazilwood. The book's cover and illustrations by Tarsila do Amaral (1886–1973) are in a self-consciously childlike style that reflects what de Andrade considers to be Brazil's inherent wildness and naiveté.
1924 An exhibition of Cubist paintings by Emilio Pettoruti (1892–1971) is held. The event signals the emergence of an artistic avant-garde in Argentina. While Pettoruti's work draws on European developments, it also features figures engaged in the Argentinean tango.
1926 Argentinean writer Ricardo Güiraldes (1886–1927) publishes the novel Don Segundo Sombra, which is considered a masterpiece of Gaucho literature. The author's friendship with Uruguayan painter Pedro Figari (1861–1938) inspires the latter's depictions of cattle ranches.
1928 The Grupo Montparnasse is formed in Chile. Among its members, who call for a break with artistic tradition, are painters Luis Vargas Rosas (1897–1976), Laureano Guevara (1889–1968), Manuel Ortiz de Zárate (1887–1946), and Camilo Mori (1896–1973).
1928 Russian-born architect Gregori Warchavchik (1896–1972) designs the Casa da Rua Santa Cruz (Santa Cruz House) in his adopted city of São Paulo. The house demonstrates the impact of Le Corbusier's (1887–1965) modernist villas of the 1920s. In the 1930s, Warchavchik sets up a workshop to produce modernist furnishings to complement his architecture.
1928 A student uprising in Venezuela leads to the emergence of two political parties that will share power after the dictatorship of Juan Vicente Gómez (1857–1935) ends in 1935: the Acción Democrática and the COPEI.
1929 Carmen Miranda's (1909–1955) demo recording is a sensation in Brazil. After ten years of popularity as a performer there, she goes to the United States, where she is known as the "lady in the tutti-fruitti hat" for the exotic film costuming that caricatures her South American identity.
1930–34 Getúlio Dornelles Vargas (1883–1954) is dictator in Brazil. Between 1934 and 1937, he serves as the elected president, as dictator between 1937 and 1945, as senator between 1946 and 1951, and finally as elected president between 1951 and 1954.
1931 Argentine critic and writer Victoria Ocampo (1890–1979) founds the magazine Sur, which is considered the most significant Latin American literary magazine of the time. She champions many of Argentina's most important writers, and is imprisoned for a short time when she opposes the regime of Juan Perón (1895–1974).
1932–35 Bolivia and Paraguay fight the Chaco War over the Chaco Boreal region. The area is important to both countries for the access it provides to the Atlantic Ocean. Paraguay wins control over most of the region.
1933 The film Flying Down to Rio, starring Fred Astaire (1899–1987), Ginger Rogers (1911–1995), and the Mexican actress Dolores Del Rio (1905–1983) as the Brazilian character Belinha de Rezende, debuts. The film is indicative of the North American fascination with Brazil and its music during the middle decades of the twentieth century.
1933–43 Peruvian painter and theorist José Sabogal (1888–1956) heads the Escuela Nacional de Bellas Artes (School of Fine Art) in Lima. Despite his self-described interest in "painting Indians," he resists the label of "indigenist"—which he considers racist—instead calling himself a "cultural indigenist."
1934 Uruguayan artist Joaquín Torres García (1874–1949) returns to Montevideo after forty-three years in the United States and Europe. In the following year, he founds the Asociación de Arte Constructivo and in 1944 his own studio, the Taller Torres García.
1936 Cândido Portinari (1903–1962) executes murals for the Ministry of Education in Rio de Janeiro and is considered the outstanding Brazilian painter of the moment. The project illustrates the impact of the Mexican muralists in South America. In 1952, Portinari paints the twin muralsWar and Peace for the United Nations headquarters in New York.
1936 An agrarian reform law is passed in Colombia and the Confederation of Colombian Workers is founded. In 1948, leader Jorge Eliécer Gaitán (1902–1948) is assassinated, thus ending the period of Liberal reform.
1938 Chilean painter Roberto Matta Echaurren (1912–2002) exhibits at the Exposition Internationale du Surréalisme in Paris. Matta reacts against the Generation of '40 in his own country, but also presents a vision that is distinct from that of the Parisian Surrealists. In 1933, he traveled to Paris and in 1939, as a result of World War II, moved to the United States. In 1957, a retrospective of his work is held at the Museum of Modern Art in New York and establishes his preeminence among Latin American Surrealists.
1939 The May Salon of Ecuadoran Writers and Artists begins. Three painters who participate become leaders of Indigenismo in Ecuador: Eduardo Kingman (1913–1997), Oswaldo Guayasamín (1919–1999), and Diógenes Paredes (born 1915).
1939 German-born artist Gertrudis Goldschmidt (a.k.a. "Gego," 1912–1994) relocates to Venezuela. In the 1960s, she makes wire constructions that are associated with Informalism and in 1972 produces the outdoor installation Environmental Aerial Structures, which reflects South American interest in kinetic art.
1939–45 Colombia assists the United States in ensuring that the Panama Canal remains open during World War II. In 1944, a Brazilian force of 25,000 troops participates in the Allied invasion of Italy. Other South American countries also support the Allied cause in World War II, although Argentina initially supports the Axis side.
1941 Ecuador and Peru fight a border war. Under the terms of the Rio Protocol of 1942, Ecuador cedes some territory to Peru. At stake is the Amazon Basin seized by Peru. The border dispute between the two countries is not resolved until a treaty of 1998.
1944 Argentinean writer Jorge Luis Borges (1899–1986) publishes Ficciones. He will become one of the internationally best-known South American literary figures of the twentieth century. In 1983, he receives the Legion of Honor in France.
1946 Juan Perón (1895–1974) is elected president of Argentina. In 1943, he had participated in a military coup that brought down the constitutional government. Perón wins a second term in 1952 but is deposed in 1955 and goes into exile. He returns as president in 1973 with his then wife Isabel Martínez de Perón (born 1931) as vice-president. She succeeds her husband as president when he dies in 1974 but is removed in a 1976 coup and exiled.
1948–58 The Civil War ("La Violencia") in Colombia leaves hundreds of thousands dead. In a bid to stop the fighting, Conservatives and Liberals together form a National Front (the Sitges Agreement), but a guerrilla war ensues. By the mid-1960s, numerous groups form in opposition to the Sitges Agreement, which had outlawed parties other than the Liberals and Conservatives. In 1974, the Colombian government begins a protracted offensive against oppositional guerrilla groups.
1950 María Eva Duarte de Perón (a.k.a. "Evita," 1919–1952) makes the "Rainbow Tour" of Europe to increase support for the regime of her husband, Argentinean president Juan Péron (1895–1974). The former actress, although a controversial figure, is nonetheless extremely popular. In 1978, she is the subject of a long-running musical play, Evita, in London and New York.
1951 Venezuelan architect Carlos Raúl Villanueva (1900–1975) organizes an internationally known slate of artists to decorate the new Ciudad Universitaria in Caracas. Among his other works is the Venezuelan Pavilion at Expo '67 in Montreal.
1951 The São Paulo Bienal is inaugurated. As an institution, it plays an important role in advancing Brazilian abstract art by featuring European, North American, and Latin American modernist artists.
1952 The Nationalist Revolutionary Movement (MNR) leads a successful revolution in Bolivia. In 1964, a coup by a military junta ends the period of MNR rule.
1953 A military coup brings Gustavo Rojas Pinilla (1900–1975) to power in Colombia. His failure to restore democratic rule, however, leads to his being ousted in 1957.
1953 A victory by the People's Progressive Party (PPP) in Guyana, with Cheddi Jagan (1918–1997) as chief minister, in the colony's first popular elections leads to military intervention by the British, who are fearful that a Communist state will be established. Forces opposed to the growing independence movement foment a conflict between the Indo-Guyanese and the Afro-Guyanese. Jagan is prime minister from 1961 to 1964, and president from 1992 until his death in 1997, when he is succeeded by his wife Janet Jagan (born 1920).
1954–89 Alfredo Stroessner (born 1912) is dictator in Paraguay. His regime generally suppresses political opposition, and he is known for allowing Nazi war criminals to seek refuge in Paraguay.
1955 The exhibition Nineteen Artists of Today reflects the renewal of contemporary art in Uruguay. Under the political regime of the Blanco party, from 1958 to 1962, a climate favorable to advanced artmaking exists in the country.
1956–60 Brasília, the new capital city of Brazil, is constructed to replace the former capital, Rio de Janeiro. Inspired by the modernist urban planning theories and projects of the Swiss-French designer Le Corbusier (1887–1965), the plan of Brasília is executed by Lúcio Costa (1902–1998). Architect Oscar Niemeyer (born 1907) designs the Senate, Secretariat, and Congressional buildings.
1958 Fernando Botero (born 1932) wins the National Prize for Painting in Colombia with his workCamera Degli Sposi: Tribute to Mantegna, which represents the contemporary return to figuration. Soon after, he relocates to New York. Botero is the subject of a major retrospective exhibition at the Museo de Arte Contemporáneo (Museum of Contemporary Art) in Caracas in 1976.
1959 Brazilian poet and critic Ferreira Gullar (born 1930) publishes the "Neoconcrete Manifesto," which seeks to define the relationship between European Concretism and its Latin American expressions. Among the artists associated with the movement are Lygia Pape (born 1929), who stages her Neoconcrete Ballet in 1958, and Lygia Clark (1920–1988).
1960 Brazilian novelist Clarice Lispector (1920–1977) publishes Laços de família (Family Ties). Her passionate portrayal of the internal lives of women draws the attention of French feminist Hélène Cixous (born 1937), who publishes L'heure de Clarice Lispector (The Hour of Clarice Lispector) in 1989.
1960 An Argentine circle of abstract artists is constituted, partly in response to the rise of Abstract Expressionism in North America. Among the leading members are Sarah Grilo (born 1920) and Miguel Ocampo (born 1922). At the same time, a group of Argentinean artists led by Miguel Angel Vidal (born 1928) and Eduardo MacEntyre (born 1929) produce Arte Generativo (Generative Art), which parallels contemporary Pop art in the U.S.
1961 Nazi war criminal Adolf Eichmann (1906–1962) is captured in Argentina, where he had settled as Ricardo Klement. Eichmann is subsequently tried and executed in Israel. In 2000, President Fernando de la Rúa (born 1937) apologizes for Argentina's role in harboring war criminals.
1961 Ethnobiologist Nicole Maxwell (1906–1998), a founder of the Ecuadoran Institute of Geography and Ethnology, publishes Witch Doctor's Apprentice: Hunting for Medicinal Plants in the Amazon, detailing her experience studying the medicinal use of plants by native Indians in the upper Amazon. In 1979, she publishes on native Peruvian art.

1962 Brazilian composer Antonio Carlos Jobim (1927–1994) and poet Vinícius de Moraes (1913–1980) write the song "Garota de Ipanema" ("The Girl from Ipanema"), based on Heloisa Pinheiro (a.k.a. "Helô," born 1944), a resident of the Ipanema district of Rio de Janeiro. The 1964 release of the song in English on an album by Brazilian performer João Gilberto (born 1931) and American jazz saxophonist Stan Getz (1927–1991), with vocals by Astrud Gilberto (born 1940), makes bossa nova music popular worldwide.
1963 The Tupamaros guerrilla resistance group is formed with a raid on the Swiss Gun Club in Uruguay. They engage in political kidnappings and other terrorist tactics, especially in Montevideo. Subsequently transformed into a legitimate political group, the Tupamaros are represented in the Uruguayan parliament from 1995 by José Mujica (born 1934), who had been jailed for thirteen years by the military government.
1963 Colombian Marlene Hoffmann (born 1934) exhibits tapestries at the Museo de Arte Moderno (Museum of Modern Art) in Bogotá. The tapestries parallel the abstraction prevalent in painting of the period and are part of a larger revival of tapestry production.
1964 The election of Christian Democrat Eduardo Frei Montalva (1911–1982) signals the beginning of a period of reform in Chile. He is succeeded by Socialist Party member Salvador Allende (1908–1973), who serves until a military coup, supported by the U.S., unseats him in 1973 and he dies under mysterious circumstances. Some allege his death is the result of the CIA's involvement in toppling his government. Allende is succeeded by the repressive regime of Augusto Pinochet (born 1915), which continues until 1990.
1964 The Museu de Arte Moderna (Museum of Modern Art) in Rio de Janeiro is completed to the design of architect Affonso Eduardo Reidy (1909–1964). The landscape is designed by Roberto Burle-Marx (1909–1994), an internationally renowned landscape architect who uses native Brazilian plants to achieve geometric abstraction in his work.
1964 Brazilian president João Goulart (1918–1976) is ousted from power in a coup and goes into exile. The ensuing military regime is repressive but presides over a period of economic expansion.
1964–85 Forbes Burnham (1923–1985) rules Guyana as prime minister and after 1980, under a new constitution, as executive president. In 1950, Burnham had been one of the founders of the People's Progressive Party (PPP).
1965 The Instituto Torcuato di Tella in Buenos Aires presents The Mess, a multimedia spectacle. Among the artists who participate is Marta Minujín (born 1941), who exhibits an installation entitled The Flop.
1966 The exhibition Art of Latin America since Independence is held at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut, the most important retrospective to date.
1967 Gabriel García Márquez (born 1928) publishes Cien años de soledad (One Hundred Years of Solitude), which is considered a masterpiece of the magic realist mode associated with the author, and is set in the mythical Colombian coastal town of Macondo. The book contributes significantly to the "Latin American Boom," the international movement to publish Latin American literature during the 1960s.
1968–80 Peru is run by military governments. During the "first phase," General Juan Velasco Alvarado (1910–1977), who comes to power in 1968, undertakes agrarian and other reforms. In the "second phase," under the presidency of General Francisco Bermúdez Cerruti (born 1921), the authoritarianism of the first phase is tempered.
1971 Brazilian architect Jaime Lerner (born 1937) is appointed mayor of the city of Curitiba, capital of the state of Paraná. In that position, which he holds intermittently through the 1980s, Lerner develops environmentally sensitive ways of planning urban growth.
1976–83 The "Dirty War" takes place in Argentina as the military junta in power persecutes and kills thousands of supposed terrorists and terrorist sympathizers. A return to democracy follows in the 1980s.
1976 The novel El beso de la mujer araña (Kiss of the Spider Woman), by Argentinean writer Manuel Puig (1932–1990), is published. An English-language film adaptation is released in 1985 and a musical version opens on Broadway in 1994.
1978 A mass suicide of 914 people, including 276 children, takes place in Jonestown, Guyana. The dead are all members of a cult, the People's Temple, led by Jim Jones (1931–1978).
1980 General Luis García Meza (born 1929) seizes control of the Bolivian government in a coup following fraudulent elections in 1978, 1979, and 1980. His regime is characterized by crime, mismanagement, and oppression. In 1995, following extradition from Brazil, he is convicted of various crimes and begins serving a thirty-year sentence.
1980 The Sendero Luminoso (Shining Path), a radical Maoist political organization begun by Abimael Guzmán (born 1934, a.k.a. "Chairman Gonzalo") in the late 1960s, begins using violent means to overthrow the Peruvian government. More than 30,000 people are killed by the movement.
1982 Argentina fights a war with the United Kingdom over the Falkland Islands. Although Argentina surrenders, rights to the Falklands are not relinquished.
1982 Isabel Allende (born 1942) publishes La casa de los espíritus (The House of the Spirits), her best-known work. Like others of her Latin American contemporaries, she employs magic realism in her writing. Her father's cousin is former Chilean president Salvador Allende (1908–1973).
1984 Argentine writer Julio Cortázar (1914–1984) publishes Nicaragua tan violentamente dulce(Nicaraguan Sketches). The book concerns Sandinista Nicaragua and reflects the author's socialist political position.
1986 Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva (born 1945) is elected to the Brazilian Congress. In 1980, Lula had co-founded the Partido dos Trabalhadores (PT), the workers party. With the PT, he helps to draft Brazil's postdictatorship constitution.
1990 Colombian author Alvaro Mutis (born 1923) wins the Prix Médicis for best foreign novel published in France, for La nieve del Almirante (1986). It is the first book in a trilogy that features the fictional character to whom Mutis often returns, Maqroll el Gaviero (Maqroll the Navigator).
1990–2000 Alberto Fujimori (born 1938) is president of Peru. He flees to Japan when allegations of corruption in his government begin to emerge.
1991 The Museu de Arte Contemporanea (Museum of Contemporary Art) at Niteroi, Brazil, is built to the design of Oscar Niemeyer (born 1907). The dramatically sited building, embodying many aspects of Niemeyer's earlier work, suggests the architect's ongoing importance to Brazilian culture.
1993 Notorious Colombian drug trafficker Pablo Escobar (1949–1993), leader of the Medellín drug cartel, is killed by the Colombian police. His death follows years of assassinations of public officials by drug cartels in response to the Colombian policy of extraditing drug traffickers to the United States.
2000 Guyana is involved in border disputes with Venezuela and Suriname. At stake in the conflict with Suriname is an oil-rich area along the coast. Venezuela's president Hugo Chávez (born 1954), who came to power in 1999, claims more than half of the land area of Guyana.
2000 The Liberal party in Paraguay makes its first decisive political gains in fifty years. The party's vice-presidential candidate, Julio César Franco (born 1951), is elected. Paraguay embarks on a program of reform.

South America 1800-1900


1799–1803 German explorer Alexander von Humboldt (1769–1859) travels across present-day Venezuela, Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru, where access had been previously forbidden to any non-Spaniard. His accounts inspire many followers, including artists Johann Mauritz Rugendas (1802–1858) from Germany and Frederic Church (1826–1900) from the U.S.
1800–1805 Aleijadinho, or the Little Cripple (pseudonym of Antonio Francisco Lisboa, ca. 1738–1814), sculpts the Prophet statues for the Sanctuary of the Bom Jesus de Matosinhos in Brazil: a native masterpiece.
1808 In an inversion of political and cultural hierarchies, the Portuguese court establishes itself in Brazil from 1808 to 1821. Portuguese Prince Regent Jõao VI (1769–1826) and some 10,000 functionaries move to Rio de Janeiro, which becomes the capital of the Portuguese empire for the next thirteen years.
1816 The French Artistic Mission arrives in Rio de Janeiro, led by Joachim Lebreton (1760–1819) and architect A.-H.-V. Grandjean de Montigny (1776–1850), initiating the strong and enduring influence of French styles.
1818 The Spanish are defeated by the Army of the Andes at the Battle of Maipú and Chilean independence is achieved.
1819 Called the father of Latin American independence, Simón Bolívar (1783–1830) leads armies to liberate Venezuela and Colombia.
1821 Bolívar is ratified as president of the new country of Gran Colombia. José de San Martín (1778–1850) declares the independence of Peru. Myriad portraits of the heroes of the Revolution displace sacred imagery of the colonial period.
1822 Bolívar's general Antonio José de Sucre (1795–1830) defeats the Spanish in Ecuador. In Brazil, Dom Pedro I is declared emperor.
1823 The U.S. proclaims the Monroe Doctrine, stating that all the territories of the Americas are off limits to further European expansion.
1824 The defeat of the Spanish at Ayacucho, Peru, signals the end of Spanish rule in Central and South America.
1825 Bolivia achieves Independence.
1826 The Academia Imperial das Belas Artes (Imperial Academy of Fine Arts) is founded in Rio de Janeiro.
1831 Dom Pedro I of Brazil abdicates.
1835 The Academia de Dibujo y Pintura (Academy of Painting and Sculpture) is founded in Caracas.
1840 Once he comes of age, Dom Pedro II is crowned emperor of Brazil. He fosters the arts and especially photography, of which he is an avid practitioner.
1845 Facundo: civilización y barbarie is published by Domingo Sarmiento (1811–1888), a key literary and historical figure of the century.
1850–59 The Comisión Corográfica conducts a pioneering survey of Colombia, and establishes the precedent for native artists and geographers recording their own lands and peoples.
1852 Dictator Juan Manuel de Rosas (1793–1877) is driven from Buenos Aires; the Argentine Federalist constitution is established the following year.
1860s A boom in export development—agricultural goods in Argentina, copper in Chile, and coffee in Brazil—continues into the twentieth century.
1865–70 The War of the Triple Alliance pits Argentina, Brazil, and Uruguay against Paraguay.
1870s The beginning of mass European emigration to Latin America is accompanied by increased foreign investment, major railway building, industrialization, organized labor, and the rise of positivist philosophy.
1871 In Brazil, the Free Womb Law (Lei do Ventre Livre) frees all children born to slaves.
1872 Argentine José Hernández (1834–1886) publishes the gauchoesque poem Martín Fierro, a popular epic that represents one of the greatest achievements of Romantic poetry in Spanish.
1879–84 Bolivia and Peru engage in the War of the Pacific with Chile, with the result that Bolivia is landlocked.
1886 Slavery is abolished in Cuba.
1888 Slavery is abolished in Brazil.
1889 Dom Pedro II abdicates and Brazil is proclaimed a republic.
1896 Teatro Amazonas opens in Manaus, Brazil, an attempt to foster culture in the Amazon region, away from the established centers.
1898 The Spanish-American War is fought. Cuba and Puerto Rico are ceded to the United States.
1900 Uruguayan philosopher and literary critic José Enrique Rodó (1871–1917) publishes Ariel, calling upon Latin America to resist the materialism represented by the U.S., whose influence has been increasing since the 1890s.
1903 Panama is separated from Colombia, a prelude to the creation of an independent nation and the construction of the Panama Canal.

South America 1600-1800


1609–17 Writings by Garcilaso de la Vega, "El Inca," are published in Lisbon and Córdoba. Born in Cuzco in 1539 to a Spanish noble and an Inka princess, Garcilaso spends most of his adult life in Spain composing a series of Neoplatonic narratives in which he attempts to reconcile the two parts of his heritage. In the Comentarios reales de los incas, he presents the lost Inka empire as a utopian ideal of Andean society.
1610 The first Jesuit missions are established among the Guarani in the forested interior of what is now Paraguay, Argentina, and Brazil. The missions ultimately comprise a vast, self-sufficient network in which indigenous tribesmen are educated and protected from enslavement.
1614 Felipe Guamán Poma de Ayala writes the Nueva corónica y buen gobierno de las Indias, a 1200-page illustrated chronicle of the history of the Inka and contemporary conditions in Peru. The chronicle is written as a plea for reform addressed to King Philip III by an Inka nobleman from Huamanga. The manuscript is discovered in 1908.
1621 The Dutch West India Company is founded. The Dutch begin to occupy northeastern Brazil in 1630, and in 1634 take Curacao, from which they challenge Spanish and Portuguese monopoly on trade with the Americas.
1623 The Church of Our Lady of Cocharcas is dedicated, the oldest church in South America devoted to the cult of the Virgin Mary. The church houses the miraculous replica of the Virgin of Copacabana, a statue brought to this Andean village by the Indian Sebastián Quimichi. The statue is the object of its own cult and the subject of innumerable paintings depicting its legend.
1650 An earthquake levels much of Cuzco, leading to the city's reconstruction in the style of the Andean Baroque.
1656 An earthquake forces reconstruction of many ecclesiastical structures in Lima.
1671 Rose of Lima, an ascetic Dominican Tertiary, is canonized, becoming the first New World saint, patron of Perú, the Americas, and the Philippines.
1673 Bishop Manuel de Mollinedo y Angulo arrives in Cuzco. The bishop's support for the arts and encouragement of native participation is responsible for some of the city's greatest treasures.
1688 Complaints of racism and stylistic conflicts spur an exodus of native artists from the Cuzco painter's guild and the consolidation of the stylistically distinctive.
1693–1730 The mestizo painter Melchor Pérez de Holguín works in the wealthy mining center of Potosí. Holguín's Baroque style will dominate Bolivian painting throughout the later viceregal period.
1700s The death of Charles II, the last Habsburg king of Spain, in 1700, provokes the War of the Spanish Succession and the confirmation in 1713 of the Bourbon Philip V as monarch. The Bourbon monarchy introduces administrative reform and increases colonial revenues. The power of the Council of the Indies is diminished by the new ministries of Spain.
1700–80 After a period of decline, production of silver in Perú again begins to rise; while some is exported, quantities are retained for domestic and liturgical use within the viceroyalty by both criollo and indigenous populations. Despite the oppressive conditions imposed on natives drafted for work in the mines, indigenous miners are still permitted to refine silver for their own benefit and indigenous communities are able to obtain enough for local liturgical use and for personal display. A distinctive silver style develops in the Potosí region, or Alto Perú, governed as the audiencia of Charcas.
1717-39 The audiencias of Santa Fe de Bogotá and Quito are consolidated to form the Viceroyalty of New Granada. The new viceroyalty also encompasses the Caribbean coastline of South America formerly under the jurisdiction of New Spain, as a means to combat foreign depredations on Spanish trade.
1742–52 Juan Santos Atahualpa, self-proclaimed descendant of the Inka, and his followers organize resistance to Franciscans and colonists in the eastern lowlands of central Perú. The movement retains control of lowland areas but fails to establish a base in the critical highland region.
1759 The accession of Charles III to the Spanish throne accelerates modernization of the royal bureaucracy and centralization of power, deeply affecting the entrenched criollo elite in Spanish America and spawning disaffection and revolts through the end of the century.
1776 The Viceroyalty of La Plata is created, with its capital at Buenos Aires, cutting away the southeastern portions of what had been Perú, including Charcas (now Bolivia).
1778 Free trade "within the empire" opens ports along the Spanish mainland (except Venezuela and Mexico), leading to an upsurge in exports and goods imported from Spain and Europe.
1780–81 A revolt led by Tupac Amaru II (José Gabriel Condorcanqui) against economic abuses initially elicits broad support in the highlands, even among criollos. Divisions between rebel and loyal native elites prevent the capture of Cuzco and La Paz. Repressive measures in the wake of the revolt destroy the wealth, power, and status of the traditional Indian nobility and the longstanding local autonomy of highland communities, and a new class of native governors is appointed by the colonial state.
1781 The comunero revolt in New Granada unites criollo and mestizo farmers in resistance to new taxes. The rebellion prompts some reforms favoring criollos, but the more radical wing of the movement is brutally suppressed.
1791 A slave revolt in Haiti leads to devastation of the sugar industry there and a consequent growth in exports from Brazil.

Central/Southern Andes 1400-1600


1400 Túcume, under Chimú rule but governed by local lords, is the leading political center in the northern Lambayeque region. The city grows and assumes an urban character. Its largest structure is converted from a freestanding truncated mound into a long platform rising onto Cerro La Raya, the mountain that dominates the site.
1400 textile artists on Peru's north and central coast produce elaborate works in an unprecedented variety of techniques executed in a virtuoso manner, among them gauzes, slit tapestries, and brocades. Supplemental materials and objects such as colorful beads, feathers, and gold and silver ornaments further enhance luxurious tunics, loincloths, mantles, and headgear.
1420 Chimú society's increased demand for luxury goods leads to state-sponsored craft production in provincial centers. At Manchán in the Casma River valley, hundreds of workshops produce fine textiles, beadwork, ceramics, and metal objects.
1438 Inka territorial expansion begins. The Inka leader Yupanqui establishes hegemony in the Cuzco valley and adjacent areas after repeated battles with the Chancas, their archrivals. Yupanqui is crowned Sapa Inka (unique king), assuming the name Pachakuti (ca. 1391–ca. 1473). He plans Cuzco to be the ceremonial, political, and economic center of an Inka state.
1450 Chan Chan, a vast labyrinth of massive adobe walls sprawling for eight square miles at the mouth of the Moche River, has an estimated population of more than 30,000. It is among the largest cities built in the central Andes and has nine to eleven imposing royal compounds (ciudadelas), the biggest covering some fifty-five acres. Scattered among the ciudadelas are residences of lesser nobility, artisans' quarters, monumental adobe shrines, cemeteries, and agricultural fields.
1460 Machu Picchu, a country estate built by Pachakuti in the pleasant climate of the Urubamba River valley, is located on a narrow ridge high above the densely forested slopes of the valley. The retreat is used for relaxation, entertainment, and diplomatic feasting as well as for religious ceremonies and rituals.
1463 Topa Inka, Pachakuti's son, takes control of the army. Father and son—able conquerors and talented organizers—embark on sweeping campaigns extending the Inka domain to Quito in the north and central Chile in the south.
1470 A regional Inka administrative center, Tambo Colorado in the Pisco River valley, is built entirely of adobe. Plan and architecture have typical Inka features such as rectangular plazas withushnus (viewing platforms) and buildings with trapezoidal niches, windows, and doors.
1470 The Inka conquer Chan Chan, capital of the Chimú kingdom, plundering the royal tombs and storerooms. Metalsmiths are taken to Cuzco, where they produce works of an unprecedented scale in the Inka style.
1471 Pachakuti resigns, leaving the empire to his son Topa Inka Yupanqui.
1480 Male and female figurines in gold and silver are dressed in finely woven miniature versions of Inka elite dress. Mantles, coca bags, belts, and feather headdresses are included. They are placed as offerings in special burials and in sacred sites in the landscape, such as caves, springs, outcrops, and mountain peaks.
1480 On the main road between Cuzco and Quito, Huanuco Pampa serves as a provincial administrative center. The city has nearly 4,000 buildings and a gigantic plaza, where state ceremonies are held. Public buildings, a royal palace, residences, and workshops surround it.
1490 The Chachapoya people build burial towers (chullpas) on a limestone cliff above the Laguna de los Cóndores in the northeastern Andes. Nine feet tall with two floors, the towers are built of limestone blocks. Some are painted in white, red, and yellow while others have zigzag stone friezes.
1490 Diaguita ceramics on Chile's northern coast show Inka influence in form and design.
1490 The Inka build the Temple of the Sun over an earlier structure at Pachacamac, the ancient oracle and pilgrimage center on Peru's central coast.
1490 Cuzco is the architectural showcase of the empire, boasting grand palaces for kings, elegant elite residences, and holy shrines built of the finest stonework.
1493 Huayna Capac succeeds Topa Inka.
1498 Christopher Columbus lands on the continent of South America.
1500 Sacred places (huacas) in the environs of Cuzco are located along a complex network of about forty imaginary lines, called ceques, thought to radiate from the city's Temple of the Sun.
1510 The finest cloth, called cumbi, is woven by cloistered "chosen women" in the Inka empire. They produce exquisite garments of cotton and camelid hair—hair of llamas, alpacas, and vicuñas—for noble and ritual use.
1510 A distinctive Inka storage vessel of ceramic is in use throughout the empire. Known as aryballos, or urpus in Quechua, they range in height from four inches to four feet, and are usually embellished with geometric polychrome designs.
1520 Inka records are kept on khipus, knotted strings that tally the empire's tribute, population numbers, and economic transactions.
1525 A major epidemic, probably smallpox, spreads into Tawantinsuyu from the north, killing thousands of native peoples.
1527 The Inka ruler Huayna Capac dies suddenly of a European disease while in Quito. Without a designated heir, a bitter battle for succession ensues. War breaks out between his sons Huascar and Atawallpa.
1530 The Inka empire stretches for almost 3,000 miles on the Pacific side of South America from central Chile and northwestern Argentina to northern Ecuador. Fifteen thousand miles of road connect its cities and towns.
1531 Francisco Pizarro (ca. 1475–1541) obtains authorization from the king of Spain to conquer Peru. He embarks from Panama to Peru.
1532 Huascar is killed by his brother Atawallpa's forces. Pizarro arrives in the coastal town of Tumbes. The Spaniard captures Atawallpa and imprisons him in the highland city of Cajamarca.
1533 Despite the paying of an enormous ransom in gold and silver, Atawallpa is not set free and is executed by his Spanish captors. A puppet government is established under a member of Inka royalty.
1534 Cuzco is invaded by the Spaniards. The church and monastery of Santo Domingo are built on the foundations of the Coricancha (Golden Enclosure), the most sacred temple in the Inka empire.
1535 The Ciudad de los Reyes (City of Kings), today Lima, is founded by Pizarro near the mouth of the Rímac River on January 6, the Festival of the Three Kings.
1535 The Spanish crown assigns lands known as encomiendas to colonizers, with Indians as laborers and taxpayers; in return, they are required to Christianize and protect the native peoples.
1536 The Indians rebel against the abuses and hardships of the invaders and besiege Cuzco.
1541 Civil war breaks out among Spanish settlers. Francisco Pizarro is killed.
1542 The Viceroyalty of Perú, with Lima as its capital, is established; it includes Colombia, Ecuador, Bolivia, and north-central Argentina and Chile. The New Laws of the Indies are promulgated, officially prohibiting Indian slavery. Colonists use African slaves instead; hundreds of thousands are brought to the Americas primarily by the Portuguese.
1545 The richest silver mine in the world is discovered in Potosí in southern Bolivia, attracting large numbers of fortune hunters from Spain.
1551 Pedro de Cieza de León (1518–1554), a Spanish soldier who traveled widely in the Andean area, writes the first extensive history of the native peoples entitled Crónica del Perú.
1553 The University of San Marcos opens in Lima. It is the first university founded in South America.
1555 Guilds are established in Lima to organize and regulate art and craft production, the training of artists, and the setting of quality standards. Only Spaniards can serve as masters.
1560 Construction on the cathedral in Cuzco begins. Built of large slabs of granite taken from the Inka fortress of Sacsahuaman, it is one of the most imposing structures in the city. The elegant Renaissance facade contrasts with the lavish interior, which houses ecclesiastical works in gold and silver made by native smiths.
1562 Indian leaders urge the Catholic church in Lima to ask the king of Spain to end theencomienda system and restore their lands.
1569 Francisco de Toledo (1520–1583; r. 1569–81), fifth viceroy, reorganizes the colony.
1570 Viceroy Toledo introduces a labor system designed for maximum exploitation of the mines. Horrendous working conditions of the largely Indian labor force enormously increase the death toll.
1570 Commissioned by Spaniards and descendants of Inka nobility, indigenous master weavers and metalworkers produce fine textiles and silver objects. The works combine traditional Inka techniques, forms, and designs with European elements.
1571 Portraits of the twelve Inka kings and their wives are painted in European style for the king of Spain. Commissioned by Viceroy Toledo of native artists, he also commissions Pedro Sarmiento de Gamboa (1532–1592) to write the Historia de los Incas.
1572 Tupac Amaru I, the last of the Inka royal heirs, is executed on Toledo's order. Inka nobles are exiled from Cuzco.
1573 A standardized grid plan for new settlements in the Americas is signed into law by King Philip II.
1575 Bernardo Bitti (1548–1610), a Jesuit painter in the Mannerist style from Rome, arrives in Lima. For forty years, he paints and teaches devotional painting throughout the Andes.
1575 The convent of Santa Catalina is founded in Arequipa, where daughters of wealthy families care for the sick and offer shelter to travelers.
1576 On the site of an Inka ruler's palace in Cuzco, the Jesuits build the Compañía Church, one of the finest examples of colonial Baroque architecture in the Americas.
1580 Dominican friars build several missions on the altiplano of Lake Titicaca in Bolivia. Charged primarily with the conversion of Indians to Catholicism, the missions also provide education in Spanish, reading, writing, and the arts as well as protection from abusive settlers.
1583 The first printing press is set up in Lima. The Jesuits produce dictionaries, grammars, and Bibles in Quechua.
1585 Felipe Guamán Poma de Ayala (1535?–1620?), born shortly after the Spanish conquest into a noble Andean family, begins to compose an illustrated letter of complaint to the king of Spain about the harsh treatment of the Indians by the colonists. Completed in 1615, this compelling document comprises 1,188 pages and 398 drawings; it is known as El primer nueva corónica y buen gobierno.
1590 Working closely with indigenous informants, the Mercedarian friar Martín de Murúa (1525/35–1618) compiles the Historia general del Perú. Describing Inka rulers and their wives, their customs and laws, their cities and military leaders, the text is accompanied by 112 colored drawings.
1600 Potosí, a city of some 160,000, is one of the wealthiest in the world. Luxury items from all over the world are imported to satisfy the expensive tastes of its affluent European residents.