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The Metropolitan Cathedral

John Philips1848

Museo Nacional de Arte

Museo Nacional de Arte
Mexico City, Mexico

Once Mexico had won its independence, its frontiers were opened to the citizens and interests of foreign powers that were in competition with Spain. The Englishman, John Phillips, was one of a series of foreigners known as "traveling artists" who, while in this country, drew and painted all the features of the young -and, to them, exotic- nation that fascinated them. While representing British mining companies in the Hidalgo region, Phillips also took advantage of his stay here to draw exterior and interior views of Mexican buildings that belong to the genre known as "perspectives", which places emphasis on the painstaking depiction of buildings, taking great care with the vanishing lines, in order to produce faithful effects of scale and depth. In 1848, his drawings of buildings, squares and cities were converted into lithographs in London and, along with his descriptive comments, published as an album under the title Mexico Illustrated, aimed at a British public interested in scenes from faraway countries. One of the plates in this volume depicts the enormous expanse of the Mexican capitals main square as the true heart of the nation. The said square is seen from the south side, with the imposing facades of the Metropolitan Cathedral and its chapel in the center, and is peopled by convivial figures from the different sectors of Mexican society. This plate, which is, at one and the same time, an exemplar of the oeuvre of one of the first foreign artists to visit Mexico and a valuable visual historical record of the place depicted, formed part of the collection of works donated to the MUNAL by the National Fund for Culture and the Arts under an agreement signed on the 12th of June, 1991.

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  • Title: The Metropolitan Cathedral
  • Creator Lifespan: 1868
  • Creator Gender: Male
  • Date Created: 1848
  • painter: John Philips
  • Provenance: National Fund for Culture and the Arts, 1991
  • Physical Dimensions: w420 x h300 mm (complete)
  • Original Spanish object note: Consumada la Independencia de México, las fronteras se abrieron a los ciudadanos e intereses de las potencias europeas rivales de España. El inglés John Phillips vino a México y formó parte de una serie de extranjeros a los que se les denominó "artistas viajeros". Éstos pintaron y dibujaron todo aquello que les sorprendía de la exótica y joven nación. Phillips combinó sus actividades relacionadas con las empresas británicas de minas en la región de Hidalgo y la inclinación por dibujar vistas de exteriores e interiores de edificios mexicanos. Éstas se asimilaron bajo la modalidad del paisaje de "perspectivas", que enfatiza el trazo minucioso de las arquitecturas cuidando las líneas de fuga para dar un correcto efecto de escalas y profundidades. Sus dibujos sobre las edificaciones, plazas y ciudades fueron litografiados en Londres en 1848, incluyendo sus textos descriptivos, y conforman el álbum México Ilustrado, dirigido a un público sajón interesado por las vistas de países lejanos. Una de las láminas de este volumen reprodujo la amplitud espacial de la plaza mayor de la capital mexicana como el verdadero corazón de la nación. El encuadre lo planteó de sur a norte y representa en el centro de la composición las imponentes fachadas de la catedral metropolitana y el sagrario. La explanada fue animada con figuras alusivas a las fisonomías de diversos sectores sociales en franca convivencia. La lámina entreteje el análisis artístico que caracterizó las cualidades de uno de los primeros artistas foráneos tras la Independencia, y el valor histórico del documento gráfico del sitio. La obra forma parte de la donación efectuada a MUNAL por el Fondo Nacional para la Cultura y las Artes en contrato formalizado el 12 de junio de 1991.
  • Original title: La Catedral de México
  • Type: drawing
  • Rights: Museo Nacional de Arte, INBA, http://www.munal.com.mx/rights.html
  • Medium: Lithography
Museo Nacional de Arte

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