Inca Garcilaso de la Vega
Inca Garcilaso de la Vega
Inca Garcilaso de la Vega (1539-1616) was a Peruvian chronicler whose Spanish prose won him the designation as the first classic writer of America.
Inca Garcilaso de la Vega was born in Cuzco on April 12, 1539, the son of Capt. Sebastian Garcilaso de la Vega, a scion of a proud Spanish family distinguished in war and literature, and Chimpu Ocllo, niece of the last Inca emperor, Huayna Cápac. Named Gómez Suárez de Figueroa, he later changed his name to El Inca Garcilaso de la Vega. Reared by his mother, he learned the language, customs, myths, and legends of her people, while his father had him educated as a nobleman in the classical traditions of Spain. Thus the mind of the bilingual child soon confused facts and fancies concerning the glories of the Incas, the triumphs of the Spaniards, and the splendors of classical Rome.
On his father's death the 21-year-old Garcilaso departed for Spain, where he vainly sought the aristocratic perquisites that he felt the public services of his sire deserved. Although he was disappointed in this pretension, a small legacy permitted him to settle down in 1571 near Cordova for the remainder of his life.
In 1572 the news of his mother's death and the stern measures of Spanish authorities in Peru to suppress her people apparently inspired in Garcilaso a resolve to prepare a defense of the Inca civilization and a record of its vanished grandeur. With tireless diligence he assembled information on all aspects of Inca history and culture and trained himself in the art of Castilian prose. The latter process began with 14 years spent on an arduous translation exercise which resulted in the best Spanish version of the Neoplatonist Dialogues on Love, a philosophical treatise written in Italian by the 15th-century Jewish humanist Leon Hebreo. To acquire narrative skill, Garcilaso wrote a novelesque account of Hernando de Soto's wanderings in the lower Mississippi Valley, called The Florida of the Inca (1605), which was based on information supplied by a veteran of that expedition.
Meanwhile, Garcilaso's masterwork, The Royal Commentaries of the Incas (1609), was taking shape. It was a systematic recital of the personalities, events, customs, rites, and the native dynasty of Peru from its beginnings to the
arrival of the Spaniards. The lyric descriptions of this work, written in poetic style, conjure up a vision of a utopian civilization. A literary achievement of genuine distinction, it is also a valuable historical record. A second part, The General History of Peru (1617), recounting events of the Spanish Conquest and published posthumously, is less impressive. Garcilaso died in April 1616.
Further Reading
Among the works on Garcilaso are Donald G. Castanien, El Inca Garcilaso de la Vega (1969), and John Grier Varner, El Inca: The Life and Times of Garcilaso de la Vega (1969). □
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BOOK REVIEW
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 6/19/1994; ; 700+ words
; ...their fat and handsome monograph, Paolo Uccello (Thames & Hudson pounds 60...be living and working now. (In Uccello's case, it's easy to suspect...rounded artistic personality of Uccello can be shown. It's a brave aim...
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Licencia artística para sueños infantiles: la pintora argentina Norma Bessouet evoca el apacible mundo de jóvenes desconectadas de las realidades de la vida adulta.(Entrevista)
Magazine article from: Américas (Spanish Edition); 7/1/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...dedicados al tema de Selvaggio y Uccello>>. Para esa serie...y el gran pintor florentino Paolo Uccello. En la historia, Selvaggio se va marchitando a medida que Uccello la descuida y la abandona por su...
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Brunelleschi e il Grasso.
Magazine article from: Annali d'Italianistica; 1/1/1998; ; 700+ words
; ...questa prospettiva", ripeteva Paolo Uccello fin quasi nel sonno, a testimonianza...geometria Brunelleschi, Alberti e Paolo Uccello possono sfuggire alla riprovazione...ingegno sofistico" dello stesso Paolo ci ricorda la tentazione anche...
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Reviews: The first Renaissance Man
Newspaper article from: Scotland on Sunday; 2/11/2001; ; 700+ words
; ...woman through an intervening gauze. Paolo Uccello was also heavily influenced by Alberti...geometric approach so faithfully that Uccello was required to repaint it, in...reality. The perspective diagrams of Uccello and others are often reminiscent...
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Diptych.(CREACIÓN)(Ilustración)
Magazine article from: Káñina; 1/1/2004; ; 700+ words
; DIPTYCH I. Paolo Uccello's The Hunt At night, at night, sullen...dear, why was forgiveness not shown? Uccello's Red horsemen blare horns through...scent Of crushed foliage and the hunt. Uccello's hunt over midnight towards The darkest...
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Mickey's war. (Persian Gulf war painting)
Magazine article from: The Economist (US); 1/25/1992; 700+ words
; ...used to be so simple. When Cosimo de' Medici asked Paolo Uccello to paint the Battle of San Romano, the painter gave...Keane's imagery is just as selective, in its way, as Uccello's view of San Romano. if he is indeed making some...
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Richard Rezac: Rhona Hoffman Gallery.
Magazine article from: Artforum International; 10/1/2006; ; 700+ words
; Giorgio Vasari's tale about how Paolo Uccello would sit at his desk late into the night, drawing obsessively...rather exquisite but not without a degree of escapism. As in Uccello's project, there is something inevitable and potentially...
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Britain's 50 best paintings {outside London}
Newspaper article from: The Sunday Telegraph London; 3/9/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...hands fluttering, the chair more powerful than the ghostly figure in front of it. Paolo Uccello The Hunt in the Forest (c.1470) Ashmolean, Oxford Uccello was famous for his depiction of animals, as well as for his development of linear...
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Picture galleries outside London: The Ashmolean Museum, Oxford.
Magazine article from: Contemporary Review; 12/1/1996; ; 700+ words
; ...across the Renaissance Room. In the stir and rouse of Paolo Uccello's Stag Hunt gaudy mannikins, mostly in open-mouthed...trees into three vistas of green shadow. Because of Uccello's exactness in the art of perspective, decried though...
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TV Preview; All In Perspective; The Special Effects of Renaissance Masters
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 5/20/1992; ; 641 words
; ...perspective is!" the 15th-century Italian painter Paolo Uccello once told his nagging wife, who couldn't get him...codified by the Italian architect Brunelleschi. What Uccello - and Leonardo, Michelangelo and Raphael - would say...
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Paolo Uccello
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
Paolo Uccello The Italian painter Paolo Uccello (1397-1475) was a leading figure in establishing the Renaissance in Florence. Abarber's son, Paolo Uccello was born in Florence. In 1407 he was apprenticed to the sculptor...
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Uccello, Paolo
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Art and Artists
Uccello, Paolo ( Paolo di Dono ) ( c. 1397–1475). Florentine painter...artists of the early Renaissance . Vasari says he was called ‘Uccello’ (which means ‘bird’) because he loved...
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Uccello, Paolo (1397–1475)
Book article from: The Renaissance
Uccello, Paolo (1397 – 1475) Italian painter born as Paolo di Dono, noted...in Florence, the son of a barber, he earned the nickname “ uccello ” (Italian for bird) for his skill at painting birds. In...
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Andrea del Castagno
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
...the Cathedral of Florence, like Paolo Uccello's earlier one to Sir John Hawkwood...typically, Andrea eliminates Uccello's perspective brackets and flanks...Castagno is in Italian: Mario Salmi, Paolo Uccello, Andrea del Castagno, Domenico...
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Pisanello (ca. 1395–1455)
Book article from: The Renaissance
...Vasari, Pisanello also made a close study of the work of Paolo Uccello, and learned from him the art of drawing and painting...birds, and from nature, a talent he shared with Paolo Uccello. In 1439, he designed a medal for the Byzantine emperor...
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