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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > Latin American Art > pre-Columbian art and architecture
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pre-Columbian art and architecture, Latin American Art

Related Category: Latin American Art


The Maya

The Maya occupied the general area of YucatAn and adjacent parts of Central America from very early times. Their roots were in the Archaic period (c.2000 B.C.), but it was only during the Late Formative (300 B.C.A.D. 150) and the Proto-Classic (A.D. 150–300) periods that the traits associated with the Classic Maya were developed. Their greatest artistic achievements included their elaborate calendar, writing, palaces and temple pyramids with vaulted rooms made of limestone, polychrome pottery, stone stelae, and stylized wall paintings and bas-reliefs.

The Classic Maya (A.D. 300–900) was the apex of Maya civilization and is described as that period when inscribed the "Long Count Calendar" on their monuments. The remains of Bonampak, with its famous murals, can be dated to shortly after 800. Maya cities were ceremonial centers, and some of the edifices may be more properly identified as sculptured monuments. Maya architectural styles are found in three main regions: the PetEn district (UaxactUn and Tikal); the cities of the river valleys, such as Piedras Negras and Palenque; and the cities of central and N YucatAn (Uxmal).

In the valley of the Motagua River to the south are CopAn and QuiriguA, where sculpture flourished in the form of huge, elaborately carved stone stelae; more delicate forms and a refined spatial sense are evident in the famous stucco sculpture of Palenque and in the airiness and grace of its buildings. In the flat, dry country of N YucatAn, Maya architecture underwent changes in style. The erection of stone stelae was largely abandoned, and decoration, notably at Uxmal, became geometric. The cause of the collapse of the Maya civilization is not precisely understood. The culture persisted over so long a period that it is easier to understand the rest of Mesoamerican art and culture from the framework of Maya chronology.

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The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press.
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Topics that might be of interest to you:

American art
Aztec
Bonampak
Chan Chan
ChavIn de HuAntar
ChichEn ItzA
Chimu
CopAn
Cuzco
Inca
inscription
Machu Picchu
Maya, indigenous people of Mexico and Central America
Mexican art and architecture
Mitla
Mixtec
Mochica
Monte AlbAn
North American Native art
Natives, South American
Nazca
Oaxaca, state, Mexico
Olmec
Palenque
Piedras Negras, ancient city, Guatemala
QuiriguA
SacsahuamAn
sculpture
Tarascan
temple, edifice of worship
TenochtitlAn
TeotihuacAn
Tiahuanaco
Tikal
Toltec
Tula, ancient city, Mexico
Uxmal
Zapotec

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Literature and the Arts > Art and Architecture


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