Soooooooooogoy Wallpapers
Skull art wallpapers
Skull art
Indigenous
Mexican art celebrates the skeleton and uses it as a regular motif. The
use of skulls and skeletons in art originated before the Conquest: The Aztecs excelled in stone sculptures and created striking carvings of their gods. Coatlicue,
the goddess of earth and death, was portrayed with a necklace of human
hearts, hands and a skull pendant. She was imbued with the drama and
grandeur necessary to dazzle the subject people and to convey the image
of an implacable state. The worship of death involved worship of life,
while the skull – symbol of death – was a promise to resurrection. The
Aztecs carved skulls in monoliths of lava, and made masks of obsidian
and jade. Furthermore, the skull motif was used in decoration. They
were molded on pots, traced on scrolls, woven into garments, and
formalized into hieroglyphs.
Chicano / Mexican – American
Often Chicano or Mexican American artists turn to their history,
recently and notably Nancy Nieto brings a bold resurgence to the ancient
tradition of Mexican skull art. Woven into a veil of rich colors and
unconventional forms, adopted from the Oaxacan School, her work removes
the veil of mystery the mystery of life only to reveal the mystery of
death. She shows depths of mystery yet has a harmonious eurhythmic note
of the epic origins of the chromatic Oaxaca.
She struggles to re-address Francisco Toledo's erotic themes, and to
step away from Rodolfo Nieto's dramatic tomes. Her work renews the Aztec
view of death as a transitional cycle between the individual life and
the ubiquitous "to be".
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