The syncretism in the sacred art of the Jesuitic Missions of the guarani: Holy Indian and Indian Holy

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: Lini, Priscila
Data de Publicação: 2019
Tipo de documento: Artigo
Idioma: por
Título da fonte: Mouseion (Canoas)
Texto Completo: https://revistas.unilasalle.edu.br/index.php/Mouseion/article/view/5437
Resumo: The Jesuit Missions were very peculiar colonial spaces, whose interaction between the Europeans and the Indians were oriented by the catechization and evangelization of the communities, in an environment of order, work and prayer. The Company of Jesus, in its missionary task, carried with it important concepts of development, such as architecture, sculpture, carpentry and music, which provided a rich material scene during the period of the Missions’ apogee. In this synergy between the apostolic catholic Christianity and the imaginary Guarani, the sacred art developed during the XVII and XVIII centuries in these spaces finds a differentiated meaning, since endowed with enormous syncretism and fusion of local elements - especially the phenotypic ones, that resignified the aesthetic expression until then in force for the representation of the sacred images of Jesus, Mary and the Catholic saints. It is important to point out that the pieces were made by the Guarani, whose techniques of sculpture, statuary and polychromy were taught to them by the Jesuit priests, so that such representations brought them closer to the new religion that had been transmitted to them. The period coincides with the Catholic Counter-Reformation and with the rise of the Baroque movement in art, the Church’s energetic reaction to the Protestant Reformation, which, in addition to multiplying the number of faithful around the world, with the conversion - imposed or accepted - of great part of America in Christian territories, has still significantly altered the aesthetic standards of art in the redefining new continent. Thus, from the study of these forms of representation of the sacred by the indigenous ‘missioners’, the present article deals with the syncretic representation in the sacred art of the Missions.
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spelling The syncretism in the sacred art of the Jesuitic Missions of the guarani: Holy Indian and Indian HolyO sincretismo na arte sacra das Missões Jesuíticas dos guarani: Índio Santo e Santo ÍndioSyncretismReligious artJesuit MissionsGuaraniSincretismoArte sacraMissões JesuíticasGuaraniArte Sacra ColonialThe Jesuit Missions were very peculiar colonial spaces, whose interaction between the Europeans and the Indians were oriented by the catechization and evangelization of the communities, in an environment of order, work and prayer. The Company of Jesus, in its missionary task, carried with it important concepts of development, such as architecture, sculpture, carpentry and music, which provided a rich material scene during the period of the Missions’ apogee. In this synergy between the apostolic catholic Christianity and the imaginary Guarani, the sacred art developed during the XVII and XVIII centuries in these spaces finds a differentiated meaning, since endowed with enormous syncretism and fusion of local elements - especially the phenotypic ones, that resignified the aesthetic expression until then in force for the representation of the sacred images of Jesus, Mary and the Catholic saints. It is important to point out that the pieces were made by the Guarani, whose techniques of sculpture, statuary and polychromy were taught to them by the Jesuit priests, so that such representations brought them closer to the new religion that had been transmitted to them. The period coincides with the Catholic Counter-Reformation and with the rise of the Baroque movement in art, the Church’s energetic reaction to the Protestant Reformation, which, in addition to multiplying the number of faithful around the world, with the conversion - imposed or accepted - of great part of America in Christian territories, has still significantly altered the aesthetic standards of art in the redefining new continent. Thus, from the study of these forms of representation of the sacred by the indigenous ‘missioners’, the present article deals with the syncretic representation in the sacred art of the Missions.As Missões Jesuíticas foram espaços coloniais muito peculiares, cuja interação entre os europeus e indígenas foram orientadas pela catequização e evangelização das comunidades, em um ambiente de ordem, trabalho e oração. A Companhia de Jesus, em sua tarefa missionária, levava consigo conceitos importantes de desenvolvimento, como a arquitetura, a escultura, a marcenaria e a música, o que proporcionou um rico cenário material no período do apogeu das Missões. Nesta sinergia entre o cristianismo católico apostólico e o imaginário guarani, a arte sacra desenvolvida durante os séculos XVII e XVIII nestes espaços encontra um significado diferenciado, pois dotada de enorme sincretismo e fusão de elementos locais – especialmente os fenotípicos, que ressignificaram a expressão estética até então vigente para a representação das imagens sagradas de Jesus, Maria e dos santos católicos. Importante salientar que as peças eram feitas pelos guarani, cujas técnicas de escultura, estatuária e policromia lhes foram ensinadas pelos padres jesuítas, de maneira que tais representações lhes aproximaram da nova religião que lhes fora transmitida. O período coincide com a Contrarreforma católica e com a ascensão do movimento Barroco na arte, a reação enérgica da Igreja à Reforma Protestante, que, além de multiplicar o número de fiéis ao redor do mundo, com a conversão – imposta ou aceita - de grande parte da América em territórios cristãos, ainda alterou de forma significativa os padrões estéticos da arte no novo continente em redefinição. Assim, do estudo destas formas de representação do sagrado por parte dos indígenas ditos ‘missioneiros’ resulta o presente artigo, versando sobre a representação sincrética na arte sacra das Missões.Universidade LaSalle - Unilasalle Canoas2019-05-07info:eu-repo/semantics/articleinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersionPesquisa Históricaapplication/pdfhttps://revistas.unilasalle.edu.br/index.php/Mouseion/article/view/543710.18316/mouseion.v0i32.5437Mouseion; No. 32 (2019); p. 55-65Revista Mouseion; n. 32 (2019); p. 55-651981-7207reponame:Mouseion (Canoas)instname:Centro Universitário La Salle (Unilasalle)instacron:UNILASALLEporhttps://revistas.unilasalle.edu.br/index.php/Mouseion/article/view/5437/pdfCopyright (c) 2019 Mouseioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessLini, Priscila2022-05-23T13:23:20Zoai:ojs.revistas.unilasalle.edu.br:article/5437Revistahttps://revistas.unilasalle.edu.br/index.php/Mouseionhttps://revistas.unilasalle.edu.br/index.php/Mouseion/oai||revista.mouseion@unilasalle.edu.br1981-72071981-7207opendoar:2022-05-23T13:23:20Mouseion (Canoas) - Centro Universitário La Salle (Unilasalle)false
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv The syncretism in the sacred art of the Jesuitic Missions of the guarani: Holy Indian and Indian Holy
O sincretismo na arte sacra das Missões Jesuíticas dos guarani: Índio Santo e Santo Índio
title The syncretism in the sacred art of the Jesuitic Missions of the guarani: Holy Indian and Indian Holy
spellingShingle The syncretism in the sacred art of the Jesuitic Missions of the guarani: Holy Indian and Indian Holy
Lini, Priscila
Syncretism
Religious art
Jesuit Missions
Guarani
Sincretismo
Arte sacra
Missões Jesuíticas
Guarani
Arte Sacra Colonial
title_short The syncretism in the sacred art of the Jesuitic Missions of the guarani: Holy Indian and Indian Holy
title_full The syncretism in the sacred art of the Jesuitic Missions of the guarani: Holy Indian and Indian Holy
title_fullStr The syncretism in the sacred art of the Jesuitic Missions of the guarani: Holy Indian and Indian Holy
title_full_unstemmed The syncretism in the sacred art of the Jesuitic Missions of the guarani: Holy Indian and Indian Holy
title_sort The syncretism in the sacred art of the Jesuitic Missions of the guarani: Holy Indian and Indian Holy
author Lini, Priscila
author_facet Lini, Priscila
author_role author
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Lini, Priscila
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv Syncretism
Religious art
Jesuit Missions
Guarani
Sincretismo
Arte sacra
Missões Jesuíticas
Guarani
Arte Sacra Colonial
topic Syncretism
Religious art
Jesuit Missions
Guarani
Sincretismo
Arte sacra
Missões Jesuíticas
Guarani
Arte Sacra Colonial
description The Jesuit Missions were very peculiar colonial spaces, whose interaction between the Europeans and the Indians were oriented by the catechization and evangelization of the communities, in an environment of order, work and prayer. The Company of Jesus, in its missionary task, carried with it important concepts of development, such as architecture, sculpture, carpentry and music, which provided a rich material scene during the period of the Missions’ apogee. In this synergy between the apostolic catholic Christianity and the imaginary Guarani, the sacred art developed during the XVII and XVIII centuries in these spaces finds a differentiated meaning, since endowed with enormous syncretism and fusion of local elements - especially the phenotypic ones, that resignified the aesthetic expression until then in force for the representation of the sacred images of Jesus, Mary and the Catholic saints. It is important to point out that the pieces were made by the Guarani, whose techniques of sculpture, statuary and polychromy were taught to them by the Jesuit priests, so that such representations brought them closer to the new religion that had been transmitted to them. The period coincides with the Catholic Counter-Reformation and with the rise of the Baroque movement in art, the Church’s energetic reaction to the Protestant Reformation, which, in addition to multiplying the number of faithful around the world, with the conversion - imposed or accepted - of great part of America in Christian territories, has still significantly altered the aesthetic standards of art in the redefining new continent. Thus, from the study of these forms of representation of the sacred by the indigenous ‘missioners’, the present article deals with the syncretic representation in the sacred art of the Missions.
publishDate 2019
dc.date.none.fl_str_mv 2019-05-07
dc.type.driver.fl_str_mv info:eu-repo/semantics/article
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Pesquisa Histórica
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status_str publishedVersion
dc.identifier.uri.fl_str_mv https://revistas.unilasalle.edu.br/index.php/Mouseion/article/view/5437
10.18316/mouseion.v0i32.5437
url https://revistas.unilasalle.edu.br/index.php/Mouseion/article/view/5437
identifier_str_mv 10.18316/mouseion.v0i32.5437
dc.language.iso.fl_str_mv por
language por
dc.relation.none.fl_str_mv https://revistas.unilasalle.edu.br/index.php/Mouseion/article/view/5437/pdf
dc.rights.driver.fl_str_mv Copyright (c) 2019 Mouseion
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
rights_invalid_str_mv Copyright (c) 2019 Mouseion
eu_rights_str_mv openAccess
dc.format.none.fl_str_mv application/pdf
dc.publisher.none.fl_str_mv Universidade LaSalle - Unilasalle Canoas
publisher.none.fl_str_mv Universidade LaSalle - Unilasalle Canoas
dc.source.none.fl_str_mv Mouseion; No. 32 (2019); p. 55-65
Revista Mouseion; n. 32 (2019); p. 55-65
1981-7207
reponame:Mouseion (Canoas)
instname:Centro Universitário La Salle (Unilasalle)
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reponame_str Mouseion (Canoas)
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