Skip to product information
1 of 1

University of Texas Press

Finding Caspicara: Double Identities, Hidden Figures, and the Commerce of Sculpture in Colonial Quito

Finding Caspicara: Double Identities, Hidden Figures, and the Commerce of Sculpture in Colonial Quito

Regular price $55.00
Regular price Sale price $55.00
Sale Sold out

An examination of sculpture and authorship in eighteenth-century Quito that documents Caspicara as a participant in the innovative artistic production of the city's workshops and its widespread commerce of polychrome sculptures.

Who is Caspicara? Nothing is known of Caspicara's life, and not a single sculpture has been documented as his work. Yet traditional histories laud him as a prolific Indigenous sculptor in eighteenth-century Quito who created exquisite polychrome figures and became a national artistic icon. Drawing on extensive archival, historical, and object research, Susan Verdi Webster peels away layers of historiographical fabrication to reveal what we do and do not know about Caspicara and his work.

Rather than being a solitary master, Caspicara collaborated with other, largely Indigenous artists in Quito's protoindustrial workshops, manufacturing sculptures now credited to him alone. The high quality of Quito sculptures produced by anonymous artists turned the city into a hub of wide-ranging commerce in religious icons. The art world and post-independence Ecuadorians have lionized the one named sculptor, Caspicara, according to the Western model of the artist-genius, amplifying the market for works bearing his name and creating a national hero on par with European masters. Lost in this process were the artists themselves. Webster returns to their world, detailing their methods and labor and, for the first time, documenting a sculpture made by Caspicara.



Author: Susan Verdi Webster
Binding Type: Hardcover
Publisher: University of Texas Press
Published: 10/01/2024
Pages: 272
Weight: 1.5lbs
Size: 9.60h x 6.90w x 1.00d
ISBN: 9781477329726
View full details