Mexican Colonial Architecture
Colonial Architecture in Mexico, Caribbean & Central America
The earliest
buildings, constructed of impermanent materials, have disappeared,
but by the end of the 16th cent. durable monumental architecture
had been achieved. Most of the buildings of this time, including
the cathedrals, were built for military purposes and were consequently
massive and plain. This was a period of transition from Spanish
Gothic to Spanish Renaissance, with many buildings reminiscent
of the plateresque style, with contrasting bare walls and ornamental
doorways, and others of the austerity of the Escorial.
Although
elaborate and intricate ornamentation was often employed, particularly
in later times, a strong strain of simple, solid construction
ran through the colonial period, as exemplified in the Spanish
missions of California and the 18th-century Jesuit missions of
Paraguay.
The earliest cathedral in the New World, in Santo Domingo, Dominican
Republic (1512–41), has a plateresque portal on the west
facade. In 16th-century Mexico the great builders were the Augustinian,
Franciscan, and Dominican monastic orders. They introduced the
open chapel, as in the monastery of San Francisco Tlalmanalco,
which was built with only three walls in order to speed construction
and to accommodate more people. The cathedrals of Puebla, Mérida,
and Guadalajara were also begun in this period.
During most
of the 17th and 18th cent. the baroque style held sway, and in
the 18th cent. the sumptuous Churrigueresque ornamentation (see
under Churriguera) of Spain was exported to the colonies. In addition
to employing the large forms and curving lines of the traditional
European baroque, Spanish colonial buildings maintained the contrast
between decorated and plain surfaces of the earlier period. A
more conservative trend was manifested in Colombia, where churches
and public buildings were simple and severe.
Baroque features,
combined with the inventiveness of native artisans, reached a
climax in the cathedral in Mexico City. It has been called ultrabaroque
because of its strong light-and-shade patterns, richly carved
columns and entablatures, and violent alternations of curves and
angles. In the late 1960s much of the cathedral was damaged by
fire and had to undergo restoration. In the Puebla region glazed
tiles were sometimes placed on the whole facade of a building,
as in the Church of San Francisco Acatepec. Central American buildings
were generally provincial versions of the Mexican, but in Guatemala
structures were lower and of heavier proportions as a protection
against earthquakes.
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