Creation Date
1843
Height
9 cm
Width
22 cm
Medium
Genre
Description
This lithograph depicts a portion of the ruins of Uxmal.
This image depicts the Governor's House at Uxmal: it is a single-story, stone-brick building, lightly covered in vegetation and elevated upon a stone-brick platform. A variety of Mexican flora surrounds the platform, filling the foreground and providing a background for the house. Two men stand near the center of the foreground, facing the house.
After reading John Lloyd Stephens and Frederick Catherwood’s account of their expedition to Central America (Incidents of Travel in Central America, Chiapas, and Yucatan), Benjamin Moore Norman traveled to the Yucatán in order to record a number of new Maya sites and to collect Maya antiquities for donations to museums in the United States; Catherwood and Stephens would not explore these sites, in the northern Yucatán, till 1843. Norman left New Orleans for Havana on November 26, 1841, and arrived in the Yucatan on December 20. After exploring a series of other sites, Norman arrived in Uxmal in early March of 1842, and would remain there shortly until his departure for Mérida. Norman’s description of the ruins relays little of his personal experiences at the site, excepting an account of his emotional reaction to the “sublime” nature of the ruins (Norman 166).
Taken five years after the same site was documented by Stephens and Catherwood, Norman’s renderings of Uxmal show a markedly different concern: he adopts the ideals of the picturesque landscape, and seems most interested in the effect of the ruins on the viewer. Furthermore, Norman’s images of Uxmal, as well as of other sites, are the first Romantic images of Mexico and Central America produced by an American for publication in the United States.
Norman’s images of Uxmal are less concerned with producing a scientific record of the site than with conveying a sense of the emotional and sensuous impact given by the experience of a place. They stand in opposition to his text, which is a point-by-point record of the buildings at the site. Consequently, we can see Norman's renderings of Uxmal as visual manifestations of his interest in sublime experience.
Locations Description
Uxmal is a pre-Columbian Maya city located in the modern Mexican state of Yucatán, approximately fifty miles south of the state capital, Mérida. The city was founded around 500 CE; modern archaeologists speculate that at its peak (700-1100 CE) the city was home to at least 25,000 people. The earliest detailed accounts of the city were published by Jean-Frédéric Waldeck (Voyage pittoresque et archéologique dans la province d'Yucatan pendant les années 1834 et 1836; Paris, 1838), John Lloyd Stephens (Incidents of Travel in Central America, Chiapas, and Yucatan; New York, 1841), and Benjamin Moore Norman (Rambles in Yucatan: Including a Visit to the Remarkable Ruins of Chi-Chen, Kabah, Zayi, Uxmal, &c.; New York, 1843). The city was inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1996.
Publisher
J. & H.G. Langley
Collection
Accession Number
G95Y9.N84
Additional Information
Bibliography
Drake, Francis S. “Norman, Benjamin Moore.” Dictionary of American Biography Including Men of the Time; Containing Nearly Ten Thousand Notices of Persons ... Who Have Been Remarkable, or Prominently Connected with the Arts, Sciences, Literature, Politics, or History, of the American Continent. Boston: Houghton, 1879. Print.
Duyckinck, Evert A. “Benjamin Moore Norman” Supplement to the Cyclopædia of American Literature, Including Obituaries of Authors, Continuations of Former Articles, with Notices of Earlier and Later Writers Omitted in Previous Editions. New York: Scribner, 1866. 73. Print.
Norman, Benjamin Moore. Norman's New Orleans and Environs. New Orleans, 1845. Print.
Norman, Benjamin Moore. Rambles by Land and Water, or, Notes of Travel in Cuba and Mexico; Including a Canoe Voyage up the River Panuco, and Researches among the Ruins of Tamaulipas. New York, 1845. Print.
Norman, Benjamin Moore. Rambles in Yucatan: Or, Notes of Travel through the Peninsula, Including a Visit to the Remarkable Ruins of Chi-Chen, Kabak, Zayi, and Uxmal. 2d ed. New York, 1843. Print.
Stephens, John Lloyd. Incidents of Travel in Central America, Chiapas, and Yucatan. 2 vols. New York: Harper, 1841. Print.
Waldeck, Frédéric de, and Hernán Menéndez Rodríguez. Viaje Pintoresco Y Arqueológico a La Provincia De Yucatán, 1834-1836.México: Consejo Nacional para la Cultura y las Artes, 1996. Print.