Ars combinatoria and cosmological models: interactions and survival in a Cuzco school painting of the XVIII century
Alejandro Gangui, Gabriela Siracusano, Juan R. Rey-Marquez

TL;DR
This paper explores the symbolic and cultural significance of the celestial ladder motif in 18th-century Cuzco school paintings, analyzing its roots in religious mysticism and its relation to cosmological models and scientific thought.
Contribution
It provides an interdisciplinary analysis connecting religious symbolism, historical cosmological models, and artistic representation in a specific cultural context.
Findings
Identifies the influence of Judeo-Christian mysticism on cosmological imagery.
Links the ladder symbolism to historical scientific and mystical ideas.
Highlights the cultural and religious significance of celestial representations in art.
Abstract
"The Lord made me a very great favor in an imaginary vision" wrote Maria de Agreda in the seventeenth century, "His Majesty put me at the foot of a beautiful Ladder, and showed me I had to climb it." These words refer to the spiritual ascent, present in the Judeo-Christian tradition, and crystallized in the visions of prophets and Catholic saints. Genesis (18: 10-22) narrates that Jacob, going to Haran, slept on some stones and saw a ladder between heaven and earth along which angels were ascending and descending. From this dream, the symbolic union between heaven and earth has been figured with stairs, ascribing to it different meanings over the centuries. On the steps of the ladder people saw a metaphor for the graduality of ascent; Benedict used a ladder of twelve steps of humility in his Regula, and in the seventh century AD John Climacus, Bishop of Sinai, established a thirty-step…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLatin American history and culture
