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- Skull_art abstract "Indigenous Mexican art celebrates the skeleton and uses it as a regular motif. The use of skulls and skeletons in art originated before the Conquest: The Aztecs excelled in stone sculptures and created striking carvings of their gods. Coatlicue, the goddess of earth and death, was portrayed with a necklace of human hearts, hands and a skull pendant. She was imbued with the drama and grandeur necessary to dazzle the subject people and to convey the image of an implacable state. The worship of death involved worship of life, while the skull – symbol of death – was a promise to resurrection. The Aztecs carved skulls in monoliths of lava, and made masks of obsidian and jade. Furthermore, the skull motif was used in decoration. They were molded on pots, traced on scrolls, woven into garments, and formalized into hieroglyphs.".
- Skull_art wikiPageExternalLink www.RodolfoNieto.com.
- Skull_art wikiPageID "13727892".
- Skull_art wikiPageLength "9151".
- Skull_art wikiPageOutDegree "28".
- Skull_art wikiPageRevisionID "689337755".
- Skull_art wikiPageWikiLink André_Breton.
- Skull_art wikiPageWikiLink Aztec.
- Skull_art wikiPageWikiLink Brujería.
- Skull_art wikiPageWikiLink Category:Art_genres.
- Skull_art wikiPageWikiLink Category:Mexican-American_culture.
- Skull_art wikiPageWikiLink Category:Mexican_art.
- Skull_art wikiPageWikiLink Catholicism.
- Skull_art wikiPageWikiLink Coatlicue.
- Skull_art wikiPageWikiLink Diego_Rivera.
- Skull_art wikiPageWikiLink File:Catrinas_2.jpg.
- Skull_art wikiPageWikiLink File:Gran_calavera_eléctrica2.jpg.
- Skull_art wikiPageWikiLink Francisco_Toledo.
- Skull_art wikiPageWikiLink Frida_Kahlo.
- Skull_art wikiPageWikiLink Jorge_González_Camarena.
- Skull_art wikiPageWikiLink José_Guadalupe_Posada.
- Skull_art wikiPageWikiLink La_Calavera_Catrina.
- Skull_art wikiPageWikiLink Oaxaca.
- Skull_art wikiPageWikiLink Obsidian_use_in_Mesoamerica.
- Skull_art wikiPageWikiLink Porfirio_Díaz.
- Skull_art wikiPageWikiLink Rodolfo_Nieto.
- Skull_art wikiPageWikiLink Rooster.
- Skull_art wikiPageWikiLink Rufino_Tamayo.
- Skull_art wikiPageWikiLink Spanish_colonization_of_the_Americas.
- Skull_art wikiPageWikiLink Tarzan.
- Skull_art wikiPageWikiLink Tenochtitlan.
- Skull_art wikiPageWikiLink File:Posada1.Quijote.jpeg.
- Skull_art wikiPageWikiLink File:The_Kid_-_Diego_Rivera.jpg.
- Skull_art wikiPageWikiLinkText "Skull art".
- Skull_art wikiPageWikiLinkText "skull art".
- Skull_art wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Citation_needed.
- Skull_art wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Skull_art subject Category:Art_genres.
- Skull_art subject Category:Mexican-American_culture.
- Skull_art subject Category:Mexican_art.
- Skull_art type Artist.
- Skull_art type Genre.
- Skull_art type Art.
- Skull_art type Artist.
- Skull_art type Genre.
- Skull_art type Redirect.
- Skull_art comment "Indigenous Mexican art celebrates the skeleton and uses it as a regular motif. The use of skulls and skeletons in art originated before the Conquest: The Aztecs excelled in stone sculptures and created striking carvings of their gods. Coatlicue, the goddess of earth and death, was portrayed with a necklace of human hearts, hands and a skull pendant. She was imbued with the drama and grandeur necessary to dazzle the subject people and to convey the image of an implacable state.".
- Skull_art label "Skull art".
- Skull_art sameAs Q7536961.
- Skull_art sameAs m.03cgffn.
- Skull_art sameAs Q7536961.
- Skull_art wasDerivedFrom Skull_art?oldid=689337755.
- Skull_art isPrimaryTopicOf Skull_art.