Matos Series Inaugurated

On October 3, 2017, the David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies and the Moses Mesoamerican Archive inaugurated the Eduardo Matos Moctezuma Lecture Series in Mexico City. A Harvard delegation traveled to Mexico City to take part in this historic event that included a behind-the-scenes tour by Eduardo Matos himself of Templo Mayor, one of the main Aztec temples at their capital of Tenochtitlan. Pictured here, Brian Farrell, Faculty Director of DRCLAS (left), listens as David Carrasco, Neil L. Rudenstine Professor of the Study of Latin America at Harvard (center), shares anecdotes with the Harvard deans and senior officials about his many decades of friendship and fruitful collaboration with Matos, the most famous archaeologist in Mexico who is renowned for his excavation of Templo Mayor (right).

The night of Matos’ lecture at the Museo Nacional de Antropología, Professor Carrasco was especially enthusiastic to present a gift to Matos: an original copy of a painting by Mexican-American, Los Angeles-based artist George Yepes, commissioned to create the visual symbol for the lecture series. The painting by Yepes, titled “El Caballero Águila,” is a monumental work, measuring five by four feet. The composition is defined by the Mexican flag overlaid with a portrait of Matos excavating Templo Mayor just below the Mexican coat of arms, which is derived from an Aztec legend. DRCLAS would like to thank José Antonio Alonso for his generous support and David Carrasco for his leadership in the establishment of the Eduardo Matos Moctezuma Lecture Series.

Winter 2018Volume XVII, Number 2

Related Articles

In the Footsteps of La Rebambaramba

In the Footsteps of La Rebambaramba

English + Español
Tracing the journey of Amadeo Roldán’s Afro-Cuban ballet La Rebambaramba (1928) I arrived in Paris. Yes, in Paris, France… both the author of the original libretto, the Cuban writer and musicologist Alejo Carpentier, and the—also Cuban— choreographer Ramiro Guerra…

La Candela Viva

La Candela Viva

The drum beat is the pulse of Palenque de San Basilio; it is central to birth, death, marriage and other celebrations. In this Colombian town, drumming is about communion and…

A View of Afro-Diasporic History from Colombia

A View of Afro-Diasporic History from Colombia

The Muntu Bantu, a memorial museum and cultural center in Quibdo, Chocó, on Colombia’s Pacific coast region, seeks to work “for the study, promotion and diffusion of the Afro…

Print Friendly, PDF & Email
Subscribe
to the
Newsletter