Origins
The ''retablos'' probably originated with the Christian knights of the Crusades and the Spanish ''Adam and Eve
There is a story of how aPatron saint of cattle
In a syncretic process, the early ''retablos'' brought by the Spanish merged with Indigenous beliefs in the Andean region to acquire certain magical or symbolic properties which had been the attributes of local spirits before the Conquest. This was particularly true of the ''retablos'' named afterDaily life and identity
Later, ''retablos'' evolved to include daily scenes in the lives of the Andean people, such as harvests, processions, feasts, and tableaux depicting shops and homes. The use of wood for the outside box remained, but other materials, such as gypsum, clay, or a potato-gypsum-clay paste mix, were increasingly used for the figures because of their ease of handling and durability. In the 1940s more and more artists were using ''retablos'' as a vehicle for affirming and recording the distinct identity of the Indigenous people of the Andean region. They are also a defense of Indigenous culture and values in the face of the modernization and the penetration of their culture by that of the white Hispanic elites of Lima.Ayacucho and Nicario Jiménez
The tradition of making ''cajones sanmarcos'' or ''retablos'' is very strong in the mountainous Peruvian region around the city of Ayacucho. In recent years theAyacucho
In 1968 Nicario’s family moved from their small village to the city of Ayacucho. A decade later Nicario Jiménez had his first chance to display his ''retablos'' alongside those of his father in a Lima gallery. The quality of and unique style of his work quickly caught the attention of many Peruvian and foreign connoisseurs of retablo folk art. In 1986 he opened his own workshop-gallery in Lima.His themes
He frequently injects elements that remind us of his Andean heritage. For example, this Crucifix has threeThe ''curandero'' (shaman)
The shaman, or ''''Yawar fiesta''
This ''retablo'' shows a ceremony (“''Yawar Fiesta''”) involving a struggle between a bull (symbol of the Spanish) and a condor (symbol of the Andeans). The condor is tied to the back of the bull, who is infuriated and cannot rid itself of the condor, and eventually dies from exhaustion. The condor is then set free. It spreads its wings, and it becomes the symbol of the freedom of the Andean Indigenous peoples.The ''Pistaku'' (cutter of throats)
'' Pistaku'' is a Quechua Indigenous word meaning “cutter of throats,” and he is the subject of an''Sendero Luminoso'' (“Shining Path”)
In recent years there have been more controversial ''retablos'', such as those showing exploitation and mistreatment of the Indigenous peoples, and the plight of the Andean people caught between leftist ''guerrillas'' and the security forces of the State. One recurring theme is the way the ''campesino'' is caught between the ''Sendero Luminoso'' (Shining Path) Marxist ''guerrillas'' and the military.See also
*References
*Craven, Roy C., Jr. “Andean Art: An Endangered Tradition.” ''Américas'', vol. 30, no. 1, January 1978, pp. 41-47. *Egan, Martha. “The Retablos of Nicario Jiménez.” ''Artspace'' (Southwestern Contemporary Arts Quarterly), Summer, 1987, pp. 11-13. *Jiménez Quispe, Nicario. ''Cuadernos de Arte y Cultura Popular''. Lima: Taller-Galería de Retablos Ayacuchanos, Lima, no. 1, 1990. *Milliken, Louise. ''Folk Art of Peru''. Washington: