fbpx
Wikipedia

Allegorical representations of Argentina

There are various allegorical representations of Argentina or associated in any way with Argentina. There is not, however, a national personification with its own name, like Marianne from France, or Hispania from Spain, but sculptures and engravings representing liberty, republic, motherland or other concepts that have been used officially by the Argentine state.

Statue of Liberty at the top of the May Pyramid, inaugurated in 1856. She holds an Argentine shield in her left hand.
The Argentine Republic allegorized by Ettore Ximenes in 1900; Note that in the place of the heart the Argentina Shield is sculpted.

Sculptures edit

Despite the absence of a character with fixed traits, the allegory of Argentina is usually a female figure dressed in robes and wearing a Phrygian cap, which also appears on the Argentine coat of arms. Figures such as these appear in dozens of engravings, reliefs, plaques, paintings, memorials and sculptures. Some of the memorials that include an allegorical representation of Argentina are the "Monumento Nacional a la Bandera" in Rosario, the "Monumento de los Españoles" in Palermo, the "Monumento al Guardacostas" in Puerto Madero, the "Monumento a la Gesta de Malvinas" in Quequén and the "Monumento al Ejército de Los Andes" in Mendoza, among others. An allegorical representation is also figurehead of the ARA Libertad, the flagship of the Argentine Navy. Allegories regularly appeared in official memorabilia for the Centenary celebrations, as well as a prominent decorative feature in state buildings and logos of government departments at the turn of the century.

May Pyramid edit

The May Pyramid was remodeled in 1856 under the artistic direction of Prilidiano Pueyrredón who commissioned the French artist Joseph Dubourdieu to build what the press of that period defined "a colossal statue of Liberty".[1] Inaugurated a few days before the anniversary of May Revolution, the statue represents a figure very similar to the representation of the goddess Athena, crowned with a Phrygian cap, armed with a spear in one hand and an Argentine shield as a defense in the other one.[2] Although most sources mention the statue as an allegory of Liberty, in a publication of the Historic and Numismatic Museum of the Central Bank of Argentina, is considered an allegory of the Republic.[2]

Bust in the White Hall edit

 
View of The Republic,[3][4] White Hall, Government House.

Chairing the White Hall in the Casa Rosada, where traditional ceremonies and important announcements related to the executive branch are made, a bust of a woman with thick hair and the Coat of Arms of Argentina as a brooch in her chest is located. The work, done by Italian sculptor Ettore Ximenes, is entitled "The Republic", but others consider it a bust of "Motherland".[5]

Mausoleum of General San Martín edit

In 1880, the remains of General José de San Martín were brought from France and placed in a mausoleum inside the Buenos Aires Metropolitan Cathedral. The black sarcophagus is guarded by three life-size female figures that represent Argentina, Chile and Peru, three of the regions freed by the General.

Monetary emissions edit

The first representation of an allegorical figure to appear on Argentine banknotes was the goddess Athena (historical symbol of Athenian democracy), commissioned by the National Bank of the United Provinces of the Río de la Plata during the Cisplatine War. The Greek goddess also appeared in banknotes issued by the National Bank during the governorship of Juan Manuel de Rosas in the Buenos Aires Province. However, the first figure to transmit a sense of regionality is displayed in a series of banknotes printed by Britain and emitted by the Bank of the Province of Buenos Aires in 1867, where a young woman is seen holding a shovel in her left hand and a shepherd's crook in her right hand (representations of agriculture and animal husbandry, respectively).

In some of the first peso moneda nacional banknotes, various unidentified female figures showing her legs or her chest appear, "as the seductive image of a State that attracts citizens via women". The monetary reorganization, that begun during the first presidency of Julio Argentino Roca, imposed the use of designs which were developed as to have a greater permanence in time. Two allegorical figures present in the first unified issues of currency and banknotes, the Bust of Liberty and the Effigy of Progress, would be recurring in later releases.

Bust of Liberty edit

 
The Liberty of Oudiné in the flip of a coin of twenty cents m$n, 1883.

One of the most recurrent figures in Argentine currency is the Effigy of Liberty by the French artist Eugène André Oudiné, which shows the profile of a woman with a serene face, abundant hair loose to the wind and a Phrygian cap. Oudiné carved his Effigy of Liberty in 1881, by order of the engineer Eduardo Castilla, first president of the Casa de Moneda, to illustrate the reverse of the coins of the peso moneda nacional, whose creation was enacted that same year to unify the monetary system of country. The Liberty of Oudiné was present in monetary emissions without interruption until 1942, when it was replaced by a modern bust made in 1940 by French sculptor Lucien Bazor. However, it reappears in the emission of 1957, and is present in subsequent designs of peso ley, peso argentino and austral.

A slightly different version appears on the banknotes of fifty cents m$n, in circulation between 1942 and 1960. This effigy can be compared with the design of Oudiné, and considered inspired by Liberty Leading the People. The Liberty of Oudiné also appears in the logo of the Central Bank of Argentina, and the former company Gas del Estado. It is also used in the seals of the Internal Revenue law present in cigarette packs.

Effigy of Progress edit

 
Effigy of Progress on 1 m$n banknote, 1903

Another common allegorical figure, in this on banknotes, is an Effigy of Progress which features a woman sitting, holding an Argentine shield with one hand and a lighted torch with the other. The design, which is usually attributed to the French writer Louis-Eugène Mouchon was carried out for illustrating the front of the peso moneda nacional banknotes as a result of Act. 3505 of 1897, which authorized the Caja de Conversión to renew and unify all paper currencies in the period. The Effigy of Progress would be present in all series of banknotes by the Caja de Conversión from 1899 until 1935, when it was replaced by the Central Bank of Argentina, and will not be replaced until 1942, when the Central Bank made its first series of banknotes. The same figure, surrounded by laurels, reappears half a century later on the back of all austral banknotes.

Apart from being identified with Progress, whose formalization is posterior, the figure was initially interpreted as an Effigy of the Republic.

Bicentennial celebrations edit

During the festivities and celebrations of the Argentine bicentennial, the young actresses Josefina Torino and Ivanna Carrizo interpreted the figure of Motherland.[6] The artists were inspired by several sculptures, including the statue of the Republic on the frontispiece of the Museo Histórico Sarmiento.[7] The production looked specifically for two actresses with mestizo features, as a way to include indigenous peoples in Argentina in the representation[8]

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ El Historiador: La Pirámide de Mayo, available at http://www.elhistoriador.com.ar/frases/revolucion/piramide_de_mayo.php 2010-12-27 at the Wayback Machine. Consulted on February 27, 2011.
  2. ^ a b Banco Central de la República Argentina: La escultura en las monedas y billetes de la República Argentina, available at http://www.bcra.gov.ar/pdfs/institucional/LaEsculturaMonedasyBilletes.pdf. Consulted on February 27, 2011.
  3. ^ Correo Oficial de la República Argentina: Emisiones - 2007, available at . Archived from the original on 2008-01-29. Retrieved 2011-04-22.. Consulted on March 6, 2011.
  4. ^ Museo Roca: Homenaje a los presidentes Roca, Uriburu y Sáenz Peña, p. 3, available at (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-09-03. Retrieved 2011-04-22.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link). Consulted on March 6, 2011.
  5. ^ Presidencia de la Nación Argentina: Casa Rosada - Puntos de interés, available at http://www.casarosada.gov.ar/index.php?Itemid=75&id=135&option=com_content&task=view. Consulted on March 6, 2011.
  6. ^ "Ivanna y Josefina, las mujeres que por un día fueron la Patria", Clarín, 27/05/2010. Consulted on 26/02/2011.
  7. ^ "Ivanna Carrizo y Josefina Torino fueron "la Patria" del 25 de Mayo 2011-10-02 at the Wayback Machine", Perfil, 29/05/2010. Consulted on 26/02/2011.
  8. ^ "ADN wichi y diaguita en nuestras Patria-voladoras 2011-09-29 at the Wayback Machine", Miradas al Sur, 30/05/2010. Consulted on 26/02/2011.

allegorical, representations, argentina, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, sc. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Allegorical representations of Argentina news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message There are various allegorical representations of Argentina or associated in any way with Argentina There is not however a national personification with its own name like Marianne from France or Hispania from Spain but sculptures and engravings representing liberty republic motherland or other concepts that have been used officially by the Argentine state Statue of Liberty at the top of the May Pyramid inaugurated in 1856 She holds an Argentine shield in her left hand The Argentine Republic allegorized by Ettore Ximenes in 1900 Note that in the place of the heart the Argentina Shield is sculpted Contents 1 Sculptures 1 1 May Pyramid 1 2 Bust in the White Hall 1 3 Mausoleum of General San Martin 2 Monetary emissions 2 1 Bust of Liberty 2 2 Effigy of Progress 3 Bicentennial celebrations 4 Gallery 5 See also 6 ReferencesSculptures editDespite the absence of a character with fixed traits the allegory of Argentina is usually a female figure dressed in robes and wearing a Phrygian cap which also appears on the Argentine coat of arms Figures such as these appear in dozens of engravings reliefs plaques paintings memorials and sculptures Some of the memorials that include an allegorical representation of Argentina are the Monumento Nacional a la Bandera in Rosario the Monumento de los Espanoles in Palermo the Monumento al Guardacostas in Puerto Madero the Monumento a la Gesta de Malvinas in Quequen and the Monumento al Ejercito de Los Andes in Mendoza among others An allegorical representation is also figurehead of the ARA Libertad the flagship of the Argentine Navy Allegories regularly appeared in official memorabilia for the Centenary celebrations as well as a prominent decorative feature in state buildings and logos of government departments at the turn of the century May Pyramid edit The May Pyramid was remodeled in 1856 under the artistic direction of Prilidiano Pueyrredon who commissioned the French artist Joseph Dubourdieu to build what the press of that period defined a colossal statue of Liberty 1 Inaugurated a few days before the anniversary of May Revolution the statue represents a figure very similar to the representation of the goddess Athena crowned with a Phrygian cap armed with a spear in one hand and an Argentine shield as a defense in the other one 2 Although most sources mention the statue as an allegory of Liberty in a publication of the Historic and Numismatic Museum of the Central Bank of Argentina is considered an allegory of the Republic 2 Bust in the White Hall edit nbsp View of The Republic 3 4 White Hall Government House Chairing the White Hall in the Casa Rosada where traditional ceremonies and important announcements related to the executive branch are made a bust of a woman with thick hair and the Coat of Arms of Argentina as a brooch in her chest is located The work done by Italian sculptor Ettore Ximenes is entitled The Republic but others consider it a bust of Motherland 5 Mausoleum of General San Martin edit In 1880 the remains of General Jose de San Martin were brought from France and placed in a mausoleum inside the Buenos Aires Metropolitan Cathedral The black sarcophagus is guarded by three life size female figures that represent Argentina Chile and Peru three of the regions freed by the General Monetary emissions editThe first representation of an allegorical figure to appear on Argentine banknotes was the goddess Athena historical symbol of Athenian democracy commissioned by the National Bank of the United Provinces of the Rio de la Plata during the Cisplatine War The Greek goddess also appeared in banknotes issued by the National Bank during the governorship of Juan Manuel de Rosas in the Buenos Aires Province However the first figure to transmit a sense of regionality is displayed in a series of banknotes printed by Britain and emitted by the Bank of the Province of Buenos Aires in 1867 where a young woman is seen holding a shovel in her left hand and a shepherd s crook in her right hand representations of agriculture and animal husbandry respectively In some of the first peso moneda nacional banknotes various unidentified female figures showing her legs or her chest appear as the seductive image of a State that attracts citizens via women The monetary reorganization that begun during the first presidency of Julio Argentino Roca imposed the use of designs which were developed as to have a greater permanence in time Two allegorical figures present in the first unified issues of currency and banknotes the Bust of Liberty and the Effigy of Progress would be recurring in later releases Bust of Liberty edit nbsp The Liberty of Oudine in the flip of a coin of twenty cents m n 1883 One of the most recurrent figures in Argentine currency is the Effigy of Liberty by the French artist Eugene Andre Oudine which shows the profile of a woman with a serene face abundant hair loose to the wind and a Phrygian cap Oudine carved his Effigy of Liberty in 1881 by order of the engineer Eduardo Castilla first president of the Casa de Moneda to illustrate the reverse of the coins of the peso moneda nacional whose creation was enacted that same year to unify the monetary system of country The Liberty of Oudine was present in monetary emissions without interruption until 1942 when it was replaced by a modern bust made in 1940 by French sculptor Lucien Bazor However it reappears in the emission of 1957 and is present in subsequent designs of peso ley peso argentino and austral A slightly different version appears on the banknotes of fifty cents m n in circulation between 1942 and 1960 This effigy can be compared with the design of Oudine and considered inspired by Liberty Leading the People The Liberty of Oudine also appears in the logo of the Central Bank of Argentina and the former company Gas del Estado It is also used in the seals of the Internal Revenue law present in cigarette packs Effigy of Progress edit nbsp Effigy of Progress on 1 m n banknote 1903Another common allegorical figure in this on banknotes is an Effigy of Progress which features a woman sitting holding an Argentine shield with one hand and a lighted torch with the other The design which is usually attributed to the French writer Louis Eugene Mouchon was carried out for illustrating the front of the peso moneda nacional banknotes as a result of Act 3505 of 1897 which authorized the Caja de Conversion to renew and unify all paper currencies in the period The Effigy of Progress would be present in all series of banknotes by the Caja de Conversion from 1899 until 1935 when it was replaced by the Central Bank of Argentina and will not be replaced until 1942 when the Central Bank made its first series of banknotes The same figure surrounded by laurels reappears half a century later on the back of all austral banknotes Apart from being identified with Progress whose formalization is posterior the figure was initially interpreted as an Effigy of the Republic Bicentennial celebrations editDuring the festivities and celebrations of the Argentine bicentennial the young actresses Josefina Torino and Ivanna Carrizo interpreted the figure of Motherland 6 The artists were inspired by several sculptures including the statue of the Republic on the frontispiece of the Museo Historico Sarmiento 7 The production looked specifically for two actresses with mestizo features as a way to include indigenous peoples in Argentina in the representation 8 Gallery edit nbsp Painting on canvas on the ceiling of the White Hall in the Casa Rosada with allegories of the May Revolution and the Declaration of Independence nbsp La repubblica Argentina 1900 by Ettore Ximenes nbsp The Liberty of Oudine in the logo for the Central Bank of Argentina nbsp The same figure was used for the logo of Gas del Estado nbsp This 1890 allegoric drawing depicts the friendship between the Argentine Republic and the newly formed Brazilian Republic nbsp Allegoric sculpture of the Republic in the Museo Historico Sarmiento nbsp Representation of Homeland during the festivities of the Bicentennial of May Revolution nbsp Sculpture representing Argentina in the Mausoleum of General Don Jose de San Martin nbsp Argentine Panorama magazine published in 1910 as part of the Centennial s commemorations of May Revolution See also editNational personification Gaucho Allegory of Hispania Marianne Liberty Leading the PeopleReferences edit El Historiador La Piramide de Mayo available at http www elhistoriador com ar frases revolucion piramide de mayo php Archived 2010 12 27 at the Wayback Machine Consulted on February 27 2011 a b Banco Central de la Republica Argentina La escultura en las monedas y billetes de la Republica Argentina available at http www bcra gov ar pdfs institucional LaEsculturaMonedasyBilletes pdf Consulted on February 27 2011 Correo Oficial de la Republica Argentina Emisiones 2007 available at Emisiones 2007 Archived from the original on 2008 01 29 Retrieved 2011 04 22 Consulted on March 6 2011 Museo Roca Homenaje a los presidentes Roca Uriburu y Saenz Pena p 3 available at Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2011 09 03 Retrieved 2011 04 22 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Consulted on March 6 2011 Presidencia de la Nacion Argentina Casa Rosada Puntos de interes available at http www casarosada gov ar index php Itemid 75 amp id 135 amp option com content amp task view Consulted on March 6 2011 Ivanna y Josefina las mujeres que por un dia fueron la Patria Clarin 27 05 2010 Consulted on 26 02 2011 Ivanna Carrizo y Josefina Torino fueron la Patria del 25 de Mayo Archived 2011 10 02 at the Wayback Machine Perfil 29 05 2010 Consulted on 26 02 2011 ADN wichi y diaguita en nuestras Patria voladoras Archived 2011 09 29 at the Wayback Machine Miradas al Sur 30 05 2010 Consulted on 26 02 2011 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Allegorical representations of Argentina amp oldid 1192411117, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.