Caminos De Tierra

6 images

Description

Pathways crossing Andean mountains, Mexican plains, and Brazilian backlands since pre-Hispanic times. Traces of dust and stone that connected empires, markets, and sanctuaries. The geography of human movement drawn on colonial maps and later captured by photographers who documented how the earth remains the first road.

Imágenes

Ingenio Monserrate. Litografía: la industria azucarera cubana en 1857, por Laplante — No identificado Ingenio San Rafael, símbolo de la industria azucarera cubana decimonónica — No identificado Oller, f, nº 10 — Francisco Oller Post, nº 1117 — Frans Post Esta pintura representa una escena rural en Iberoamérica — Anónimo tlacuilo mexica Vista del Brasil holandés — Post, lámina — Frans Post Veduta delle r — Frans Post Post, nº 1067 — Frans Post Imagenes — Anónimo (ilustración colonial)
Ingenio Monserrate. Litografía: la industria azucarera cubana en 1857, por Laplante.Ingenio San Rafael, símbolo de la industria azucarera cubana decimonónica.Vista del teatro Tacón y parte del paseo de Isabel II en la Habana, 1855
Visual archive

Caminos de tierra

10 images

10 images

Dirt roads, vital arteries of Iberoamerica since the 16th century, trace the geography and history of its peoples. They reveal the pulse of travel, human labor, and the vastness of the embracing landscape, uniting distances and destinies.