Yucatán es una Maravilla del Mundo

Conozca Más de Yucatán
Exif info
    • JFIFVersion: 1.02
    • Resolution Unit: inches
    • X-Resolution: 350 dpi
    • Y-Resolution: 350 dpi
    • Image Description: This sculptural bust was recovered from Zona arqueológica de Ek Balam, circa 600-900 d.C. Palacio Cantón, at Paseo de Montejo and Calle 43, was built in 1911 as a residence for General Francisco Canton, the governor of the state of Yucatán. It stayed in the family for a few years before being sold to the government where it functioned as a school, and then the official residence of the state governors before El Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia (INAH) turned it into Museo de Antropología e Historia in 1966. Designed by Italian architect Enrico Deserti and engineer Manuel Canton Ramos, who oversaw Casas Gemelas, the mansion turned-museum is a mix of architectural styles: French Baroque, European neoclassical, and classical.
    • Make: Canon
    • Model: Canon EOS R50
    • JFIFVersion: 1.02
    • Resolution Unit: inches
    • X-Resolution: 180 dpi
    • Y-Resolution: 180 dpi
    • Processing Software: Windows Photo Editor 10.0.10011.16384
    • Compression: JPEG (old-style)
    • Make: Panasonic
    • JFIFVersion: 1.02
    • Resolution Unit: inches
    • X-Resolution: 350 dpi
    • Y-Resolution: 350 dpi
    • Image Description: This figure from the underworld was part of a mausoleum in Taloi akropolis at Ek Balam. Gran Museo del Mundo Maya (Mayan World Museum of Mérida) opened in 2021. The contemporary building, designed by by Grupo 4A Arquitectos, is in the form a ceiba, a sacred tree believed by the Maya to connect the living with the undaerworld and heavens above. The museum's permanent galleries house a collection of more than 1100 remarkably well-preserved ancient Mayan artifacts.
    • Make: Canon
    • Model: Canon EOS R50

Mérida - Paseo Montejo: Museo de Antropología - Ek Balam sculpture

This sculptural bust was recovered from Zona arqueológica de Ek Balam, circa 600-900 d.C. Palacio Cantón, at Paseo de Montejo and Calle 43, was built in 1911 as a residence for General Francisco Canton, the governor of the state of Yucatán. It stayed in the family for a few years before being sold to the government where it functioned as a school, and then the official residence of the state governors before El Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia (INAH) turned it into Museo de Antropología e Historia in 1966. Designed by Italian architect Enrico Deserti and engineer Manuel Canton Ramos, who oversaw Casas Gemelas, the mansion turned-museum is a mix of architectural styles: French Baroque, European neoclassical, and classical.

  • Etiquetado:
loading