Artifacts to Art

Collecting Ancient America in Midcentury L.A.

Mary E Miller author Andrew D Turner author Khristaan Villela author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Getty Trust Publications

Publishing:4th Aug '26

£26.00

This title is due to be published on 4th August, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Artifacts to Art cover

By the mid-twentieth century, ancient Mexican artifacts had undergone a striking transformation. Once dismissed as anthropological curiosities, sought after more for their ethnographic value than aesthetic merit, they had become prized artworks that were prominently displayed in major US museums, featured in advertisements and Hollywood films, and shown adorning the homes of celebrities.

At the center of this shift was Earl Stendahl, a savvy Los Angeles art dealer who played a pivotal role in shaping public and institutional perceptions of these objects. Through strategic marketing and a keen eye for opportunity, he repositioned these artifacts, selling them to an elite clientele that included movie stars, wealthy collectors, and museum curators. In doing so, he helped define a new canon of "ancient American art."

Beneath this glamorous facade, however, lies a darker narrative of the looting, smuggling, and forgery that fueled this midcentury craze, exposing how the desire for authenticity and prestige often came at the expense of ethical collecting practices and cultural heritage. This book brings together art history, museum studies, and the politics of the antiquities trade, offering both a social history and a critical examination of how ancient Mexico's past was sold in twentieth-century America.

"Physical damage from looting is visible at nearly every Mexican archaeological site, but the secretive world of dealing in Mesoamerican treasures has been hidden from view. Objects that weren't made to be "art," in our current cultural sense, became art through commercial and social processes and entered the home decor canon of midcentury Los Angeles and beyond. Through the lens of the Stendahl Art Galleries, this book explores the duality of loss and gain: what was sacrificed-scientific sanctity, Indigenous heritage, and national sovereignty-and who profited from those sacrifices."

- Dr. Donna Yates, UNESCO Chair in Cultural Heritage and Emerging Crime

ISBN: 9798887120287

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

176 pages