Library

╰┈➤Alexander Bailey, Gauvin. Art of Colonial Latin America. 2005. New York: Phaidon Press Limited, 2005. 

╰┈➤Alexander Bailey, Gauvin. Art of Colonial Latin America. 2005. New York: Phaidon Press Limited, 2005.

╰┈➤ “Arts of Latin America, the Philippines, and Portuguese India: Decorative Arts.” The Hispanic Museum & Library, Date Accessed April 12, 2022.

╰┈➤ Baumgartner, Walter. “The Aztec Feather Shield in Vienna: Problems of Conservation.” Nuevo Mundos, Date Accessed April 2, 2022.

╰┈➤ “Bishop’s Featherwork Miter.” A Collection in Context: The Hispanic Society of America, Media Center for Art History at Columbia University, Date Accessed March 1, 2022.

╰┈➤ “Feathers from Which Birds Went to Make Aztec & Maya Headdresses?” Mexicolore. Date Accessed March 20, 2022.

╰┈➤ Feest, Christian. “Vienna’s Mexican Treasures: Aztec, Mixtec, and Tarascan Works from 16th Century Austrian Collections.” Archiv für Völkerkunde, January 1990, Date Accessed March 12, 2022.

╰┈➤ Hanson, Thor. Feathers: The Natural Evolutions of a Natural Miracle. 2011. Reprint, Basic Books, 2021.
Kilroy-Ewbank, Lauren. “Featherworks: The Mass of St. Gregory.” Smarthistory, March 8, 2016, Date Accessed February 13, 2022.

╰┈➤ “The Power of Feathers.” Otulina (blog), May 7, 2019. https://otulinablog.pl/en/2019/05/07/the-power-of-feathers-shield/.

╰┈➤ Russo, Alessandra. “Plumes of Sacrifice: Transformations in Sixteenth-Century Mexican Feather Art.” RES: Anthropology and Aesthetics, no. 42 (2002): 226–50.

╰┈➤Russo, Alessandra , Wolf Gerhard , and Fane Diana. Images Take Flight. 2015. Hirmer, 2015.

╰┈➤ Russo, Alessandra , Wolf Gerhard , and Fane Diana. Images Take Flight. 2015. Hirmer, 2015.

╰┈➤ Sousa, Lisa, and Allison Caplan. “Introduction: Knowledge of Birds and Feathers in the Ancient and Colonial Mesoamerican World.” Ethnohistory 67, no. 3 (July 1, 2020): 345–54.

╰┈➤ “Why Are Feathers So Important in the Aztec Culture: Piecing Together the Puzzle | Real Archaeology.” Vassar. Date Accessed May 4, 2022.

╰┈➤ Wolf, Eric R. “The Virgin of Guadalupe: A Mexican National Symbol.” The Journal of American Folklore 71, no. 279 (1958): 34–39.