Andrew James Hamilton is associate curator of Arts of the Americas at the Art Institute of Chicago and a lecturer in the Department of Art History at the University of Chicago. He is the author and illustrator of Scale & the Incas (Princeton).
""Andrew James Hamilton carries out a meticulous examination of the 500-year old imperial tunic, considered “the most celebrated Andean artwork in the world”, putting the case for its creation by two female artists on the eve of the devastating Spanish invasion.""---Jacqueline Riding, The Art Newspaper ""As thrilling as a murder mystery, a visual feast that kept me engaged till the last page. . . . Hamilton has provided an example of how thrilling art history and archaeological writing can be.""---Bill Sillar, 21: Inquiries into Art, History, and the Visual ""Hamilton brings an impressive grasp of material processes and an ability to evoke haptic sensibilities to the understanding of objects of material culture. . . . Hamilton’s wide-ranging investigation of the tunic’s manufacture reads with the verve of a detective novel and leads to a series of plausible and intriguing histories. His astute perceptions and detailed observations generate rich inferences as to the how and whom of the garment."" * Choice * ""This extensive analysis of the textile, the methods, the time of making and the underlying meaning sets a new standard for understanding this relic of a lost empire.""---Michael F. Rohde, HALI Magazine