figurine fragment

Title

figurine fragment

Identifier

Description

Fragment of a statuette, white clay, elaborate headdress, pre-classic. Clay figurines appear in the graves and household debris of the earliest farmers in Mexico and continued to be made and used by successive civilisations until the Spanish Conquest. Those made by the village farming communities of the Mexican Neolithic most often represent women, with exaggeration of the breasts and buttocks perhaps reflecting a concern with human fertility and increase. Images of the later period, especially those from the great classical city of Teotihuacan, illustrate a variety of gods and human types, reflecting the richness and diversity of an elaborate priest-temple cult. 

Date

Early: 1500 Late: Period: Pre-Classic

Format

H: 65 mm W: 41 mmm

Coverage

America Mexico Valley.of.Mexico

Creator

McPherson, John Dr

Source

Aztec

Relation

clay fired.clay

Contributor

McPherson, John Dr

UUID

860df1e0-a981-48e1-8d0d-935576057b7f

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