
Rollout photograph © Justin Kerr,
File # K531
Latin American Art
Mexico, Southern Campeche
Drinking Vessel, 600-800 A.D.
Ceramic with cream, red, and black slip
Height: 5 3/8 in. (13.65 cm); Diameter: 5 1/8 in. (13.02 cm)
M.2006.41
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Elegantly painted ceramic vessels
constituted the premier form of artistic expression during the
Late Classic period (550–850 AD) of ancient Maya civilization,
and none were more beautifully painted than those known as codex
style. Named for their resemblance to the Maya codices,
or painted books, codex style ceramics such as this Drinking
Vessel depict highly esoteric scenes describing the fundamental
concepts of Maya religious belief and practice and the special
role of kings as participants in the supernatural realm. These
concepts are embedded within a layered matrix of complex imagery
and hieroglyphic writing that describe the ritual actions of rulers,
who engaged with ancestors and supernatural beings in order to
maintain the delicate balance of the cosmos.
Codex style ceramics were produced for a very brief period in
a restricted region of the Maya lowlands, encompassing southern
Mexico and the northeastern corner of the Petén, Guatemala.
Vessels are typically covered with a cream colored ground; red
slip adorns the rim and basal bands and the imagery is painted
with a fine black line. The figures portrayed on this vessel are
rendered with the characteristic whiplash line that constitutes
the most refined Maya painting on both ceramics and murals.
The
content of codex style imagery is almost exclusively mythological
or cosmological, and this vessel, acknowledged as the work of an
extraordinary artist known as the Metropolitan Master, is no exception.
The scene shows three sinister and otherworldly beings with both
animal and human characteristics. They represent wayob’,
the companion spirits of Maya rulers. These composite beings with
their supernatural attributes share in the consciousness of the
person who owns them, coming to life when the person is asleep
in order to roam the world. Wayob’ may take the
form of animate or inanimate beings, but are commonly depicted
on Maya ceramics as powerful forest creatures.
On this vessel, the wayob’ include a plump toad
wearing a jade bead necklace, a dashing jaguar with knotted scarf
and deer antler, and a bearded serpent with a deer ear and a young
man emerging from his opened jaws. The creatures, whose names appear
in the brief texts adjacent to their images, signal a complex relationship
between the supernatural realm and lineage ancestors, the powerful
beings contacted by the living king to sustain the well-being of
the human community. The vertical text describes the vessel as
one used to drink cacao (chocolate), which was first cultivated
by the Maya and whose consumption was the prerogative of royalty.
This vessel is recognized as one of the finest known in the codex
style tradition. It provides complementary imagery to the rare
fluted Cylinder Vessel in the pre-Columbian collection; together
they present extraordinary insights into ancient Maya religious
belief and royal performance in the words and images of the artists
themselves.
View the complete record and details of this work in Collections
Online.
Image at top:
Peter Brenner, LACMA
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Gift of the 2006 Collectors Committee |