Figure Item Number: 2979/6 from the MOA: University of British Columbia

Description

Clay figure of a seated male, broken at knees. The body is slender and bent slightly forward. Arms are curved and rest on legs. A thick bracelet surrounds each upper arm. A small protuberance emerges from the figure’s lower torso. The head is long, bulging out at the top, and the face has incised mouth and eyes, and a narrow protruding nose. Ears are placed low on the head, with a hole in each lobe. The figure is hollow, and a hole is bored through the top of the head into the body. The right ear is broken off on the lower part of the lobe.

History Of Use

These types of hollow, naturalistic redware ceramics have been found in (often elaborate) shaft tombs, a mortuary structure unique to the western Mexican states of Colima, Nayarit and Jalisco. Some experts think the main figure found in such burials may represent a powerful, elite member of the society; other figures may depict retainers sacrificed to accompany that person in the afterlife. Other figures commonly depict warriors, pregnant women, acrobats, male and female couples both seated and standing, and women with children. (The end date of the period is in dispute.)