National Museum of Anthropology--page 3

Photographs of works in the museum are arranged based on the museum's organization:

Preclassic Works--page 1
Teotihuacán Culture--page 2 and 3
Toltec Culture--page 4
Mexica Culture--page 5 and 6
Oaxaca/Zapotec examples--page 7
Maya Culture--page 8 and 9

Examples from Teotihuacán




Reliefs

If you know what these reliefs represent, could you send me an email at the address below. (Thanks.)
 

Ceremonial incense burners

Generally the body is simple but the lid is adorned with features representing a deity.
 

Ceremonial incense burners

Excavations at Teotihuacán unearthed a number of these at their place of manufacture. This discovery confirmed that these ritual objects were mass-produced with decorative elements made from molds.
 

Clay statuettes

The example in the center has movable limbs--was this a puppet? a doll?
 

Copy of relief from Tikal, but found at Teotihuacán

 

Alabaster relief of two-headed jaguar

See also two-headed Jaguar throne at Uxmal
 

Large clay statue of Xipe-Tótec, god of springtime (or of a priest to that god's cult)

Height: 109cm
The figure wears the skin of a sacrificial victim over his face and part of his body. His eyes are closed signifying death. The figure carries a shield and a jaguar-claw vessel.
 

Center: a head with two chalchihuites on the forehead; right: fresco of a rooster (a copy?)


Continue to page 4 for examples of art of the Toltec culture.


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© 2004 Mary Ann Sullivan. I have photographed (on site), scanned, and manipulated all the images on these pages. Please feel free to use them for personal or educational purposes. They are not available for commercial purposes.

Page created by Mary Ann Sullivan