Ask the Scholar

Document scope · 1 page
obj
Scholar
Ask about this object, its catalog metadata, its source description, or the page inventory. For page-specific OCR and visual context, open one of the page chats.

Source Description

Best known from Mesoamerica, variants of the 'ballgame' were played across a significantly greater geographic range, including the Caribbean. As with Mesoamerican ballcourt tradition, Caribbean cultures, and particularly the Taino, carved stone versions of ballgame equipment. Such copies were too heavy to have actually been used in game and are thus understood to be trophies for the victorious team. Among the Taino (meaning "men of the good"), ballplayer hip protection (called 'yokes' or 'collars' in scholarly literature) typically consisted of a bent and tied tree branch, occasionally with a carved 'elbow stone' at the point where the two ends met. Versions made completely made of stone typically mimic the resulting form, with a pronounced point at one side of a generally ovoid form. This example is atypical in its lack of such a point and the bulbous section on the end with incised designs. Moreover, the strictly geometric incision is not the norm for Taino yokes, and the quality of the carving is markedly distinct from other versions.

Scholar Source Context

Document identity
localId
17773
label
Yoke (Ballgame Trophy)
core
obj
dtoType
sculpture
pageCount
1
Source metadata
id
17773
contentType
sculpture
stage
normalized
title
Yoke (Ballgame Trophy)
description
Best known from Mesoamerica, variants of the 'ballgame' were played across a significantly greater geographic range, including the Caribbean. As with Mesoamerican ballcourt tradition, Caribbean cultures, and particularly the Taino, carved stone versions of ballgame equipment. Such copies were too heavy to have actually been used in game and are thus understood to be trophies for the victorious team. Among the Taino (meaning "men of the good"), ballplayer hip protection (called 'yokes' or 'collars' in scholarly literature) typically consisted of a bent and tied tree branch, occasionally with a carved 'elbow stone' at the point where the two ends met. Versions made completely made of stone typically mimic the resulting form, with a pronounced point at one side of a generally ovoid form. This example is atypical in its lack of such a point and the bulbous section on the end with incised designs. Moreover, the strictly geometric incision is not the norm for Taino yokes, and the quality of the carving is markedly distinct from other versions.
provenance
Estate of Jaime Vasquez, Santo Domingo, until 1980s; Dan Pucara of Lost Arts, New York, 1980s; Throckmorton Fine Art, Inc., New York, 2001, by purchase; Private collector, Hawaii, 2001, by purchase; Throckmorton Fine Art, Inc., New York, 2006, by purchase; Austen-Stokes Ancient Americas Foundation [John Stokes as agent], June 14, 2006, by purchase; Walters Art Museum, 2007, by gift.
date
600-1500
rightsUri
CC0
language
en
genreSpecific
Sculpture
yokes
trophies (prizes)
imageCount
1
pageCount
1
source
import
dimensions
units
cm
width
27.9
height
41.9
dimensionsRaw
11 x 16 1/2 in. (27.94 x 41.91 cm)
style
Taino
Source extras
cul
Taino
med
stone
creator_ids
8577
collection_ids
AME
exhibition_ids
none
Single page context
seq
1
pageIndex
0
type
photo
mediaId
1eae08d20bd268e5