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Source Description
The brown color and elongated, curvilinear form of this bowl recalls that of a gourd, the most common food-service vessel in Mesoamerica. To this day, gourds remain an important household item as well as the preferred container for ceremonial offerings, from those for curing the sick to Catholic rites of veneration. Throughout Mexico, Belize, and Guatemala today, guests are honored by being served a chocolate beverage in a gourd drinking cup, a practice reaching back at least to 1600 bce. The bowl's graceful curvature is accentuated by the burnish lines that follow the vessel's contours. In place of the gourd's stem, the artist incised geometric motifs that have symbolic associations. The four short, arched lines recall the gum line of the jaguar and the Olmec dragon, which symbolizes the surface of the earth. Radiating from this important motif are parallel lines that imply the gourd's natural flutes.
Scholar Source Context
Document identity
localId
80425
label
Bowl with Incised Motifs
core
obj
dtoType
object
citationUrl
pageCount
2
Source metadata
id
80425
contentType
object
stage
normalized
title
Bowl with Incised Motifs
description
The brown color and elongated, curvilinear form of this bowl recalls that of a gourd, the most common food-service vessel in Mesoamerica. To this day, gourds remain an important household item as well as the preferred container for ceremonial offerings, from those for curing the sick to Catholic rites of veneration. Throughout Mexico, Belize, and Guatemala today, guests are honored by being served a chocolate beverage in a gourd drinking cup, a practice reaching back at least to 1600 bce. The bowl's graceful curvature is accentuated by the burnish lines that follow the vessel's contours. In place of the gourd's stem, the artist incised geometric motifs that have symbolic associations. The four short, arched lines recall the gum line of the jaguar and the Olmec dragon, which symbolizes the surface of the earth. Radiating from this important motif are parallel lines that imply the gourd's natural flutes.
provenance
Stendahl Galleries, Los Angeles [date and mode of acquisition unknown] [1]; John G. Bourne, 1970s, by purchase; by bequest to Walters Art Museum, 2017.[1] Said to have been found ""one inside the other"" with 2009.20.269
date
1200-600 BCE (Early-Middle Formative)
citationUrl
rightsUri
CC0
language
en
genreSpecific
Ceramics
bowls (vessels)
imageCount
2
pageCount
2
source
import
dimensions
units
cm
width
10.5
height
23.6
depth
15.2
dimensionsRaw
H: 4 1/8 x W: 9 5/16 x D: 6 in. (10.48 x 23.62 x 15.24 cm)
Source extras
cul
Olmec
med
earthenware
creator_ids
8579
collection_ids
AME
exhibition_ids
2988
Page inventory
seq
1
type
photo
mediaId
209f943bdcc1a675
hasOcr
no
hasDescription
no
seq
2
type
photo
mediaId
e86a9ca87e4a5709
hasOcr
no
hasDescription
no