Xochipala Terracotta Sculpture of a Woman, 1050 BCE - 500 BCE
Terracotta
1.5 x 5.25
CK.0084
The name Xochipala has been attached to an early style of figurines and pottery unearthed in the modern Mexican state of Guerrero. Xochipala figures are noteworthy not only for naturalism,...
The name Xochipala has been attached to an early style of figurines and pottery unearthed in the modern Mexican state of Guerrero. Xochipala figures are noteworthy not only for naturalism, but also for their age. The Xochipala style dates to the Early Formative period of Pre- Columbian Mesoamerican history (around 1800- 200 B.C.), making them among the earliest works of figurative art in the region, contemporaneous with the more celebrated Olmec culture of the Gulf Coast. While certain scholars have tried to trace links between the Olmec and Xochipala styles, other scholars have ardently disagreed, making it possible that any artistic similarities may have derived from cross-cultural influences and not direct relations. While the Olmecs may have overshadowed the Xochipala culture in our contemporary popular knowledge of Mesoamerican history, Xochipala figures are almost universally praised by scholars and connoisseurs for their striking naturalistic modeling and sensitive depictions.
This female figure stands tall with her arms held at her sides. Her hair has been styled into a distinctive coiffure with a central part. Her ear lobes have been stretched with spools. Her eyes are wide open and she bears and almost sinister grin. A cache-sexe covers her genitalia and completes the decorative elements of this work.
This female figure stands tall with her arms held at her sides. Her hair has been styled into a distinctive coiffure with a central part. Her ear lobes have been stretched with spools. Her eyes are wide open and she bears and almost sinister grin. A cache-sexe covers her genitalia and completes the decorative elements of this work.