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Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Mayan Bowl With Painted Monkeys, 300 CE - 900 CE
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Mayan Bowl With Painted Monkeys, 300 CE - 900 CE
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Mayan Bowl With Painted Monkeys, 300 CE - 900 CE

Mayan Bowl With Painted Monkeys, 300 CE - 900 CE

Terracotta
14.6 x 7.6 cm
5 3/4 x 3 in
PF.5643
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The exterior of this vessel is divided into two bands. The upper band is a series of glyphs repeated four times. This glyph takes the form of a head with...
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The exterior of this vessel is divided into two bands. The upper band is a series of glyphs repeated four times. This glyph takes the form of a head with a long extended snout that leads to a hooked appendage. The glyphs are interspersed with a series or black dots and red rectangles. The lower band depicts three monkeys crawling across the bottom. There stomachs take the form of two black concentric rings from which there swirling tails and undulating limbs extend. The monkeys seem to playfully chase each other. There is a swiftness in their form duplicated in the loosely applied paint. What is the relationship between the text and the paintings? Altogether, the decoration of this vessel is a very precise and significant symbolic language. Unfortunately, the vocabulary has been lost to us. However, the beauty of this pictorial statement can still be easily appreciated.
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