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Pacific Coast region (Mexico),
Nayarit
Standing Figure
200 B.C.-A.D. 300
Ceramic and pigment
28 inches high, 5-1/2 inches wide
The John R. Van Derlip Fund
47.2.30
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Look
- This figure is made out of clay. Where does clay come from? When you
work with clay, is it soft or hard? How does it get hard? Baking or
firing clay makes it last a long time. How do you think the artist shaped
this figure? Pretend you have a ball of clay in your hands. Move your
hands to show how you would shape the feet; the legs; the face; the
body. Can you tell what parts have been added on in clay?
- Look closely at this woman's face. Can you make the same expression?
Do you think she is happy? Sad? Sleepy? Funny? What adjectives would
you use to describe her? What jewelry is she wearing? Where do you see
the jewelry? How would her earrings feel if you could try them on?
- Does this look like a real person? Do you think this is a male or
a female figure? Why do you say that? Which features has the artist
exaggerated or emphasized? Why do you think the artist did this?
- How did the artist decorate the figure? Where do you see painted patterns?
Where do you see a rectangle in this figure? A triangle? A square? What
is she holding?
- What is this figure wearing? Does she have a hat? Does she wear shoes?
Based on her clothing, what do you think the climate was like where
she lived? What has she done to decorate her body? Do you think body
decoration was important to the Nayarit people?
Think
- Why do you think this is called a tomb figure? Why do you think people
would want objects buried with them? Objects people placed in their
tombs provide clues to their everyday life. What do you think this woman's
life was like? Why do you say that?
- Do you think this figure was difficult to make? Why do you think so?
- What other objects in this unit have been included in a tomb? All
used clay for works of art. Which culture(s) do you think was more advanced
in its ceramics techniques? Why?
- Describe what an archaeologist does. (Digging up things buried long
ago and searching for clues to how people used to live.) What would
you bury in a time capsule that would show people in the future about
your life?
- Even though this woman is standing still, she looks lively. How did
the artist convey that liveliness? Is it shown in her face? In her body?
Cover the body and look at the head. Cover the head and look at the
body. How did the artist make the face so expressive?
- After firing, the artist painted this figure with patterned fabrics,
facial decoration, and jewelry in white, red, yellow, and black mineral
and vegetable PIGMENTS.
You may see some traces of the paint still on the figure, but most of
it has worn off or faded over time because it was not baked on in the
firing process. Do you think it is possible to appreciate the figure
as a work of art even though we can not see it as the artist originally
intended it to appear? If you were the curator of the museum's Art of
the Americas gallery, would you display this figure as it is, or would
you attempt to repaint the figure in order to display it as the artist
intended? Why?
Key ideas.
Where does it come from?
What does it look like?
How was it used?
How was it made?
Discussion questions.
Additional resources.
Select another piece.
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