Figure of a Seated Chieftain

Art Institute of Chicago

Figure of a Seated Chieftain

Nayarit

Date
100 BCE–250 CE
Medium
Ceramic and pigment
Culture
Nayarit state
Department
Arts of the Americas
Institution
Art Institute of Chicago

Large terracotta figures were made to accompany the remains of high-ranking people in ancient West Mexican tombs. Figures are often found in male-and-female pairs, likely commemorating the marriage of the deceased. Nayarit artists also depicted other major rites of passage, such as the presentation of a baby, the initiation of warriors and chiefs, young women reaching the age of courtship and marriage, and funerary rites. Such tomb figures testified to the earthly status of the deceased, qualifying the individual as a venerable ancestor-spirit expected to intercede with cosmic forces on behalf of the living community.

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Object type
AAT300301253

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