On view
Art of the Ancient Americas
Bottle with an excised raptor foot,
1400–1000 BCE
Olmec style
Early Formative Period
2016-1265
A serpent winds around one vessel, while two others present clawed feet: The distinctive hooked shape of the claws colored red on the tecomate (gourd-shaped bowl) are those of a feline, such as the mighty jaguar, the terrestrial apex predator of Mesoamerica. The long, straight claws carved on the bottle more likely depict bird talons. The Olmec featured in their art a specific raptor, the harpy eagle, the great predator of the sky. Parts of a creature’s body likely stood for the whole, a convention scholars call pars pro toto (part for the whole), a visual strategy frequently employed by Olmec artists. In the deeply excised designs adorning the dish displayed here, intensive reduction and abstraction were used. The designs represent the head of the Olmec Dragon, a supernatural being that blends features of the crocodile, harpy eagle, snake, and feline.
Information
Title
Bottle with an excised raptor foot
Dates
1400–1000 BCE
Medium
Reduction-fired ceramic
Dimensions
h. 19.7, diam. 14.4 cm (7 3/4 × 5 11/16 in.)
Credit Line
Bequest of Gillett G. Griffin
Object Number
2016-1265
Place Made
North America, Mexico, Puebla, Las Bocas
Culture
Period
Materials
Subject
October 31, 1978, The Merrin Gallery (Edward H. Merrin), New York, sold to Gillett G. Griffin (1928-2016), Princeton, NJ [1]; 2016, bequeathed to Princeton University Art Museum.
Notes:
[1] According to invoice (no. 1701), in the curatorial file.