On view

Art of the Ancient Americas

Xipe Totec,

600–900

Classic Veracruz
Late Classic Period
1997-608
Xipe Totec, the name used by the Aztecs for this deity, means Our Lord the Flayed One. During Xipe Totec’s annual festival, Aztec warriors impersonated him by wearing the flayed skins of sacrificed war captives. Occurring in the spring, the festival carried agricultural significance: the shedding of the dead, flayed skin was seen as parallel to the growth of planted seeds, whose sprouts spring forth from their dry, dead hulls. As this pre-Aztec example from Veracruz presents, Xipe Totec—and his human impersonators—wore the flayed skin as a full bodysuit. The expressionless face of this ceramic version, with slit-eyes and gaping mouth, almost completely conceals the wearer; only his hands and feet emerge from the costume.

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Information

Title
Xipe Totec
Dates

600–900

Medium
Ceramic with chapopote (black tar)
Dimensions
h. 69.3 cm., w. 28.0 cm., d. 22.0 cm. (27 5/16 x 11 x 8 11/16 in.)
Credit Line
Gift of Esther and Moshe Bronstein
Object Number
1997-608
Place Made

North America, Mexico, Veracruz, Gulf Coast

Materials

1997, gift of Esther and Moshe Bronstein to the Princeton University Art Museum.