On view
Tecomate (gourd-shaped bowl),
1400–1000 BCE
More Context
Didactics
Tecomate is a Nahuatl term for a calabash gourd, but is also used by scholars for this type of spherical, gourd-shaped vessel. The complex and varied coloration on the white slip of the outer surface of these objects is derived from their firing. Because such thin vessels are particularly susceptible to cracking during the firing process, the temperature was carefully controlled by the placement of organic materials over the vessels, to limit the amount of oxygen. During firing, if the vessel is exposed to insufficient oxygen, the carbon in the clay is not released, resulting in discoloration of the white surface ranging from black to orange. Even today, such discoloration is prized for its aesthetic qualities among ceramicists, who refer to it as "fire-clouding." While the linear orange areas on these vessels may have resulted from the placement of organic materials, such as grass or other vegetation, over the firing pit, the black area may have been caused by an adjacent vessel, or by a larger mass of organic material that did not completely burn off during firing. As the vessels were not discarded but instead burnished after firing, producing a shiny, smooth surface, the resulting variation in coloration appears to have been appreciated by the artist and the patron. The works demonstrate that an aesthetic existed for such unpredictably abstract ceramics very early in Pre-Columbian art. They likely were used to hold a liquid during feasts or for ritual offerings.
More About This Object
Information
1400–1000 BCE
North America, Mexico, Puebla, Central Mexico, Las Bocas
December 26, 1968, George Pepper (1913-1969), Mexico City, sold to Gillett G. Griffin (1928-2016), Princeton, NJ [1]; 1995, gift of Gillett G. Griffin to the Princeton University Art Museum.
Notes:
[1] According to Griffin’s Notebook 1-8.
- Gerald Berjonneau, Emile Deletaille, and Jean-Louis Sonnery, Rediscovered Masterpieces of Mesoamerica: Mexico-Guatemala-Honduras (Boulogne: Editions Arts, 1985)., cat. no. 31 (illus.)
- Arne Eggebrecht, Glanz und Untergang des Alten Mexiko: Die Azteken und ihre Vorläufer (Mainz: Verlag Phillip von Zabern, 1986).
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Lin Crocker-Deletaille and Emile Deletaille, Tresors du nouveau monde (Brussels: Royal Museum of Art and History, 1992).
, fig. 74 - Harmer Johnson, ed. Guide to the Arts of the Americas (New York: Rizzoli, 1992), p. 55 (illus.)
- Elizabeth Benson and Beatriz de la Fuente, eds., Olmec Art of Ancient Mexico (Washington, D.C.: National Gallery of Art, 1996)., cat. no. 66 (illus.)
- Michael D. Coe et al., The Olmec World: Ritual and Rulership (Princeton, Princeton University Art Museum, 1996), cat. no. 136, p. 238 (illus.)
- "Acquisitions of the Art Museum 1995," Record of the Art Museum, Princeton University 56, no. 1/2 (1997): p. 36-74., p. 55
- Princeton University Art Museum: Handbook of the Collection (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2007), p. 288 (illus.)
- Princeton University Art Museum: Handbook of the Collections (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Art Museum, 2013), p. 340