Keywords: Colima - Seated Figure - Walters 20092016 - Three Quarter Left.jpg The valleys of the Río Armería and Río Coahuayana which drain the mountains of the modern Mexican state of Colima nurtured the development of a robust culture Although the peoples' names and languages are lost to time their vitality is preserved in remarkable ceramic sculptures and a pottery vessel tradition that are unique in Mesoamerica Yet these artworks also incorporate a variety of features found among many Mexican societies thereby indicating ancient Colima's membership in the greater Mesoamerican community Colima's hollow figural art characterized by its monochrome orange-red or deep red slip palette is one of the most unified artistic statements of Mesoamerica The surfaces were highly burnished to achieve a bright shine interrupted only by black manganese staining resulting from a natural corrosive process Here the sculptor draws attention away from the engaging figure by highlighting the vessel's orifice with deep red slip paint The sculptor's mastery of the human form is seen in the adept rendering of the twist of the back as the figure leans forward on his bent knee The acuteness of the twist however may also depict a skeletal defect The figure's gesture-right hand held to the chest-is a pan-Mesoamerican sign of deference 100 BC-AD 300 Comala Phase earthenware burnished slip in red and light brown cm 25 2 18 21 5 accession number 2009 20 16 80171 Stendahl Galleries Los Angeles date and mode of acquisition unknown John G Bourne 1980s by purchase Walters Art Museum Gift of John Bourne 2009 place of origin Colima Mexico Walters Art Museum license Objects from Colima in the Walters Art Museum Media contributed by the Walters Art Museum needs category review |