Keywords: Mayan - Figural Pendant - Walters 2009206 - View B.jpg Jadeite is a dense alumina silicate of the pyroxene mineral family The preferred stone for denoting status and sacredness throughout Mesoamerica its value was based on its relative scarcity the polished stone's bright shiny surface its translucent colors ranging from light green to a rich blue-green and the challenge of carving the stone due to the stone's hardness In addition to the impressive visual qualities and scarcity jadeite was symbolically linked to the miracle of the earth's fecundity the maize god and the life-giving promise of green plants and blue-green water Together these attributes made jadeite the most valuable of all materials to adorn the nobility and the gods The Maya also fashioned adornments from similar green-colored stones whose visual properties resemble those of jadeite It is difficult to discern the correct geological identification of these adornments without technical analyses This pendant exemplifies the aesthetic variety and technical expertise of Classic Maya jadeite carvers The pendant is carved in the standardized frontal rendering of a noble person wearing the formal head gear of the ruling elite with unique features that document more than five hundred years of the jadeite carver's art The flat pendant exemplifies Middle Classic figural pendant styles with the distinctive headdresses and impressive jadeite earflares and bead necklaces worn by the nobility AD 450-650 Middle Classic jadeite cm 6 7 4 2 0 8 accession number 2009 20 6 80161 Ron Messick Fine Arts Santa Fe New Mexico date and mode of acquisition unknown John G Bourne 1990s by purchase Walters Art Museum Gift of John Bourne 2009 place of origin Honduras Walters Art Museum license Maya art in the Walters Art Museum Media contributed by the Walters Art Museum needs category review Maya jade beads and pendants |