1971.62 Temple (Guerrero, Mexico, West Mexico, Mezcala style)


GENERAL DESCRIPTION
Small carvings of human figures are a common sculptural theme among the various cultural groups of both Central and West Mexico. Lapidary artists favored a variety of precious materials for their small-scale sculptures, including alabaster, obsidian, jade, serpentine, and other varieties of greenstone. This is a fine example of stone carving from Late Formative (Late Preclassic) Guerrero. This region is known for a wide variety of sculptural styles from multiple cultural groups that inhabited this area of southwest Mexico. The most well-known Guerrero style is called Mezcala, primarily small-scale abstract stone sculptures depicting human figures, masks, and temple-like buildings. This example depicts a multi-leveled temple with columns and stairway. Typical of the Mezcala style, the carving appears simple and elementary in form, while also very modern in its abstraction and expression. These carvings may have functioned as models, as they are similar in form to columned stone buildings or funerary structures found throughout Guerrero. It appears that these Mezcala models were re-carved or re-purposed by other cultures throughout later periods, and thus indicate the possible significance of these works as heirlooms or a continuation of former stylistic traditions.

Mexican artist Miguel Covarrubias identified the Mezcala lithic, or stone, art style in the 1940s. While the characteristic geometric forms of the figures and temples make them easy to recognize, placing them in time has been challenging, for none had been found in an archaeological context in Guerrero. In 1989, seven objects in the Mezcala style were found beneath the floors of residential complexes at Ahuinahuac, and associated materials have been securely dated to the Late Formative (Late Preclassic) period, between c. 500 and 200 BCE. Other objects in the style have since been found in context, at least one associated with material from the Late Classic period (c. 700–900 CE). Additional contextual information is needed to determine whether the presence of Mezcala-style objects in late contexts represents heirloom status, as it did in the Mezcala style objects found at the Templo Mayor at the Aztec capital of Tenochtitlán, or a living sculptural tradition that persisted through centuries. The emphasis on stone sculpture in the Guerrero region also suggests an interaction with the Olmec peoples of the Gulf Coast, and many Olmec style objects have been found near this area.

Adapted from
  • Carol Robbins, Label text [1968.4; 1967.11; 1971.62; 1972.40; 1971.61], A. H. Meadows Galleries.
  • Gallery text [West Mexico], A. H. Meadows Galleries.

NOTES
Formative period, 300 B.C.E. or earlier (noted on TMS), updated by KJones on 04/01/14; no culture noted.

Catalogue essays

Artist/designers

Cultures
Pre-Columbian (American): AAT: 300016619
Mezcala (West Coast Mesoamerican styles / Guerrero): AAT: 300017193
West Coast Mesoamerican styles: AAT: 300017196

Geography
Mexico (nation): TGN: 7005560
Guerrero (state/Mexico): TGN: 7005585
Mezcala (inhabited place / Mexcala): TGN: 1017856
Balsas (inhabited place): TGN: 7351418
Río Balsas (stream): TGN: 7404865
Río Balsas (river): TGN: 1121636

Process/materials
calcite (mineral): AAT: 300011078
carving: AAT: 300053149
incising: AAT: 300053847
polishing (finishing): AAT: 300053867
drillwork (sculpture technique): AAT: 300186211

Historical periods
Formative Period (Preclassic): AAT: 300016973
Preclassic (Archaic / Formative / Mesoamerican period): AAT: 300016967
Late Preclassic Period (Formative): AAT: 300016976

Individuals

Subject terms
sculpture: AAT: 300047090
ritual objects: AAT: 300312158
effigies (funerary sculpture): AAT: 300047108
models (repesentations): AAT: 300047753
buildings (structures): AAT: 300004792
Temples: AAT: 300007595
columns (architectural components): AAT: 300001571
stairs: AAT: 300003228
funerary buildings (funerary structures): AAT: 300005866
Covarrubias_Miguel: ULAN: 500122721
geometric abstraction: AAT: 300056509
geometric shape: AAT: 300263819
buildings (structures): AAT: 300004792
dwellings (residential structures): AAT: 300005425
Ahuinahuac (deserted settlement / Mexico): DMA
Templo Mayor (historic structure): TGN: 7032716
Tenochtitlán (Mexico City): TGN: 7007227
Olmec: AAT: 300017051
abstract: AAT: 300108127
abstraction: AAT: 300056508

RELATED OBJECTS

PROVENANCE
From 1971: Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, General Acquisitions Fund, purchased from Teochita, Inc., New York [1], [2]

[1] The main source for this provenance is Acquisition Record (dated November 09, 1971, copy in Dallas Museum of Art Collections Records Object File). Exceptions and other supporting documents are noted.

[2] The name of the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, founded in 1933, was changed to the Dallas Museum of Art in 1983.

AUDIO ASSETS

VIDEO ASSETS

IMAGE ASSETS

WEB RESOURCES
The Metropolitan Museum of Art~Read more about architectural models from the ancient Americas.

ARCHIVAL RESOURCES

FUN FACTS

TEACHING IDEAS

RULES
Apply to objects where number equals 1971.62


Category
rules_operator
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General Description
Small carvings of human figures are a common sculptural theme among the various cultural groups of both Central and West Mexico. Lapidary artists favored a variety of precious materials for their small-scale sculptures, including alabaster, obsidian, jade, serpentine, and other varieties of greenstone. This is a fine example of stone carving from Late Formative (Late Preclassic) Guerrero. This region is known for a wide variety of sculptural styles from multiple cultural groups that inhabited this area of southwest Mexico. The most well-known Guerrero style is called Mezcala, primarily small-scale abstract stone sculptures depicting human figures, masks, and temple-like buildings. This example depicts a multi-leveled temple with columns and stairway. Typical of the Mezcala style, the carving appears simple and elementary in form, while also very modern in its abstraction and expression. These carvings may have functioned as models, as they are similar in form to columned stone buildings or funerary structures found throughout Guerrero. It appears that these Mezcala models were re-carved or re-purposed by other cultures throughout later periods, and thus indicate the possible significance of these works as heirlooms or a continuation of former stylistic traditions.

Mexican artist Miguel Covarrubias identified the Mezcala lithic, or stone, art style in the 1940s. While the characteristic geometric forms of the figures and temples make them easy to recognize, placing them in time has been challenging, for none had been found in an archaeological context in Guerrero. In 1989, seven objects in the Mezcala style were found beneath the floors of residential complexes at Ahuinahuac, and associated materials have been securely dated to the Late Formative (Late Preclassic) period, between c. 500 and 200 BCE. Other objects in the style have since been found in context, at least one associated with material from the Late Classic period (c. 700–900 CE). Additional contextual information is needed to determine whether the presence of Mezcala-style objects in late contexts represents heirloom status, as it did in the Mezcala style objects found at the Templo Mayor at the Aztec capital of Tenochtitlán, or a living sculptural tradition that persisted through centuries. The emphasis on stone sculpture in the Guerrero region also suggests an interaction with the Olmec peoples of the Gulf Coast, and many Olmec style objects have been found near this area.

Adapted from
  • Carol Robbins, Label text [1968.4; 1967.11; 1971.62; 1972.40; 1971.61], A. H. Meadows Galleries.
  • Gallery text [West Mexico], A. H. Meadows Galleries.

Fun Facts

Archival Resources

Web Resources
The Metropolitan Museum of Art~Read more about architectural models from the ancient Americas.

Notes
Formative period, 300 B.C.E. or earlier (noted on TMS), updated by KJones on 04/01/14; no culture noted.

Catalogue essays

Artist/designers

Cultures
Pre-Columbian (American): AAT: 300016619
Mezcala (West Coast Mesoamerican styles / Guerrero): AAT: 300017193
West Coast Mesoamerican styles: AAT: 300017196

Geography
Mexico (nation): TGN: 7005560
Guerrero (state/Mexico): TGN: 7005585
Mezcala (inhabited place / Mexcala): TGN: 1017856
Balsas (inhabited place): TGN: 7351418
Río Balsas (stream): TGN: 7404865
Río Balsas (river): TGN: 1121636

Process/materials
calcite (mineral): AAT: 300011078
carving: AAT: 300053149
incising: AAT: 300053847
polishing (finishing): AAT: 300053867
drillwork (sculpture technique): AAT: 300186211

Historical periods
Formative Period (Preclassic): AAT: 300016973
Preclassic (Archaic / Formative / Mesoamerican period): AAT: 300016967
Late Preclassic Period (Formative): AAT: 300016976

Individuals

Subject terms
sculpture: AAT: 300047090
ritual objects: AAT: 300312158
effigies (funerary sculpture): AAT: 300047108
models (repesentations): AAT: 300047753
buildings (structures): AAT: 300004792
Temples: AAT: 300007595
columns (architectural components): AAT: 300001571
stairs: AAT: 300003228
funerary buildings (funerary structures): AAT: 300005866
Covarrubias_Miguel: ULAN: 500122721
geometric abstraction: AAT: 300056509
geometric shape: AAT: 300263819
buildings (structures): AAT: 300004792
dwellings (residential structures): AAT: 300005425
Ahuinahuac (deserted settlement / Mexico): DMA
Templo Mayor (historic structure): TGN: 7032716
Tenochtitlán (Mexico City): TGN: 7007227
Olmec: AAT: 300017051
abstract: AAT: 300108127
abstraction: AAT: 300056508

RELATED OBJECTS

PROVENANCE
From 1971: Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, General Acquisitions Fund, purchased from Teochita, Inc., New York [1], [2]

[1] The main source for this provenance is Acquisition Record (dated November 09, 1971, copy in Dallas Museum of Art Collections Records Object File). Exceptions and other supporting documents are noted.

[2] The name of the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, founded in 1933, was changed to the Dallas Museum of Art in 1983.

AUDIO ASSETS

VIDEO ASSETS

rules
Apply To
Objects
number
Equals
1971.62
tags
#draft
#completed
@Higgins
*Arts of the Americas
%copyedited_Gail
sculpture: AAT: 300047090
Mexico (nation): TGN: 7005560
Pre-Columbian (American): AAT: 300016619
incising: AAT: 300053847
effigies (funerary sculpture): AAT: 300047108
Preclassic period (Formative period/Archaic period/Mesoamerican periods and styles): AAT: 300016967
Late Preclassic period (Formative period / Mesoamerican periods and styles): AAT: 300016976
effigies (general portraits): 300404933
%Archived
polishing (finishing): AAT: 300053867
carving (processes): AAT: 300053149
drillwork (sculpture technique): AAT: 300186211
abstract: AAT: 300108127
Olmec: AAT: 300017051
abstraction: AAT: 300056508
geometric shape: AAT: 300263819
columns (architectural components): AAT: 300001571
Guerrero (state/Mexico): TGN: 7005585
geometric abstraction: AAT: 300056509
ritual objects: AAT: 300312158
buildings (structures): AAT: 300004792
stairs: AAT: 300003228
funerary buildings (funerary structures): AAT: 300005866
Temples: AAT: 300007595
models (repesentations): AAT: 300047753
Covarrubias_Miguel: ULAN: 500122721
Mezcala (West Coast Mesoamerican styles / Guerrero): AAT: 300017193
Mezcala (Mexcala/Mexico): TGN: 1017856
dwellings (residential structures): AAT: 300005425
Tenochtitlán (Mexico City): TGN: 7007227
Balsas (Mexico): TGN: 7351418
Río Balsas (stream/Mexico): TGN: 7404865
Río Balsas (river/Mexico): TGN: 1121636
Templo Mayor (historic structure): TGN: 7032716
West Coast Mesoamerican styles: AAT: 300017196
Ahuinahuac (deserted settlement / Mexico): DMA
calcite (mineral): AAT: 300011078
source file
object_notes_3_a-0685.xml.nores