GENERAL DESCRIPTION
Ground stone axe heads, or celts, were tools for clearing wood and brush from land to be farmed. Celts made of precious jadeite and serpentine were important in Olmec ritual and may have constituted a form of wealth. Great numbers of them were placed in caches. When they were planted vertically, these celts defined the central axis mundi, or World Tree, and the corners of the four-sided world, or cosmic maize field. Celts may even have symbolized ears of corn. Because the compact form was useful in revealing the quality of the stone and was easy to transport, jadeite and serpentine were widely traded in the form of celts, which could be incised with symbols or recarved as figures or other forms.
This carved, finely finished serpentine celt features a subtlety incised plant motif. Though it is unclear to the specific type of foliage depicted, the vines with flowering buds may represent maize. The dark green color of the stone is further associated with maize, vegetation, water, sky, and life. Celts such as this were likely objects that had ritual or specialized use and sacred significance, rather than a working tool.
Adapted from
- Carol Robbins, Label text, A. H. Meadows Galleries, 2010.
- F. Kent Reilly, PhD, DMA unpublished material [1973.17], 1992.
NOTES
- Olmec, Formative period, 900–500 B.C.E., updated by KJones in TMS on 10/16/13, 03/14/16, and 03/21/16.
- I added additional bibliographic sources to TMS record based on the materials in object file.
- General Description drawn from: DMA unpublished material [TMS Object Record Olmec Mask (1973.17), cited as Kent Reilly (1992)].
Catalogue essays
Artist/designers
Cultures
Pre-Columbian (American): AAT: 300016619
Olmec: AAT: 300017051
Geography
Mexico (nation): TGN: 7005560
Guerrero (state): TGN: 7005585
Ahuelicán (inhabited place): TGN: 7350170
Process/materials
serpentine: AAT: 300011627
carving: AAT: 300053149
polishing (finishing): AAT: 300053867
incising: AAT: 300053847
Historical periods
Middle Preclassic Period (Formative): AAT: 300016973
Formative Period (Preclassic): AAT: 300016973
Preclassic (Archaic / Formative / Mesoamerican period): AAT: 300016967
Individuals
Subject terms
sculpture: AAT: 300047090
celts (cutting tools): AAT: 300251881
supernatural (concepts): AAT: 300055947
green (color): AAT: 300128438
plant-derived motifs: AAT: 300164599
foliation (pattern): AAT: 300165104
maize (zea mays species): AAT: 300375398
corn (zea mays species): AAT: 300375398
tree of life (general motif / axis mundi /cosmic axis / world axis / world tree): AAT: 300312112
shiny: AAT: 300065244
ritual objects: AAT: 300312158
RELATED OBJECTS
PROVENANCE
From 1968: Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, Dallas Art Association Purchase, purchased from Teochita, Inc., New York (Frances Pratt, dealer) [1], [2]
[1] The main source for this provenance is Acquisition Record (dated December 26, 1968, copy in Dallas Museum of Art Collections Records Object File). Exceptions and other supporting documents are noted.
[2] The Dallas Art Association is the predecessor to the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts. The name was abandoned in 1970. Works from this collection were transferred to the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts. The name of the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, founded in 1933, changed to the Dallas Museum of Art in 1983.
AUDIO ASSETS
VIDEO ASSETS
IMAGE ASSETS
253363377: UMO. [Caption] Corn flower (maize) with mature silk. Source: Tarek Siala (own work), Wikimedia Commons, accessed: June 03, 2015, http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/8c/Corn_Flower_in_Libya.jpg.
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ARCHIVAL RESOURCES
FUN FACTS
TEACHING IDEAS
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Apply to objects where number equals 1968.32
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General Description
Ground stone axe heads, or celts, were tools for clearing wood and brush from land to be farmed. Celts made of precious jadeite and serpentine were important in Olmec ritual and may have constituted a form of wealth. Great numbers of them were placed in caches. When they were planted vertically, these celts defined the central axis mundi, or World Tree, and the corners of the four-sided world, or cosmic maize field. Celts may even have symbolized ears of corn. Because the compact form was useful in revealing the quality of the stone and was easy to transport, jadeite and serpentine were widely traded in the form of celts, which could be incised with symbols or recarved as figures or other forms.
This carved, finely finished serpentine celt features a subtlety incised plant motif. Though it is unclear to the specific type of foliage depicted, the vines with flowering buds may represent maize. The dark green color of the stone is further associated with maize, vegetation, water, sky, and life. Celts such as this were likely objects that had ritual or specialized use and sacred significance, rather than a working tool.
Adapted from
- Carol Robbins, Label text, A. H. Meadows Galleries, 2010.
- F. Kent Reilly, PhD, DMA unpublished material [1973.17], 1992.
Fun Facts
Archival Resources
Web Resources
Notes
- Olmec, Formative period, 900–500 B.C.E., updated by KJones in TMS on 10/16/13, 03/14/16, and 03/21/16.
- I added additional bibliographic sources to TMS record based on the materials in object file.
- General Description drawn from: DMA unpublished material [TMS Object Record Olmec Mask (1973.17), cited as Kent Reilly (1992)].
Catalogue essays
Artist/designers
Cultures
Pre-Columbian (American): AAT: 300016619
Olmec: AAT: 300017051
Geography
Mexico (nation): TGN: 7005560
Guerrero (state): TGN: 7005585
Ahuelicán (inhabited place): TGN: 7350170
Process/materials
serpentine: AAT: 300011627
carving: AAT: 300053149
polishing (finishing): AAT: 300053867
incising: AAT: 300053847
Historical periods
Middle Preclassic Period (Formative): AAT: 300016973
Formative Period (Preclassic): AAT: 300016973
Preclassic (Archaic / Formative / Mesoamerican period): AAT: 300016967
Individuals
Subject terms
sculpture: AAT: 300047090
celts (cutting tools): AAT: 300251881
supernatural (concepts): AAT: 300055947
green (color): AAT: 300128438
plant-derived motifs: AAT: 300164599
foliation (pattern): AAT: 300165104
maize (zea mays species): AAT: 300375398
corn (zea mays species): AAT: 300375398
tree of life (general motif / axis mundi /cosmic axis / world axis / world tree): AAT: 300312112
shiny: AAT: 300065244
ritual objects: AAT: 300312158
RELATED OBJECTS
PROVENANCE
From 1968: Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, Dallas Art Association Purchase, purchased from Teochita, Inc., New York (Frances Pratt, dealer) [1], [2]
[1] The main source for this provenance is Acquisition Record (dated December 26, 1968, copy in Dallas Museum of Art Collections Records Object File). Exceptions and other supporting documents are noted.
[2] The Dallas Art Association is the predecessor to the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts. The name was abandoned in 1970. Works from this collection were transferred to the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts. The name of the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, founded in 1933, changed to the Dallas Museum of Art in 1983.
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