The Colima are part of a group of archaeological cultures – known almost
purely from their artworks – referred to as the Western Mexico Shaft Tomb
(WMST) tradition. There are many distinct groups within this
agglomeration, and their relationships are almost totally obscure due to
the lack of contextual information.
All of the cultures encompassed under the WMST nomenclature were in the
habit of burying their dead in socially-stratified burial chambers at the
base of deep shafts, which were in turn often topped by buildings.
Originally believed to be influenced by the Tarascan people, who were
contemporaries of the Aztecs, thermoluminescence has pushed back the
dates of these groups over 1000 years. Although the apogee of this
tradition was reached in the last centuries of the 1st millennium BC, it has
its origins over 1000 years earlier at sites such as Huitzilapa and
Teuchitlan, in the Jalisco region. Little is known of the cultures themselves,
although preliminary data seems to suggest that they were sedentary
agriculturists with social systems not dissimilar to chiefdoms. These
cultures are especially interesting to students of Mesoamerican history as
they seem to have been to a large extent outside the ebb and flow of more
aggressive cultures – such as the Toltecs, Olmecs and Maya – in the same
vicinity. Thus insulated from the perils of urbanization, they developed
very much in isolation, and it behooves us to learn what we can from what
they have left behind.
The arts of this region are enormously variable and hard to understand in
chronological terms, mainly due to the lack of context. The most striking
works are the ceramics, which were usually placed in graves, and do not
seem to have performed any practical function (although highly decorated
utilitarian vessels are also known). It is possible that they were designed to
depict the deceased – they are often very naturalistic – although it is more
probable that they constituted, when in groups, a retinue of companions,
protectors and servants for the hereafter. More abstract pieces – such as
reclinatorios – probably had a more esoteric meaning that is hard to
recapture from the piece.
The current piece falls within the Colima style, which is perhaps the most
unusual stylistic subgroup of this region. Characterized by a warm, red
glaze, the figures are very measured and conservative, while at the same
time displaying a great competence of line. They are famous for their
sculptures of obese dogs, which seem to have been fattened for the table.
Colima reclinatorios are also remarkable, curvilinear yet geometric
assemblages of intersecting planes and enigmatic constructions in the
semi- abstract.
This figure comes from the state of Colima and
is typical of a substyle know as Tuxcacuesco-
Ortices. In a
standing position with thin arms joined together
and held at the waist, the flattened figure stares
out at us with beady eyes. His large sculpted;
large ears spools and a turbaned head frame
ornamented nose, and gaping mouth. Beaded
jewelry around his neck and a decorated loin
cloth combine with painted incised decorations
to give this elaborate figure a most distinctive
appearance, offering us a glimpse back into a
vanished world whose expressiveness is still
experienced today.