Chupicuaro Sculpture of a Female Ballplayer - PF.0625 Origin: Chupicuaro, Mexico Circa: 350
BC
to 250
BC Dimensions:3.625" (9.2cm) high x 1.875" (4.8cm) wide Collection: Pre-Columbian Style: Chupicuaro Medium: Terracotta
The remains of a once vibrant culture are now
submerged under a lake. Fortunately,
excavations in the 1940's on the site were able
to uncover sufficient artifacts to give us an
intriguing picture of people who lived there
centuries ago. Chupicuaro was the elaborate
burial ground of a village above the Lerma River
in the state of Guanajuato, eighty miles
northwest of the Valley of Mexico. The abundant
offerings of pottery, jade, and figurines
discovered there attest to a flourishing artistic
culture. One of the most endearing types of the
clay objects is the small female figures, or 'pretty
ladies'. They typically show a naked female with
short arms, extended stomach and a fancy
coiffure or headdress.
We should not be fooled by the delicate
appearance of this Mesoamerican beauty with her
coffee-bean eyes. The deflector on her arm and
the weights on her feet suggest she is a player in
the ballgame, a rough and grueling event. This
somehow takes us by surprise--we expect these
primitive female figures to be either mothers or
goddesses. It is as if Venus herself had decided
to become an athlete.