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HOME : Pre-Columbian Art : Costa Rican Masks : Basalt Funerary Mask with a Protruding Tongue
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Basalt Funerary Mask with a Protruding Tongue - PF.4599
Origin: Costa Rica
Circa: 500 AD to 1000 AD
Dimensions: 13" (33.0cm) high
Collection: Pre-Columbian
Medium: Basalt


Location: United States
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Description
The motivation to create a work of art comes from two main sources- external requirements and internal inspiration. The first pertains to needs of a community or from an individual in the form of a commission; and the second from an artist's compulsion to express something that lies deep within. However, when public demand combines with personal desire the result can be very forceful indeed. This exciting mixture of art, society, and religion can be readily seen in Costa Rican stone sculpture, and this powerful and potent mask is a perfect example. Masks were primarily used in ritual ceremonies, worn by Shamans as an essential part of their regalia. The mask performed many functions, acting as a shield, a protector and a disguise to deceive unwanted spirits. It also served as a "vehicle" of communication for spirits to come into contact with the living. Another role the mask may have played was as a representation of real people either living or dead, such as warriors captured in battle. It is possible this mask fits into that category, representing the "universal image" of a defeated enemy whose power could still be acquired through the mask. The X-shaped patterns on the cheeks are ritual scarification indicating the person is either a warrior or member of the elite; as does the elaborate headband. The extended tongue is a graphic way of showing someone in defeat or perhaps at a final stage of ritual intoxication. Whatever this mask's exact function, there is no question as to its capacity to stir the imagination, taking us back to a time when art and religion merged in a mystical and magical union. - (PF.4599)

 

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