Zacatecas
Seated Male Figure
Zacatecas, 100-300
Scroll
Zacatecas
Seated Male Figure
Zacatecas, 100-300
Physical Qualities
Ceramic, 14 × 8 1/4 × 7 7/8 in. (35.5 × 21 × 20 cm.)
Credit Line
Gift of Bernice Barth, Los Angeles
Object Number
2006.120
In ancient cultures of West Mexico, ancestor worship connected the living with the dead and reinforced social status. Elite kinship groups participated in intricate burial practices in which the dead were placed in shaft tombs along with offerings of ceramics, jewelry, luxury trade goods, and meals for the journey to the afterlife.
Both the Zacatecas figure and the Nayarit chief figure were likely found in tombs and depict men of authority. The Nayarit figure may represent a warrior chief, whose seated position on a stool shows his rank. The Zacatecas figure wears a complex hairstyle, an extravagant textile, and earspools. His open mouth with pursed lips suggests that he is chanting or singing at a social or ritual event.
As the Nayarit and Zacatecas people left no written histories, ceramics like these are vital records of their lifeways and funerary practices. The house model, for instance, alludes to traditional burial practices with its form—the Nayarit typically lived in one-story buildings and buried family members beneath the house, so the lower level of the structure likely represents a tomb or the underworld itself.
Group label for 1960.30.19, 1960.30.20, and 2006.120.
The Baltimore Museum of Art by gift, 2006; purchased by Bernice and Arthur Barth from Morton Lipkin on April 8, 1968
Ancient Americas Gallery Rotations 2021
Ancient Americas Gallery Rotations 2022
Ancient Americas Gallery Rotations 2023
Ancient Americas Rotations 2024
Baltimore Museum of Art. The Baltimore Museum of Art: Celebrating a Museum. Baltimore: The Baltimore Museum of Art, 2014.
Inscribed: Inventory number 10594 inscribed in ink on right buttock. Number corresponds to Barth inventory.
