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LOT 0135

Maya Gualpopa Polychrome Cylinders (Group of 2)

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**Originally Listed At $2000**

Pre-Columbian, El Salvador, Maya, Gualpopa, Late Classic Period, ca. 600 to 900 CE. A wonderful set of two hand-built pottery cylinders, both with flat bases and thick rims and a pale-orange base color, the smaller with a lightly-tapering form, and the larger with bulging walls. The smaller vessel is decorated with thick red swaths along the rim and lower body, repeating black-painted registers of undulating waves, zigzagging lines, red-painted spacer lines above and sinuous waves below, and a register of red pyramids and black stylized human heads in the center. The top of the larger vessel has black-painted glyphs in abstract avian and human head forms, with a register of repeating arches above a trio of abstract deer-form glyphs separated by vertical red frets. Size of largest (deer glyphs): 6.5" W x 7.4" H (16.5 cm x 18.8 cm).

According to Peterson and Green's "Precolumbian Flora and Fauna: Continuity of Plant and Animal Themes in Mesoamerican Art", "The nimble speed and bounding grace of deer only partially suggest their fire and stellar symbolism and their recurring role in creation myths. As one of the most valued sources of meat, deer were also featured in ancient fertility rites. .. The deer is a consistent actor in Maya creation myths. Over time the animal played numerous roles in stories about the formation of the cosmos. Most frequently the deer is a metaphor for the sun during his courtship of the moon. The sun dons a deer skin disguise as part of his plot to regain his wife the moon." (Jeanette Favrot Peterson with essays by Judith Strupp Green, "Precolumbian Flora and Fauna: Continuity of Plant and Animal Themes in Mesoamerican Art"; Mingei International Museum, 1990, p. 22)

Provenance: private California, USA Collection, the larger purchased in the late 1980s, the other in the 2000s; (the larger) ex-private San Diego County, California, USA collection; ex-private Smith collection

All items legal to buy/sell under U.S. Statute covering cultural patrimony Code 2600, CHAPTER 14, and are guaranteed to be as described or your money back.

A Certificate of Authenticity will accompany all winning bids.

We ship worldwide to most countries and handle all shipping in-house for your convenience.

#145710
Condition Report: Smaller vessel has one stable hairline fissure along rim and small chips to rim and body. Larger vessel professionally reassembled from multiple pieces with light restoration, resurfacing, and overpainting along break lines. Both vessels have light abrasions and fading to original pigmentation. Nice earthen deposits throughout.

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Time, Location
30 Mar 2020
USA, Louisville, CO
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[ translate ]

**Originally Listed At $2000**

Pre-Columbian, El Salvador, Maya, Gualpopa, Late Classic Period, ca. 600 to 900 CE. A wonderful set of two hand-built pottery cylinders, both with flat bases and thick rims and a pale-orange base color, the smaller with a lightly-tapering form, and the larger with bulging walls. The smaller vessel is decorated with thick red swaths along the rim and lower body, repeating black-painted registers of undulating waves, zigzagging lines, red-painted spacer lines above and sinuous waves below, and a register of red pyramids and black stylized human heads in the center. The top of the larger vessel has black-painted glyphs in abstract avian and human head forms, with a register of repeating arches above a trio of abstract deer-form glyphs separated by vertical red frets. Size of largest (deer glyphs): 6.5" W x 7.4" H (16.5 cm x 18.8 cm).

According to Peterson and Green's "Precolumbian Flora and Fauna: Continuity of Plant and Animal Themes in Mesoamerican Art", "The nimble speed and bounding grace of deer only partially suggest their fire and stellar symbolism and their recurring role in creation myths. As one of the most valued sources of meat, deer were also featured in ancient fertility rites. .. The deer is a consistent actor in Maya creation myths. Over time the animal played numerous roles in stories about the formation of the cosmos. Most frequently the deer is a metaphor for the sun during his courtship of the moon. The sun dons a deer skin disguise as part of his plot to regain his wife the moon." (Jeanette Favrot Peterson with essays by Judith Strupp Green, "Precolumbian Flora and Fauna: Continuity of Plant and Animal Themes in Mesoamerican Art"; Mingei International Museum, 1990, p. 22)

Provenance: private California, USA Collection, the larger purchased in the late 1980s, the other in the 2000s; (the larger) ex-private San Diego County, California, USA collection; ex-private Smith collection

All items legal to buy/sell under U.S. Statute covering cultural patrimony Code 2600, CHAPTER 14, and are guaranteed to be as described or your money back.

A Certificate of Authenticity will accompany all winning bids.

We ship worldwide to most countries and handle all shipping in-house for your convenience.

#145710
Condition Report: Smaller vessel has one stable hairline fissure along rim and small chips to rim and body. Larger vessel professionally reassembled from multiple pieces with light restoration, resurfacing, and overpainting along break lines. Both vessels have light abrasions and fading to original pigmentation. Nice earthen deposits throughout.

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Estimate
Unlock
Time, Location
30 Mar 2020
USA, Louisville, CO
Auction House
Unlock