Seated Ballplayer

Date:
1st century BCE–3rd century CE
Geography:
Mexico, Mesoamerica, Jalisco
Culture:
Ameca-Etzatlán
Medium:
Ceramic
Dimensions:
H. 19 5/8 x W. 13 in. (49.8 x 33 cm) Ball: Diam. 8.5 cm
Classification:
Ceramics-Sculpture
Credit Line:
Gift of The Andrall and Joanne Pearson Collection, 2005
Accession Number:
2005.91.1
  • Description

    Images of ballplayers were made in ancient Mexico for millennia. The game, played with a large rubger ball, was fast paced and had many layers of meaning—and it was always a significant male activity. Depictions of both game and players appear in the ceramic sculptures of Jalisco, a state on the west coast of Mexico, where such works were produced in the centuries around the turn of the first millennium when their makers flourished. This impressive seated player, in the Ameca-Etzatlan style of Jalisco, holds the large ball reverentially high, in a manner of presentation. His short "pants," a typical player costume, protect the lower body as the ball was propelled with the hips low to the ground. In remove areas of Mexico a game was played in this manner well into the twentieth century.
    The ceramic sculpture of Jalisco was used as funerary offerings in the tombs of members of important families. It is conjectured that depictions of ballplayers were meant to acompany the burial of a man who had been a skilled player.

  • Provenance

    Andrall E. and Joanne P. Pearson, Greenwich, CT, until 2005

  • See also
    What
    Where
    In the Museum
    Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History
50012056

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