The Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History   The Metropolitan Museum of Art
World MapsTimelines / RegionsThematic EssaysWorks of ArtIndex  
Bat-Nosed Figure Pendant, 13th–16th century
Costa Rica; Diquís
Cast gold; H. 3 in. (7.6 cm)
Gift and Bequest of Alice K. Bache, 1966, 1977 (66.196.17)

Among the many Precolumbian gold pendants from the Isthmian region depicting a wide range of animals and composite beings are those that feature bat imagery. They form a sizable group and usually have human bodies with faces that have an upswept, leaflike nose. The nose leaf, here shown as a stylized, projecting loop, is part of the sensing apparatus of leaf-nosed bats which locate their food primarily by sound reflected off their prey, often as small as insects. In addition to the nose leaf, the most characteristic features on human-bat images are the strongly protruding eyes depicted on stalks. They are also associated with bat imagery.

On this rare, carefully cast pendant, the bat-headed figure is adorned with ornamental leg bands, a necklace, and a crown of feathers, and is shown sitting with raised hands above what resembles an entrance to an architectural structure, as if guarding it. Four toothy crocodile heads in profile, with curled snouts, jut from the sides of the entrance.


Open full-size image



  • Related Index Terms

    Material and Technique

    Object

    Subject Matter/Theme

    Technical Glossary


    Bat-Nosed Figure Pendant, 13th–16th century
    Costa Rica; Diquís
    Cast gold; H. 3 in. (7.6 cm)
    Gift and Bequest of Alice K. Bache, 1966, 1977 (66.196.17)